Roots and Responsibility

Transcription

Roots and Responsibility
UMass Lowell
MAGAZINE FOR ALUMNI AND FRIENDS
Roots and Responsibility
The Generosity of Rob and Donna Manning
Page 28
Rob ’84 and
Donna ’85, ’91
Manning
Page 22
From Logan
to LAX
Page 34
Andre Dubus III:
Haverhill to
Hollywood
Page 38
Killing Fields Survivors
Tell Their Stories
Page 40
Introducing the Circle
of Distinction
Page 57
Donor Report
of Gifts 2011
WINTER 2011-2012
Winter 2011-2012
The UMass Lowell Alumni
Magazine is published by:
Office of Public Affairs
University of Massachusetts Lowell
One University Avenue
Lowell, MA 01854
978-934-3223
[email protected]
Chancellor
Martin T. Meehan
Vice Chancellor of
University Relations
Patti McCafferty
Vice Chancellor for Advancement
Edward Chiu
Director of Publications
and Publisher
Mary Lou Hubbell
Special Assistant to the
Vice Chancellor of Advancement
Diane Earl
Executive Director of
Alumni Relations
Lily Mendez-Morgan
Associate Director
of Alumni Relations
Heather Makrez
A Message From
Chancellor Martin T. Meehan ’78
The college experience can be daunting to a student who is often living away
from home for the first time, sometimes the first member of his or her family
with a chance to pursue a degree.
Financial assistance—which often represents a vote of confidence to a student,
along with a connection to an alumnus or a friend of the University—can
prove to be life-altering for scholarship recipients.
In this issue of the UMass Lowell Magazine, you’ll learn about some of the people who give so much
to our students, helping to provide the best education possible. We are deeply grateful to them—
whether the gift is large or small. It all makes a difference.
The generosity of our alumni and friends takes many forms: it may help fund a scholarship, purchase
equipment for a lab, support an academic, research or outreach program or endow a teaching chair.
Every day at the University, we are keenly focused on our students, preparing them to be work ready,
life ready and world ready. But we simply cannot do it alone. We need you—alumni and friends of
the University.
The magazine also helps keep you up-to-date with the latest campus and alumni activities—and they
are many. Browse these pages. Check out www.uml.edu. Or better yet, drop by the campus and
see all the activity for yourself.
Communications Manager
Nichole Carter
Editor
Sarah McAdams
Staff Writers
Edwin Aguirre
Karen Angelo
Geoffrey Douglas
Bob Ellis
Sheila Eppolito
Jill Gambon
Julia Gavin
Christine Gillette
Elizabeth James
Jack McDonough
Dave Perry
Sandra Seitz
Marty Meehan ’78
Chancellor
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Jan. 6:
UMass Lowell Alumni Ice Skate @ Fenway Park
Jan. 28:
Delta Kappa Phi Reunion @ River Hawks vs. UMass Amherst hockey game,
Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell
Jan. 28:
Sigma Phi Omicron Reunion @ River Hawks vs. UMass Amherst hockey game,
Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell
Feb. 4-5: UMass Lowell in India
Feb. 10: Third Annual Residence Life, Orientation Leader and SGA Reunion @ River Hawks vs.
Merrimack hockey game, Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell
Feb. 19: 10th Annual Wine Dinner @ Ricardo’s in Lowell
Please send address changes to:
University of Massachusetts Lowell
Office of University Advancement
Southwick 250, One University Ave.,
Lowell, MA 01854-2882
[email protected]
978-934-2223
UMass Lowell is an Equal
Opportunity/ Affirmative Action,
Title IX, H/V, ADA 1990 Employer.
Learning with Purpose
Feb. 25: Engineering Alumni night @ River Hawks vs. Merrimack College,
Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell
Apr. 3:
Plastics Engineering Alumni and Friends dinner @ ANTEC Conference, Florida
May 25:
Commencement Eve Celebration, UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center
May 26:
40th & 50th Reunions, UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center
Civil War Book Club
Alumni are invited to participate in “Let’s Talk About It: Making Sense of the American Civil War”
—a five-part discussion series led by History Prof. Michael Pierson on Jan. 24, Feb. 21, March 20, April 3
and April 24. Registration: http://libguides.uml.edu/LTAI. Materials: [email protected].
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UMassLowell
MAGAZINE FOR ALUMNI AND FRIENDS
VOLUME 14
CAMPUS LIFE
3
ALUMNI LIFE
OUR WORLD
F E AT U R E S
11
STUDENT SCENE
NUMBER 3
From Logan to LAX, From Safety to Security:
44
ALUMNI EVENTS
47
CLASS NOTES
55
IN MEMORIAM
22
Reflections of Operations Chief Steve Martin ’71
26
‘We Could Create Huge Changes’
Brewing Coffee, Saving Forests, Bettering Lives
28
Roots and Responsibility
The Generosity of Rob and Donna Manning
14
17
LAB NOTES
Killing Fields Survivors Tell Their Stories
SPORTS UPDATE
University Teams up With Cambodian Students
38
34
From Haverhill to Hollywood
‘A Happy Accident’ for Author and Professor Andre Dubus III
36
Face of Philanthropy
Bob ’71 and Gail Ward: Saving Lives and Growing Grapes
Circle of Distinction
40
The Few, Whose Generosity Lights the Way
Donor Report of Gifts 2011
57
Editor’s Note
Please send comments to
Editor Sarah McAdams at
[email protected].
Submit class notes to: Class
Notes Editor, Southwick 250,
1 University Ave., Lowell, MA
01854 or www.uml.edu/advancement/classnotes.
LOWELL TEXTILE SCHOOL • MASSACHUSETTS STATE NORMAL SCHOOL • STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE AT LOWELL • LOWELL TEXTILE INSTITUTE
LOWELL TECHNOLOGICAL INSTITUTE • MASSACHUSETTS STATE COLLEGE AT LOWELL • LOWELL STATE COLLEGE • UNIVERSITY OF LOWELL
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1
Campus Life
Inside...
3
OUR WORLD
11
STUDENT SCENE
14
LAB NOTES
17
SPORTS UPDATE
Music studies major Miles
Collins-Wooley lets loose during
a master class featuring West
African drumming and dance
with Joh Camard.
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Ourworld
C A M P U S
N E W S
Students Help Shape U.S. Senate Debate
UMass Lowell students participated in democracy in action at
an Oct. 4 U.S. Senate Democratic primary debate on campus. Dozens of students played
a role in the event—helping
to shape the debate’s format,
firing off questions as panelists,
serving as timekeepers and
ushers, participating in a
Boston Herald focus group
and suggesting questions via
Facebook and Twitter.
The debate, the first among
Democratic Senate candidates,
attracted a capacity crowd of
nearly 1,000. Co-sponsored by
the newly launched UMass
Lowell Center for Public Opinion, the UMass Lowell Political
Science Club and the Boston
Herald, the event attracted
scores of local and national
media outlets and thousands
of followers online.
Participating candidates
were Tom Conroy, Marisa
DeFranco, Alan Khazei, Bob
Massie, Herb Robinson, Elizabeth Warren and Setti Warren.
Four students served as panelists, asking questions of the
candidates who hope to challenge U.S. Sen. Scott Brown
next year. Their questions
probed both policy positions
such as the withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Afghanistan and
more personal topics like how
the candidates paid for college.
The level of student involvement and the heavy use
of social media will set a new
standard for political debates,
predicted Ryan Bounsy, a senior
political science major who
participated in the Herald’s
focus group of six UMass Lowell students and three faculty
members. During the debate,
focus group members shared
their reactions with a Herald
reporter and formulated a question, which was then posed to
the candidates.
“This is a perfect example
of how an activity like a
political debate can be a real
learning experience for students that they cannot get in
a classroom. As a result, this
enriches their education at
UMass Lowell and engages
them in the community,” said
Prof. Frank Talty, director of
the Center for Public Opinion.
UMass Lowell students participated in the Senate
debate in many ways — as panelists, focus group
members and as timekeepers (above).
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Ourworld
Ground has broken on South Campus for
a new academic building that will be home
to health and social sciences programs.
Prof. Regina Panasuk
REGINA PANASUK
NAMED UNIVERSITY
PROFESSOR
Major Projects Give
UMass Lowell Campus
an Exciting New Look
The hammers were swinging all summer as two major projects—the
construction of the Emerging Technologies and Innovation Center
(ETIC) on North Campus and the Health and Social Sciences
Building (HSSB) on South—as well as myriad major renovations
took shape.
The ETIC will bring together world-renowned and next-generation
research leaders to develop solutions to complex scientific challenges
facing society today—energy, health, environment, communications Robert ’71 and Gail Ward tour the future Robert
and security. The building will open in fall 2012. The Health and & Gail Ward Biomedical Materials Development
Social Sciences Building will provide much needed additional in- Laboratory in the Emerging Technologies and
structional space and faculty offices. The four-story atrium lobby, Innovation Center, currently under construction.
with skylights and multiple gathering areas, will promote student and Read more about the Wards on page 36.
faculty interactions. The building will open in spring 2013.
Meanwhile, O’Leary Library on South Campus is being retooled as the O’Leary Library Learning Commons.
The first floor will offer students a beautiful new resource: a Library Learning Commons with comfortable,
relaxed learning spaces, the latest technology and software and access to the information and assistance they
need to study, collaborate, conduct research and write papers. Starbucks, already open on the first floor, is a great
new plus for students, faculty, staff and visitors.
A University Crossing Steering Committee is considering options for renovations and uses of that facility at
the corner of Pawtucket and Merrimack streets. The plan is that it will serve as a unifying hub with studentfocused activities and services.
Other projects completed or nearly so include upgraded classrooms, residence spaces, faculty offices, labs and
infrastructure improvements.
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Prof. Regina M. Panasuk
of the Graduate School of
Education, acclaimed by
fellow faculty members
and students alike for her
outstanding service to
UMass Lowell for nearly two
decades, has been awarded
the distinguished title of
University Professor.
Panasuk is “an exceptional professor … who works
harder than could be reasonably expected of any individual because she loves her
career and is dedicated to
improving the quality of
mathematics education for
all,” says Anita Greenwood,
interim dean of the Graduate School of Education.
The appointment carries
with it a stipend of $10,000,
release from teaching one
class each semester and the
commitment to deliver a
University Professor lecture,
which, in this case, will take
place during the spring 2012
semester. The three-year
appointment, which runs
through August of 2014,
is the highest distinction
bestowed on a UMass Lowell
faculty member.
C A M P U S
The Poster Child
Kay Ryan, a former U.S. poet
Laureate and winner of the 2011
Pulitzer Prize for poetry, visited
campus recently.
PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING POET VISITS CAMPUS
Poet Kay Ryan drew a crowd of
approximately 200 for a reading
recently and then kept them
laughing. Ryan, a former U.S.
poet Laureate and winner of the
2011 Pulitzer Prize for poetry, read
from her latest book, “The Best
of It: New and Selected Poems.”
“Kay is highly decorated but
her poems are not,” said English
Department faculty member
Maggie Dietz in her introduction
of the poet. She noted that
Ryan’s poems have been compared to Fabergé eggs or Joseph
N E W S
Cornell boxes, “which is to say
it’s a delight to open them and
discover what’s inside.” Ryan
took the podium declaring that
after such a fine introduction
she felt inspired to go write some
more poems immediately.
English Department Chair
Tony Szczesiul said Ryan’s visit
marked an important day for
the department, which has
grown significantly over the past
two years and recently added a
concentration in creative writing.
Legal Studies Professor Michael E. Jones—who has not only a J.D. from
Miami University, but also an MBA from the Wharton School at the
University of Pennsylvania—is also an accomplished author, district court
judge, globally ranked triathlete and painter.
The last talent has brought his latest honor. Jones was selected to create
the image that will serve as the official triathlon poster for the 2012 Olympics
in London. His original painting will be made into posters and sold throughout
the Olympic venue and at the USA Olympic Trials and national championship
triathlon race.
“It’s a pretty cool honor,” says Jones, who also had paintings selected for
Olympic posters at the 2004 and 2008 games.
The Pelham, N.H., native’s connection
to the Olympics is deep. A teammate of
Mark Spitz on the U.S. national swim
team in the 1970s, Jones made it to the
Olympic Trials in 1972.
“Not all first dreams come true,” he
says. “I’m completely happy with who I
am and how things turned out. So many
athletes live in the past. I respect and
honor the past—but I don’t want to live
in it. After all, I made the Olympic games,
just in a different way.”
The 2012 Olympics triathlon poster
will be based on this painting by Prof.
Michael E. Jones.
Weasels Have Problems, Too
“The Weasel Problem” multimedia installation by Provincetown artists
Zehra Kahn and Tim Winn was on exhibit in the University Gallery in October.
Coordinated by the Art Department and sponsored by the College of Fine Arts,
Humanities, and Social Sciences, the non-profit University Gallery exhibits the
work of regionally and nationally recognized professional artists.
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Ourworld
UMass Lowell
Named a Tree
Campus USA
UMass Lowell is New England’s
first college to be designated an
official Tree Campus USA by the
Nebraska-based Arbor Day Foundation. Superintendent of Grounds
Ryan McCaughey says the University
meets five standards for tree care
and community engagement:
a campus tree advisory committee,
a campus tree-care plan, an annual
budget for tree care, involvement
in observing Arbor Day and a
service-learning project aimed
at engaging the student body.
FACULTY TOPS 500
This fall, UMass Lowell reached a
new milestone, as the semester
began with 503 faculty members,
a record for the campus. Overall
enrollments have increased by more
than 30 percent in the past three
years due to improved retention
rates and an increased number of
incoming students. The campus
now has more than 14,000 students,
including undergraduate, graduate
and continuing studies levels. New
faculty members have been recruited across disciplines to respond to
these enrollment increases.
UMASS LOWELL
ONLINE BREAKS RECORD
UMass Lowell saw a record-breaking 18,558 online enrollments in
the last academic year, up more
than 10 percent over a year ago.
Programs include fully online bachelor’s degrees in fields like liberal
arts, psychology and information
technology. Online graduate study
options include 10 master’s degrees
in areas like business administration
and education, and a variety of
certificates. Highly specialized
6
programs created in response to
demand from employers and
students are another hallmark of
UMass Lowell’s online offerings and
include new certificates in fields
like network security, victim studies
and sleep disorder treatment.
MBA PROGRAM AMONG
BEST IN COUNTRY
For the fifth year in a row,
UMass Lowell’s Manning School
of Business has been named one
of the best business schools in the
country by the Princeton Review.
In its newly published book, “The
Best 294 Business Schools: 2012
Edition,” the education services
company recommends UMass
Lowell as one of the top universities for earning a master’s of
business administration. Enrollment in the University’s MBA
program is up 17 percent this year,
according to Prof. Gary Mucica,
director of graduate programs at
the Manning School. Contributing to that increase is the new
full-time MBA program, which
was introduced this semester, and
the popularity of online courses.
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CHECK OUT THE NEW UML.EDU!
After months of research, design iterations and rewriting, the new
UMass Lowell website was launched this fall. Geared toward students,
the color scheme is meant to convey the excitement and momentum
of the campus. The overall design is much wider, providing more space
to display content. It incorporates best practices for higher education
websites, as well as recommendations from a web consultant.
Visitors will notice streamlined navigation, including horizontal topic
areas and pull down menus, flash landing pages with bigger pictures
and video, and seamless incorporation of social media. Future improvements will include a mobile site, multiple languages and personalization. Let us know what you think at www.uml.edu/feedback/.
C A M P U S
Luring Tourists Underground
SUBWAY CAMPAIGN FEATURES PROFESSOR MINKKINEN’S PHOTOS
His photographs are displayed in galleries
around the world—including New York’s
Museum of Modern Art, Boston’s Museum
of Fine Arts and Musée d'Élysée in Lausanne, Switzerland. But for Art Prof. Arno
Minkkinen, displaying work in the Paris
underground—on billboards throughout
the city’s Metro stations—is a first.
“The Finnish Tourist Board contacted
me to ask if I would let them use my work
in their efforts to boost tourism from
France,” Minkkinen says. “This has been,
by far, the most wonderful and unusual
display of my work—to be able to promote
my homeland in one of my favorite cities
…wow! Magnifique!”
The images—displayed in high-traffic
metro stations and on billboards throughout
the city—share the beauty of Finland with
minimal supporting text, letting the photographs tell the story.
Closer to home, Minkkinen was recently
selected as the University’s third recipient
of the Nancy Donahue Endowed Professorship in the Arts, created by patrons
Richard and Nancy Donahue to support
the University’s music, art and theater
programs by strengthening ties to local
music, arts and theater communities.
Minkkinen says he’s honored to be
among previous Donahue scholars, Music
Prof. Kay George Roberts and English
Prof. Andre Dubus. “I am indeed honored,
especially considering the first two Donahue
scholars,” he says, adding that he’s using
the position to create exciting community
service applications.
UMASS LOWELL
SCHOLAR WINS
NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
Peace activist and UMass
Lowell Greeley Scholar
Leymah Gbowee was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
in October.
“As UMass Lowell’s 2011
Greeley Peace Scholar,
Gbowee contributed to our
understanding of how deep
and lasting conflicts can be
N E W S
resolved through peaceful
means,” says Chancellor
Marty Meehan. “During her
participation earlier this year
in the University’s International Women Leaders
Summit, Gbowee inspired
us with her courage and her
unflagging commitment
to peace and equality. As
Nobel Peace Laureate, she
will continue to mobilize
and unite people.”
Get on the Bus!
What better way to get high school students excited
about the nursing profession than to give them
hands-on experience? UMass Lowell nursing faculty
is taking this idea on the road in the form of a 34foot bus that is home to two realistic mannequins—
birthing mother “Noelle” and newborn “Hal.” By
simulating functions of the human body such as
breathing, crying, talking and assuming medical
conditions, the high-tech mannequins offer students
a fun and intriguing way to find out if the nursing
profession is for them.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services awarded the UMass Lowell Nursing Department
a $298,990 grant for the “On the Move for Nursing’s
Future” mobile simulation laboratory to reach out
to diverse and underserved populations in the Merrimack Valley.
Arno Minkkinen’s work is shown in a Paris Metro
station—one of many installations throughout the city.
“Despite the current down economy, the shortage of nurses is still expected to be significant as the
population ages,” says nursing Prof. Jacqueline
Dowling, the project’s lead manager. “With this
mobile laboratory, we’re able to bring the technology into the community and have the students
interact with the patient simulators in a way that
will engage them.”
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Ourworld
From Millworkers
to Microchips:
Lowell’s Journey
to Geekhood
By David Perry
Feeling geeky? Raise your geek flag high. You are not alone. Lowell,
thanks in large part to UMass Lowell, is transcending its history of hard
labor and blue-collar struggle. Brawn is being swapped for brains.
In its annual Science and Engineering Indicators report, the U.S.
National Science Foundation has dubbed greater Lowell the sixth
“geekiest” city in the nation on a Top 20 list. The Mill City is lodged
smack between Durham, N.C., and Washington, D.C. San Jose, Calif.,
in the Silicon Valley, tops the list.
The study measures the percentage of a city’s workforce in occupations
that require at least some technical knowledge or training, including
at least a bachelor’s degree. The report, recently released in Forbes
magazine, says 14.1 percent of the area’s workforce—16,580 workers—
are employed at such technology companies as Kronos Inc., Jabil Circuit
and Juniper Networks. The report includes Billerica and Chelmsford in
the “Lowell area.”
“I find it particularly interesting because Lowell has been traditionally
viewed as a place filled with mills and industrial history,” says Robert
Malloy, UMass Lowell professor and department chair of Plastics
Engineering. “It’s a real indication of how much things have changed.
We’ve gone from an untrained labor force to a work force that is much
more innovative.”
Long before it was known as UMass Lowell, the University was
producing engineers and other brainy grads.
Rich Miner, a partner in Google Ventures and co-founder of Android,
earned a bachelor’s degree in computer science in 1986 and his master’s
in 1989 from then-University of Lowell and his Ph.D. in 1997 from
UMass Lowell. Even in the shadow of some of the best-known engineering
and science schools, UMass Lowell was doing its part to produce workready geeks.
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“It’s been around for a while,” said Miner by phone from his Cambridge
office. “It’s not new. You had technical companies like Mercury Computer
Systems, Allied, Wang. What this sounds like is the recognition that
there’s a super-bright, well-trained and very skilled student body and
everybody should be recruiting them.”
UMass Lowell is becoming even more deeply woven into the fabric
of the city. It is considered a main feeder to the city’s workforce. With
the University’s dedication to preparing work-ready graduates for life in
the real world, it could get a lot geekier.
“Having the University as a major player in the city’s development
and energy certainly go hand in hand with the creative economy,” says
Lowell City Manager Bernie Lynch. “I think of geeks as being creative
people, big thinkers, people who embrace social media, new technologies.
Geeky is good. Steve Jobs, Barack Obama and Bill Gates are the sort of
names that come to mind. They are considered geeks, or were at one
time. Which says some good things about geeks.”
UMass Lowell’s part in meeting the future head-on is invested deeply
in “nanotechnology, cutting-edge plastics, biodegradables and the like,”
adds Lynch. “They’re forward-thinking things they are putting into the
pipeline, and it is attracting people to the city.”
Like the $70 million Emerging Technologies and Innovation Center
rising on North Campus?
“That’s the idea,” says Malloy. “But you know, I don’t think of our
students as ‘geeks’ in the least. There are some schools known as centers
for such things that might fit the geek tag. I guess the term implies hightech. I think of our students as scientists and engineers, people capable
of understanding things and having an interest in things that not a lot of
people understand. Our students may be smart, but they’re also ready to
work in the mainstream, to work hard, to connect well with people.”
C A M P U S
LONGTIME LIBRARY
DIRECTOR RETIRES
The End
of an Era
for NASA
UMass Lowell librarian
Pat Noreau says that
although much in her industry changed during her four
decades at the University,
one thing remains the same:
“I’ve always felt that the
most important thing for a
reference librarian is to be
good at customer service,”
she says.
Noreau would know.
She joined the University in
April 1970, when it was the
Lowell Technological Institute. After the merger of
Lowell State and Lowell
Tech, she became the head
of the unified serials department and subsequently was
appointed head of technical
services. She retired, as
director, this summer.
For all of her years here,
Noreau focused on addressing the needs of her customers: students. But how
she and her co-workers addressed those needs changed
drastically over the years.
For the first half of her
tenure, the emphasis was on
“how large your physical collection is—how many books
and journals you have,” she
Edwin Aguirre, the science and
technology writer in UMass Lowell’s Public Affairs Office, was in
Cape Canaveral, Fla., when the
space shuttle Atlantis embarked
on its final 13-day mission with a
picture-perfect launch this summer.
Witnessed by hundreds of thousands of people gathered at
NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, as
well as millions more glued to live
TV and web broadcasts around
the world, the launch marked the
beginning of the end for America’s
storied three-decades long space
shuttle program.
Atlantis’s primary objective was
to deliver the shuttle payload to
the crew of the orbiting International Space Station (ISS). The cargo
includes a multi-purpose logistics
module filled with spare parts and
nearly five tons of supplies for the
space station, as well as a pair of
Android smartphones that UMass
Lowell alumnus Mark Micire ’10
helped develop. The smartphones
are designed to control a trio
of miniature free-flying robots
residing in the ISS.
Forty seconds after it left the
launch pad for the final time,
Atlantis was gone, but people
could still hear the shuttle’s rattling
sound and follow the dark, curving
shadow cast by its smoke trail on
the cloud tops. “Squinting our eyes
and craning our necks, we tried to
catch one last glimpse of Atlantis
in flight,” Aguirre says. “Soon
afterward, people cheered,
hugged, shook hands and highfived. Everyone had a big smile—
Atlantis had just put on the most
spectacular fireworks of the year,
and we had a ringside seat to it!”
Photo: Edwin Aguirre/Imelda Joson
Staffer Covers
Last Shuttle Mission
Newly retired Director of
Libraries Pat Noreau enjoys
a coffee at Starbucks, which
recently opened in the space
previously occupied by her
office at O’Leary Library.
N E W S
says. That changed, however, with the advent of the
digital world.
Over the next decade,
the library staff began building an online collection,
with, for instance, the buying of robust, sophisticated
databases.
“Under Pat’s direction,
the library developed one
of the nation’s first online
digital collections with the
journal collection growing
from 2,000 paper titles to
more than 40,000 online
titles,” says Interim Director
Rosanna Kowalewski.
Prof. Emeritus Bodo Reinisch
PROFESSOR WINS
PRESTIGIOUS
PHYSICS PRIZE
“It was like winning the
equivalent of the Nobel
Prize for the field of radio
science!”
That’s how Prof. Emeritus Bodo Reinisch of the
Environmental, Earth and
Atmospheric Sciences
Department described the
news that the International
Union of Radio Science
has chosen him to receive
the prestigious Appleton
Prize for “outstanding
contributions to studies in
ionospheric physics.”
Reinisch, former director
of UMass Lowell’s Center
for Atmospheric Research,
was cited for “revolutionizing radio sounding from
ground and space.”
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9
Ourworld
Lynda Barry Wows
as Artist-in-Residence
Renowned artist and writer Lynda
Barry left her creative mark on
campus as the fall 2011 Artist-inResidence for the UMass Lowell
Center for Arts & Ideas. For the last
several decades, Barry has shared
her passion for art, writing and life
through “Ernie Pook’s Comeek”—
a cornerstone of the alternative
comic world—and numerous
graphic novels, books and, most
recently, creativity workshops.
“I’ve absolutely loved my time
here at UMass Lowell and I’m
jealous of everyone who gets to
come here,” she says. “I would
study here in a second, I would
teach here in a second, it’s just an
excellent place to be.”
Barry’s stay at the University
included teaching several master
classes, one-on-one meetings with
students and professors, a standing-room-only lecture and a workshop for students and professors.
A self-portrait by Lynda Barry
10
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
Student scene
Heather Jaffe practices her TV
weather-forecasting skills in
front of the “green screen” at
the New England Cable News
Network studio.
STUDENT, ALUM
KEEP TABS ON NEW
ENGLAND WEATHER
On the afternoon of June 1,
an outbreak of tornadoes
with winds exceeding 135
miles per hour struck western Massachusetts. Residents in Springfield only
had about 10 minutes’ warning that a powerful twister
was approaching their city.
The tornadoes—the
strongest to hit New England since the 1953 twister
in Worcester—killed four
people and left hundreds
more injured or homeless.
Kristina Oakland, a 21year-old student in UMass
Lowell’s Environmental,
Earth and Atmospheric
Sciences Department, was
on her first day as a meteorology intern at the New
England Cable News
(NECN) studio in Newton
when the tornadoes struck.
“It was absolutely crazy!”
she says. “I rushed the alerts
from the National Weather
Service to NECN meteorologist Matt Noyes for his
live TV broadcast. I also
answered the phone and
took down information the
viewers were sending in.
Watching the formation of
the storms on the Doppler
radar was amazing, but at the
same time it was frightening
to see the power of these
tornadoes. I was one of the
first to see pictures and
videos from Springfield and
neighboring towns before
they were aired and I was
speechless. It was a scary,
exciting first day.”
Also interning at NECN
is Heather Jaffe, who graduated from UMass Lowell
in May with a degree in
atmospheric sciences.
“I was in the studio two
days after the tornadoes
struck,” says Jaffe. “The
aftermath was very devastating. Still, we are very fortunate we had such good
coverage of these storms,
giving people at least 10
minutes to take cover in
their basements before the
twisters touched down.
This was my first experience
dealing with tornadoes, and
hopefully my last until I
decide to go to the midwest
to storm-chase!”
C A M P U S
Im received her master’s
degree from Pusan National
University in South Korea
in 2005. She is now working
on developing the “Mini
Mutt,” a chemical sensor
designed to detect organic
vapors and explosives using
gold nanoparticles and
conducting polymers.
MODEL U.N. TEAM
WINS BIG IN TURKEY
Preparation and commitment paid off for UMass
Lowell students who competed in the Model United
Nations competition held in
Antalya, Turkey, recently.
The team members, drawn
from the Dean Bergeron
International Relations
Club, won six awards—
taking honors in more than
half the committees they
served on, and winning
more awards and honorable
mentions than any other
school at the conference.
“Being the only U.S.
school was tough,” says the
club’s faculty adviser, Jason
Carter, adjunct professor
N E W S
of political science. “Our
students had to work a bit
harder to overcome the
negative stereotypes others
had. More than one student
was asked, ‘Are you a typical
American? You’re the first
one I’ve ever met.’ So they
found themselves explaining
the diversity of American
culture.”
The UMass Lowell
students faced 300 delegates
from 20 other colleges
and universities.
STUDENTS NAMED
TRIPATHY FELLOWS
Two Ph.D. candidates—
Abhishek Kumar in physics
and Jisun Im in chemistry—
were each awarded the 2011
Tripathy Memorial Endowed
Graduate Fellowship in
recognition of their academic accomplishments and
multidisciplinary research
in the areas of materials
science and polymer
science. Each received a
$6,500 research stipend
for the summer.
Kumar received his master’s degree from the Indian
Institute of Technology in
Kanpur, India, in 2005.
His current investigation
deals with the development
of a highly sensitive optical
sensor that uses organic
fluorescent materials to
detect trace amounts of
explosives in the air.
UMass Lowell grad student Molly Clay, center, conducts diffraction experiments in a physics class
at Lowell High School.
Students Make Waves in
Lowell and Lawrence Schools
Eileen Montbleau says she loves watching science come alive for her ninth grade
students at Lowell High School—thanks to graduate students from UMass Lowell. “It’s
great to see my students have the opportunity to be engaged in different lab activities
that I don’t have the resources or expertise to provide,” says the science teacher,
referring to the Vibes and Waves program.
Since 2009, the program—which is funded by a five-year $2.4 million grant from
the National Science Foundation—has connected UMass Lowell graduate students in
science, math, education and engineering with high school teachers and students in
the Lowell and Lawrence school districts.
Vibes and Waves helps the grad students learn how to effectively communicate the
nature and significance of their research to a diverse lay audience, and the high school
students get a chance to hear about exciting university-level research they otherwise
wouldn’t be exposed to.
“Being in the classroom and working with high-school students is very fulfilling,”
says Molly Clay, a chemical engineering graduate student. “And being a role model for
them and opening up their eyes to new ideas and research is wonderful.”
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11
Student scene
Team Massachusetts’ solar home finished fourth in the
Affordability category, second in Energy Balance and
fourth in Market Appeal in the U.S. Department of
Energy’s biennial Solar Decathlon.
(Credit: Stefano Paltera/U.S. Department of Energy)
STUDENTS HELP SHARPEN SKATERS‘ SKILLS
Students’ Solar Home
Places Ninth in National Contest
Team Massachusetts—made up of energy engineering students from UMass Lowell
and architecture students from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design—won
ninth place in the U.S. Department of Energy’s biennial Solar Decathlon competition
held in late September in Washington, D.C. The team beat 10 other collegiate teams
from the United States, Canada, Belgium and China.
“This is the best showing ever by any Massachusetts team, public or private, in the
history of the Solar Decathlon,” says Engineering Dean John Ting. “I think we had
one of the most livable, energy-efficient, thoughtfully designed and executed homes.
As proof, I believe we were the first home to be sold to a private owner, with the
proceeds going to help defray the institutional costs of this project.”
A number of donors, sponsors and volunteers contributed materials and services to
the project, including Epoch Homes, which fabricated the house at the company’s
factory in Pembroke, N.H., and Saint-Gobain North America, a global company with
more than 190,000 employees in 64 countries, which donated about 30 different
products used in the construction of the team’s home. Other donors included Nordic
Engineered Wood, Solectria Renewables, Sundrum Solar, Boott Hydropower and Enel
Green Power North America.
The team’s entry—designed to house a family of three and to be completely
powered by the sun—finished fourth in the Affordability category, second in Energy
Balance and fourth in Market Appeal (three of the 10 individual contests that formed
the overall “decathlon”). Overall, the University of Maryland won first place, followed
by Purdue University and Victoria University in New Zealand.
“It was a dream project for us,” says Apurav Jain, who is pursuing a master’s degree
in solar engineering and plans to set up his own solar energy company in India after
graduation. “We received a lot of practical experience and knowledge on how to go
about installing photovoltaic panels and designing our system to comply with the
national electrical code, among other things. It helped us better understand the
concepts we learned in the classroom.”
Other members of the 2011 UMass Lowell team included Christopher Bradley,
John Connor, Milo DiPaola, Erik Jordan, Srilakshmi Kurmana, Tim Lee, Abdelwahed
Nabat, Kemmeng Peng, Raam Perumal, Matthew Polese, Julianne Rhoads,Walter
Thomas and Anant Wadalkar. Their faculty adviser was Prof. Robert Parkin of
mechanical engineering.
12
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
By assessing the strength
and power of 40 figure
skaters at the Reggie Lewis
Track Athletic Center in
Boston, physical therapy
and exercise physiology
students applied classroom
learning to the real world.
“It allowed them to use
the skills they learned in
the classroom in a real work
setting,” says Assoc. Prof.
Cynthia Ferrara of exercise
physiology, who serves on
the Sports Medicine and
Sports Science Committee
for U.S. Figure Skating.
Second-year doctor of
physical therapy students
Celine DeMaggio, Connor
Ryan and Heather Jones and
senior exercise physiology
students Molly Nowill and
Greg Titus, along with
Ferrara, tested each of
the skater’s abilities using
the standards set by U.S.
Skating.
“Screening skaters
helped me put to use some
of the tests that we performed in our exercise
physiology labs,” says Nowill. “It was a positive experience that really helped me
apply my knowledge of
exercise physiology in a
setting outside of classes.”
Standing, from left, second-year doctor of physical therapy students
Celine DeMaggio, Connor Ryan, Heather Jones and senior exercise
physiology students Molly Nowill and Greg Titus.
STUDENTS DEVELOP SMARTPHONE APPS
Imagine a smartphone app that helps drivers find parking
spots on the UMass Lowell campus. Or one that lets you look
up the location of the University’s shuttle bus in real time.
These are just some of the cool, user-friendly programs
developed recently by students in a computer science graduate course taught by Assoc. Prof. Benyuan Liu. The “UML
Parking Finder” was created by Peng Xia and Shan Lu while
the “UML Shuttle Tracker” was developed by Jason Chan,
I-Hsuan Lin and Xiawei Liu.
The students worked with
the dozen smartphones that
Microsoft had awarded to
Prof. Liu for his teaching
and research. The award was
made possible through the
company’s international
educational partnership
program.
C A M P U S
Washington Internships
Give Capital Gains
Recent UMass Lowell graduate Jeanna McCarthy likens
her summer internship in
Washington, D.C., to a stint
on the reality TV show
“The Apprentice.”
Quick-turnaround group
projects and high-pressure
presentations, complete with
last-minute curveballs, gave
McCarthy a taste of the
real-world demands of the
professional workplace,
all crammed into a 10-week
internship program.
“I learned so much
more than I ever thought
I could in 10 weeks,” says
McCarthy, who interned in
the District of Columbia’s
Office of Contracting and
Procurement. “It was really
rewarding.”
McCarthy, an economics
major, was participating in a
program offered through the
The Washington Center for
Internships and Academic
Seminars (TWC), the
largest program of its kind in
the country. For more than
10 years, dozens of UMass
Lowell students have taken
part in TWC’s programs,
earning up to 12 credits
while working for government agencies, media
outlets, nonprofits, law
firms, lobbyists and private
companies in and around
the nation’s capital.
In addition to doing
internships at places like the
White House, the Department of Homeland Security,
the Washington Post and
the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, students take
a class and participate in a
leadership forum, which
features guest lectures, tours
and panel discussions with
government, military and
business leaders. They also
complete a community en-
gagement project and prepare a final portfolio of all
their work.
Nicholas Bernardo, a
senior English major, spent
last spring semester writing
scripts, editing videos,
crafting press releases and
sharpening his social media
know-how at a TWC internship with RedEye, a
boutique video production
company in Alexandria, Va.
He had previously done a
communications internship
at the Merrimack Valley
Repertory Theatre, but
wanted more experience to
help him stand out in the
job market. “I needed to
give myself a competitive
edge,” he says. “I thought,
Nicholas Bernardo, third from
left, with his brother, Patrick,
a UMass Lowell freshman, his
mother Cathleen Bernardo and
grandfather, David Pelley, on
the steps of the U.S. Capitol.
if I can thrive in the
nation’s capital, I can
thrive anywhere.”
Bernardo took a class
called Power, Politics and
Prose, during which he
studied documents such as
the Declaration of Independence and the Gettysburg Address and then
visited related historic sites.
Looking back, Bernardo says
he gained confidence in his
abilities during the fivemonth experience. “I was
challenged to constantly
think outside the box,” he
says. “When I started, I
hated public speaking. Now
I can get up in front of a
group of people. I feel like
a different person.”
N E W S
FIRST STUDENT VETERANS SERVICES
OFFICE OPENS ON CAMPUS
For the first time, veterans
studying at UMass Lowell
will have a space on campus
to go to for assistance and to
call their own. The Student
Veterans Services Office in
McGauvran Hall has study
space, a kitchenette and
private areas for conversation. On one wall hangs
a map of the world with
pins showing where the
veterans served.
It’s a place for student
veterans to meet and get
help with college life. Janine
Wert, newly appointed director of Veterans Services,
says that the veterans on
campus and in classes—more
than 600—can offer UMass
Lowell unique insight.
“These are students with different needs, but they have
experiences that other students don’t have,” she says.
UMass Lowell ROTC founding colonel Walter Kelly,
right, paid a visit to Lt. Col. Matthew McSwain on
campus recently.
AIR FORCE ROTC NAMED BEST
DETACHMENT IN REGION
The Air Force ROTC on campus, Detachment #345—
which celebrated its 60th birthday in 2011—has
been named the best small detachment in the
Northeast. The award is for a two-year record of
achievement in several categories, including cadet
activities, university relations and education. “I am
so proud of this team and our cadets, and all that
these extraordinary young people are doing on
campus and around Lowell,” says Lt. Col. Matthew
McSwain, Det. #345 commander, noting that enrollment is the highest in 12 years, with a jump of 59
percent in the past two years.
A solemn Flag Retreat ceremony marked the
60th anniversary of Air Force ROTC Detachment 345
on campus, as alumni, cadets and guests gathered
in memory and celebration. Among them was Col.
Walter Kelly, founder of the University’s ROTC
detachment 60 years ago.
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13
Labnotes
MEDICAL DEVICE
STARTUPS FILLING
M2D2 INCUBATOR
One of the Lab’s many carbon dioxide
submillimeter-wave laser systems
Submillimeter-Wave Lab
Awarded $23 Million
In one of the largest single awards ever received by the University, UMass Lowell’s
Submillimeter-Wave Technology Laboratory (STL) received a grant worth $23 million
over five years from the U.S. Army’s National Ground Intelligence Center.
“This grant is a continuation of our program to assist the government in acquiring
and analyzing surveillance radar imagery,” says Physics Prof. Robert Giles, who directs
the STL. “Our research is focused on using terahertz frequency sources and receivers to
scale the Army’s millimeter-wave and microwave airborne radar systems.”
For the past 30 years, the STL has been at the forefront of developing and applying
technologies to help in military surveillance, homeland security, medical diagnostics
and scientific and academic research.
In 1979, then-STL director (now science adviser) Prof. Jerry Waldman recognized
that emerging terahertz source/receiver technologies could be used to simulate the
military’s sophisticated microwave radar systems in the laboratory. These simulations
could then be used to obtain characteristic radar fingerprints of aircraft, ships, tanks,
trucks and other tactical vehicles
at low cost and very high accuracy.
Such radar fingerprints are useful
for quickly identifying whether an
incoming object in the battlefield
is a friend or foe.
Since then, the STL has used
its unique capabilities to fulfill radar
measurement requests from Department of Defense agencies as well
as defense-related laboratories and
companies, including MIT Lincoln
Lab, Boeing, Lockheed-Martin and
Raytheon. STL’s efforts have also
successfully spun-off to medical ap- STL Engineering Director Michael Coulombe works on
plications, especially in detecting a solid-state, high-resolution Terahertz radar system.
non-melanoma skin cancer.
14
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
The Massachusetts Medical
Device Development Center
(M2D2), a business incubator at UMass Lowell, has
eight medical device startups
already in residence in its
laboratory and office space.
The incubator is the result
of a $4 million renovation
that has transformed 14,000
square feet of a former mill
building into a state-ofthe-art facility for emerging
companies.
The University supports
those companies with its expertise in engineering, business management, medical
procedures, prototyping and
clinical trials. M2D2 is a
joint initiative of UMass
Lowell and UMass Medical
School in Worcester to help
companies bridge the large
gap between invention
and production of new
medical devices.
Over the past decade,
Massachusetts’ medical device exports have grown at
more than twice the rate of
the state’s overall exports.
The industry employs nearly
25,000 workers in the Commonwealth and is responsible for creating more than
80,000 jobs in related industries, according to a recent
study by the business consulting company Deloitte
Touche Tohmatsu Ltd.
Gov. Deval Patrick’s
administration provided
funding for the renovation
project, which was managed
by the UMass Building
Authority.
“This facility provides
new opportunities for medical device startup companies,” says UMass Lowell
Prof. Stephen McCarthy,
co-director of M2D2.
“The wet labs, together
with expertise offered by engineering faculty, can help
entrepreneurs design
cutting-edge products that
doctors and clinicians will
want to use.”
RESEARCHERS HELP
STUDENTS BECOME
‘DATA SCIENTISTS’
The National Science Foundation (NSF) awarded a
grant totaling $1.3 million
to UMass Lowell and its
partners to introduce young
students to cyberlearning in
the classroom and help prepare them for the deluge of
data produced by modern
science.
“We’ll focus on training
middle school and high
school students to become
‘data scientists’ engaged in
collecting, sharing and visualizing scientific data over
the Internet,” says computer
science Assoc. Prof. Fred
Martin, the project’s principal investigator.
The project’s core technology is an interactive web
platform called the Internet
System for Networked Sensor Experimentation, or
iSENSE—which provides
a shared repository of usercontributed classroom activities, such as tabletop science experiments, environmental analyses, engineering
projects and surveys, together with the data generated
by these activities.
Asst. Prof. Michelle
Scribner-MacLean of the
Graduate School of Education is co-principal investigator for the project.
C A M P U S
N E W S
Researchers to
Develop Intelligent
Humanlike Robots
A team of researchers from UMass Lowell, the University
of Michigan and Tufts University recently received a
two-year grant of nearly $1.5 million from the National
Science Foundation to create intelligent robot systems
that will navigate more like humans.
For its part, UMass Lowell will receive nearly $409,000
for the project, with Computer Science Prof. Holly
Yanco as principal investigator.
“Our research will develop and evaluate an intelligent
robot capable of being genuinely useful to a human and
capable of natural dialog with a person about their
shared navigation task,” says Yanco. “In particular, the
robots will be able to ask for directions and clarifications
to those directions.”
The team’s work will be tested in two areas: robot
wheelchairs and telepresence robots. Robotic wheelchairs
help people move to their desired destinations while
telepresence robots serve as virtual eyes and ears for a
remote human operator as the robots navigate within
an environment.
Yanco says this research
will create technologies
for mobility assistance
for people with
disabilities in
perception
(blindness or
low vision),
cognition
(developmental
delay or dementia) or general
frailty (old age).
Hugo, an augmented VGo
Communications’ VGo
telepresence robot, is driven
remotely by a human operator (visible on Hugo's
screen). A light-up LED
necktie indicates the robot's
current status.
$4.5 MILLION GRANT WILL IMPROVE EMPLOYEE HEALTH
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has committed
$4.5 million to renew funding of the Center for the Promotion of Health in the
New England Workplace at UMass Lowell and the University of Connecticut.
Originally funded in 2006 with a $5 million grant, the center is a collaborative
research-to-practice program led by Prof. Laura Punnett of Work Environment
at UMass Lowell.
“Our work has made a substantial difference to the health of workers in nursing homes, correctional facilities and other businesses across New England,” says
Punnett. “We’re very excited that NIOSH has awarded this funding so that we
can expand our research to uncover the root causes of how the workplace may
be influencing negative health behaviors.”
For instance, the center is evaluating a program in a chain of more than 200
nursing homes that uses lift devices for residents to prevent back injuries and
musculoskeletal disorders among aides and other caregivers. The team is measuring overall physical and mental health, employee retention, program costs and
workers’ compensation claims.
TRACKING FLU EPIDEMICS VIA TWITTER
Fever. Cough. Sore throat.
Runny nose. Body aches and
headache. Fatigue. These are
some of the classic symptoms
of the flu, a highly contagious respiratory illness
caused by influenza viruses.
Seasonal flu epidemics result
in about 3 to 5 million cases
of severe illness and about
250,000 to 500,000 deaths
worldwide each year.
A team of researchers
from UMass Lowell’s
Computer Science Department, the Harvard Medical
School’s Department of
Population Medicine and
Scientific Systems Co. is
now using online social networks such as Twitter and
Facebook to help improve
the prediction of influenza
levels within a population
and keep track of its spread.
“Studies have shown
that preventive measures
can be taken to contain the
outbreak, provided early
detection can be made,”
says computer science Assoc.
Prof. Benyuan Liu, a member of the team.
Called the Social Network-Enabled Flu Trends,
or SNEFT, the system uses a
continuous data-collection
framework that monitors
all flu-related tweets. The
team’s research is supported
in part with a $200,000
grant from the National
Institutes of Health.
“We consider Twitter
users within the United
States as ‘sensors’ and the
collective message exchanges they post describing
their flu symptoms as
early indicators and robust
predictors of flu activities,”
says Liu.
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15
Labnotes
NSF Grant Funds
$1.3 Million Microscope
A brand-new, state-of-the art microscope is further separating UMass Lowell from its peers. The Auriga focused
ion-beam scanning electron microscope (FIB-SEM),
manufactured by German optics leader Carl Zeiss, will
greatly enhance the University’s research capabilities in
the areas of nano materials and biological sciences.
“This Zeiss FIB-SEM system can resolve details
as tiny as one nanometer, or a billionth of a meter, and
magnify views up to a million times,” says Earl Ada,
Ph.D., who manages the Campus Materials Characterization Laboratory, where the microscope is located.
“It offers the highest
resolution in scanning
electron microscopy today,” he says. “UMass
Lowell is one of only a
handful of educational
institutions in the
Northeast that has this
advanced capability.”
The purchase of the
$1.3 million microscope
was made possible by a
$1.15 million grant from
the National Science
Foundation (NSF). The
University shouldered
the rest of the cost.
UMass Lowell’s brand-new Auriga focused ion-beam
scanning electron microscope made by Carl Zeiss is
located in the Materials Characterization Laboratory
on North Campus.
AWARDS & GRANTS
PROJECT FIGHTS ASTHMA
UMass Lowell researchers
and community health
workers have won a round
in the fight against childhood asthma, thanks to
The Healthy Homes
Program. Funded with grants
from the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban
Development, the team
recently released test results
from its first two years of
work to identify and eliminate asthma triggers in
the home.
The findings? The team’s
efforts prompted a significant drop in the number of
times a child experienced
wheezing, had an asthma
attack or trouble breathing,
or visited a doctor’s office
or clinic for asthma
problems.
“I was pleasantly
surprised by the positive
results and measurable
improvements,” says David
Turcotte, the research
professor who directs the
a goal of limiting worker exposures to
toxic commercial disinfection formulations.
History Prof. Robert Forrant and Economics
Prof. Carol McDonough: $10,000 from the
Verizon Foundation to continue a UMass
Lowell partnership grant to expand access to
high-speed Internet access for underserved
populations.
Biology Asst. Prof. Rick Hochberg: $598,976
from the National Science Foundation to
study the biodiversity of the Cayman Islands,
which has led to identification of a new
species of worm.
Biology Asst. Prof. Jessica Garb: $294,656
from the U.S. National Institutes of Health
to research how the venom of black widow
spiders became so powerful.
Physics Prof. Silas Laycock: $56,707 grant by
the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
to study X-ray binary star systems in IC 10, a
dwarf irregular galaxy 2.2 million light-years
away in the constellation Cassiopeia.
Asst. Prof. Nancy Goodyear of Clinical Laboratories and Nutritional Sciences: $20,000 from
the Toxics Use Reduction Institute to evaluate
disinfection in homes and hospitals, with
16
The Healthy Homes Program is reducing asthmatic
episodes in children, allowing them to become more active.
Asst. Prof. Ramaswamy Nagarajan of Plastics
Engineering: $20,000 from the Toxics Use
Reduction Institute to test safer surfactants
for laundry detergents.
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
Healthy Homes Program.
“These were significant
changes.”
Turcotte attributes the
project’s success to its intensive, multivisit approach.
Two-person teams—a community outreach worker and
UMass Lowell researcher—
visited each household to
explain the study and conduct an environmental assessment. The team then
arranged for necessary interventions, from instituting
pest management to arranging for repairs, industrial
cleaning or installation of
hardwood floors in place of
carpeting. Four or five home
visits over a one-year period
helped families maintain
their efforts.
More than 75 staff
members of partner organizations have been trained on
how to incorporate Healthy
Homes knowledge and intervention during their own
visits. In-home day care
providers also received training. Partners include the
Lowell Community Health
Center, the Coalition for a
Better Acre, Community
Teamwork Inc., the Lowell
Housing Authority and the
Merrimack Valley Housing
Partnership.
Physics Assoc. Prof. Viktor Podolskiy: $261,265
from the National Science Foundation to
develop a new approach to camera imaging
and focusing of light to improve resolution
and eliminate the need for components like
lenses and mirrors.
Assoc. Prof. Daniel Schmidt of Plastics
Engineering: $20,000 from the Toxics Use
Reduction Institute to develop and test a safer
formulation for adhesives based on plant oils
and other nonhazardous ingredients.
Chemical Engineering Asst. Prof. Seongkyu
Yoon: $150,000 from the UMass President’s
Office Science and Technology Initiatives Fund
to create a biopharmaceutical process and
quality consortium.
Sportsupdate
C A M P U S
N E W S
‘We’re Just Getting
Warmed Up’
By Geoffrey Douglas
Women’s Coach Makes Rowers of Middle-Schoolers, Wins Races Along the Way
“I
feel like I’ve spent my whole life
preparing for this,” says Veronika
Platzer. This from a woman who already, at 48, has prepared for, faced
and surmounted more challenges than
most of us will ever consider.
Three-time NCAA discus champion. NCAA
Female Track and Field Athlete of the Decade.
World Cup rower. Coach of the U.S. Junior National rowing team. Coach of the NCAA National Champion University of Virginia Women’s
Four rowers. Gold medalist—with UMass Lowell
alumna Ginny LaFreniere ’81—in the 2010
FISA World Rowing Masters Regatta. And, for
the past four years, head coach of the UMass
Lowell Women’s Rowing Program.
Still, it is something else altogether for which,
she says, she has spent her life preparing.
Last summer, if you ever happened to be out
on the Merrimack River on a weekday morning,
you might have seen an oversize, ungainly but
nearly untippable, flat-bottom boat—they call
it the Barge—packed with a crowd of 12- and
13-year-olds, laboring over their oars. This was
Platzer’s brainchild: Year One of the UMass
Lowell youth rowing program, designed to bring
the basics of what Coach Platzer says too many
still see as an “elitist sport” into the lives—and
hearts—of the city’s middle-schoolers.
“It’s a hard sport to support,” she concedes. “It’s
expensive, for one thing. And the communitymembers have every right to ask, ‘Just what is
this doing for me?’ Well, I’m trying to create a
community rowing center—both to teach the
sport and to make it accessible—not just for
NCAA athletes, but for everyone who wants to
learn, for citizens of the world.”
And so, working with Cheryl Saba, athletic
director at the Ste. Jeanne d’Arc School, Platzer
launched the new program at the end of the
school year in June, drawing roughly 100 kids
by summer’s end. The cost for the four-day program was $50 per student; David Cormier, president of the UMass Lowell men’s crew, served
as coach. At the end of every week’s program,
he told a reporter in July, he’d have several kids
approach him to ask “if there was some highschool team or club they could join. Some of
them even said they [wanted to] come back and
row for UMass Lowell someday.”
“Giving our athletes [like Cormier] responsibility for coaching is an important piece of the
program,” says Platzer. “It instills in them a real
love, and respect, for the sport. It teaches the
importance of doing things with purpose.
“I’ll tell you, I’m as proud of this program as
I am of anything I’ve done with women’s crew.”
That’s saying something—there’s a lot to be
proud of when it comes to women’s crew.
A program that didn’t have enough rowers to
fill an eight-woman boat when Platzer arrived
four years ago (following a $1 million-dollar infusion of state funding for renovations to Bellegarde Boathouse in 2007, women’s crew last
year made the move to varsity status), now
boasts a Varsity Eight as well as a Varsity Four—
fulfilling the NCAA standard—with a Novice
Four to serve as a feeder for the future. At this
fall’s 32nd annual Textile River Regatta—with
650 boats, the largest one-day rowing event in
the United States—the Varsity Eight placed
third, just 16 seconds behind the winning boat;
in the women’s novice sculling division, firstyear student Erinn McLaughlin captured the
program’s first-ever gold medal.
The next challenge, as of press-time for this
magazine, was to be the Head of the Charles regatta in Cambridge—with 56 events and more
than 1,700 boats, among the largest and most
prestigious in the world—to which UMass Lowell
had been invited.
“I don’t expect us to win anything this year,”
Platzer conceded two weeks before Race Day.
“We’re still in a building mode. But in two or
three more years? Look for us to have a very real
chance.
“Stay tuned. We’re just getting warmed up.”
W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2 UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE
17
Sportsupdate
A
E
B
C
D
18
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
C A M P U S
‘Soaring With Pride’
E F F O R T
M
L I F T S
eticulously curated and stretching along the
long front lobby of Costello Athletic Center,
the display of individual prowess is staggering.
An Olympic silver medalist, a four-time Stanley
Cup winner, All-Americans, record holders,
outstanding student-athletes, even a father and
son known for different sports in different eras.*
The father, a baseball pitcher and batting champ
from 1955 to 1959 named Leo A. Parent, put up numbers
that still make UMass Lowell Athletic Director Dana
Skinner smile.
“Guy pitches 225 innings and strikes out 392.” He
pauses. “Imagine that.”
The son, Leo J. Parent, played basketball here from
1986 to 89, and was named Most Outstanding Player of
the 1988 NCAA Division II Final Four.
Skinner wants everyone to digest all of the individual
accomplishments in the context of pride—they all
happened at the place now called UMass Lowell. The
“Soaring With Pride” display is intended to mend what
Skinner calls “a disconnect,” thanks in part to the name
changes over the years. From Lowell Technological
Institute, to Lowell State College, the University of
Lowell and UMass Lowell, each era is represented as a
way of creating one brand.
“We’ve come to understand that who we are
is who we were,” says Skinner, quoting John Quincy
Adams, from his U.S. Supreme Court argument in the
“Amistad” case.
And we have been good. Fairly amazing, in some
cases. Consider the coaches.
Hockey coach Bill Reilly took the team from frozen
folly to three Division II national championships over
the course of 22 seasons (1969-91). Logging 363 wins, he
also oversaw the team’s transition to Division I and
Hockey East.
Meanwhile, Jim Stone’s tenure as baseball coach from
1966 to 2003 wasn’t just a matter of longevity. Stone also
amassed an 801-393-7 record.
Similarly, George Davis coached the University’s cross
country/track and field team from 1970 to 2002. He led
the 1991 men’s cross country team to a national title and
during his tenure 78 All-Americans and 34 New England
champions emerged from the ranks of Lowell’s teams.
N E W S
By David Perry
A W A R E N E S S
Shannon Hlebichuk wasn’t just an outstanding field
hockey player from 1994 to 1998, she was the University’s
first-ever NCAA Massachusetts Woman of the Year
in 1997-98. After coming back to coach, she led the
River Hawks field hockey squad to national titles in 2005
and 2010.
And sometimes it was the movers and shakers who
broke through barriers.
Denise Legault and Claire Chamberlain began and
nurtured women’s sports at UMass Lowell (then Lowell
State College), beginning in 1972 with volleyball, followed
by basketball, tennis and softball.
But with all of the accomplishment, there was also a
question of identity.
“I’ve been here 25 years now, and I’ve heard so many
people talking about Lowell Tech, Lowell State, U of
Lowell,” says Skinner. “And there was a disconnect
between people from different eras. Our goal here in
everything we do is to make the University a better place
to be, and a better place to be from.”
Four years ago, five alumni approached Skinner. Bob
Boehm, Gary and Jim Hunt, Hank Brown and Skip Roper
asked him to support a fund-raising campaign for a trophy
case named for Jim Ciszek and Rusty Yarnall. Legends of
Lowell sports, the pair were each longtime coaches at
various incarnations of the University, as well as UMass
Lowell Hall of Fame members. The trophy case was the
seed from which grew the Soaring With Pride campaign.
In addition to Costello, there are displays in the
Tsongas Center and throughout other athletic buildings.
It’s been a year since the displays were hung, and Skinner
says he’s heard great feedback.
“Sometimes, at sporting events, I see people standing
in the corridor, looking at the photos and reading the
captions—captivated by reading about the past,” he says.
*So who are these folks? They are among the best to emerge from
the University’s locker rooms. The Olympic silver medalist is
Shelagh Donohue, who rowed here from 1984 to 1988, and
earned the silver at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. The fourtime Stanley Cup winner is Craig MacTavish, who played hockey
at Lowell from 1977 to 1979 before beginning a long pro career
with the Boston Bruins. All-Americans are numerous, but they
include Ruben Sanca, who ran cross country and track and
field from 2005 to 2008. In addition to being a four-time AllAmerican, Sanca was a three-time New England champion. !
“OUR GOAL
HERE IN EVERYTHING WE DO
IS TO MAKE THE
UNIVERSITY A
BETTER PLACE
TO BE, AND A
BETTER PLACE
TO BE FROM.”
— Dana Skinner
Photos on Page 18
A. Elad Inbar ’04
B. Leo Parent Jr. ’89
C. Nicole Plante ’07
D. Leo Parent Sr. ’59
E. Joanna DaLuze ’06
W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2 UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE
19
Sportsupdate
Sammy Macy Is
Sticking Around
By David Perry
Photo: Bob Ellis
Field Hockey Standout Remains With UMass Lowell
Sole Man
By Chris O’Donnell
Runners Collect Shoes for Third-World Countries
When UMass Lowell junior Steve Fitzsimmons cleaned out his closet earlier this
summer, he was overwhelmed by the number of old running sneakers he found.
He counted 26 pair from high school and his first two years of college.
Fitzsimmons didn’t want to just throw them away. By a distance runner’s
standards, they were tired, flat. But surely someone somewhere could use them.
So he did a search online for donating used running shoes, and found a website
called www.soles4souls.org. He was moved by the videos and photos.
“There was one child who was wearing his mother’s shoes because those were
the only shoes they had for the whole family,” Fitzsimmons says.
The images stuck. The biology major thought about it more and did some
math. He runs 85-90 miles in a typical week. The longevity of a pair running
shoes is about 500 miles, so he figures anywhere between six to eight weeks, he
needs a new pair.
“And I’m just one of 20 to 30 athletes on the men’s [cross country] team,”
Fitzsimmons says.
The Methuen native factored in the 11 other women’s and men’s teams at
UMass Lowell. The potential was overwhelming.
Over the summer, Fitzsimmons brought the idea to Joan Lehoullier, UMass
Lowell’s senior associate director of athletics who oversees the Athletic Department’s
fundraising and community service efforts. Usually, Lehoullier is the one pitching
the community service ideas to UMass Lowell’s athletes.
“I’m always excited when a student-athlete comes to us with an idea for
community service,” Lehoullier says, adding that she immediately registered the
University as a drop location via the Soles4Souls website. Soon after, the
collection boxes arrived.
At the 2011 annual River Hawk Games on Sept. 11, Lehoullier introduced the
effort to UMass Lowell’s 250-plus student-athletes: “A lot of kids came up to us
right away and said it was a great idea,” she says. “Once you get them started,
they’re on board. They’re all looking for a way to help.”
Four days later, the on-campus boxes were overflowing with everything from
Tevas to Bostonians to Nikes. Lehoullier and Fitzsimmons will pack them up and
send them to one of the 10 Soles4Souls warehouses nationwide where they are
cleaned and reconditioned.
“It is something that is relatively easy and does a lot of good,” Fitzsimmons
says. “These shoes are going to people in third-world countries, in crisis relief
situations, people who have never owned a pair of shoes in their lives.” !
20
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
Sitting in a downtown Lowell
caffeine emporium, Sammy
Macy pushes her sunglasses up
onto her long brown hair and
takes a sip of her iced coffee.
Though the 22-year-old is a
new graduate of UMass
Lowell, she says she’s doesn’t
plan to stray far.
Macy, recently named the
nation’s top collegiate Division II female athlete, isn’t
leaving the University or its
field hockey team despite
graduating with a 3.12 GPA
in criminal justice last spring.
The three-time first team
All-American worked with
the River Hawks as an assistant coach this past fall, after
a summer of slinging ice cream
at Dandelions in her native
Tewksbury.
Macy is the first-ever New
England recipient of the DII
female athlete award, “which
makes it even more special,”
says Athletic Director Dana
Skinner. He credits Macy’s
“exhilarating play during the
team’s record-breaking 2011
season” with a large part in the
River Hawks’ 24-0 record, but
also believes the “level of excellence she sustained over
four years” was hard-won,
the result of great dedication.
In February, she will begin
a six-month stay in Australia
to play field hockey with a
team in Queensland.
Macy says her rifle-like
field hockey shot—one of
collegiate field hockey’s most
feared trajectories—was the
result of years of playing softball and hockey. Her sharp,
quick swing came from softball, while her stick-handling
skill sprung from ice hockey.
She sometimes played on
three teams simultaneously,
rendering her father a virtual
taxi service.
Macy discovered field
hockey as a high school
freshman, shortly after she
tired of soccer. Field hockey
was, she says, “new and fun,”
and allowed her to put to
good use her strong sense of
competition. At 5’9”, speed
and reach are among her
offensive weapons.
The 2005 Tewksbury High
School graduate nearly didn’t
become a River Hawk. She
was set to follow her older
brother, Brian, to Northeastern, where she would play field
hockey with scholarship money, but she opted for UMass
Lowell the March before
classes began. She sensed she
would want “more balance” in
her collegiate life than she’d
get at Northeastern. Her high
school coach suggested she
talk to Shannon Hlebichuk,
who was all too happy to make
Macy a River Hawk.
“She’d come to some
clinics I’d run, so I knew her
a little bit,” says Hlebichuk.
“Sammy is such a hard worker,
but she also wanted a balance
between her work, social
and academic lives. We could
offer that.”
“I found the perfect
balance here,” says Macy.
“I am so glad I came.” !
Features
Inside...
22
FROM LOGAN TO LAX
28
COVER STORY
34
ANDRE DUBUS III
36
FACE OF PHILANTHROPHY
38
KILLING FIELDS SURVIVORS
40
CIRCLE OF DISTINCTION
Accounting major Georgios Liakakis ’14
enjoys the unseasonably warm weather
on North Campus this past fall.
W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2 UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE
21
Featurestory
From Logan to LAX,
From Safety to Security
By Geoffrey Douglas
Chief Operating Officer Steve Martin ’71 Reflects on a Changing World
O
n the evening of Jan. 23, 1982, World Airways Flight 30, a DC-10-30 on its
way from Newark to Boston’s Logan Airport, skidded on an icy runway,
broke apart and slid into the waters of Boston Harbor. Two passengers in the
plane’s front row were thrown into the water. Their bodies were never recovered.
“O
ur yearly budget, for security and
safety, is in the hundreds of millions of dollars,
probably greater than for any other single
airport in the U.S. It’s just a massive job.”
— Steve Martin ’71
22
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
F E A T U R E
World Airways Flight 30 in Boston Harbor
Steve Martin ’71,
working at the time
for the Massachusetts
Port Authority, was at
Logan as part of the
team that investigated
the crash. The memory
has stayed with him—
and informed him—
ever since:
“It’s been like this
little tape in my mind: ‘Did we do all that we
could to prevent it?’ ‘What could we have
done differently?’,” says Martin, today the
chief operating officer at Los Angeles World
Airports (LAWA), in charge of LAX and three
other facilities. “The issue in those days was
safety; in today’s world, it’s more geared to security. But the mindset stays with you: ‘Did
we do this?’ ‘Did we do that?’ Have we done
everything we can reasonably do?’”
Martin, who’s been COO at LAWA since
early 2008, is responsible for oversight of all
the airports’ activities: security, administration,
IT, budget, operations, maintenance, commercial development and more. LAX alone, he
says (the world’s sixth-busiest airport, serving
59 million passengers a year) accounts for
roughly 80 percent of his time. Of this, only
15 percent or so is devoted to issues of security.
But it’s an incalculably critical 15 percent.
“There’s a high cognizance of this airport
as a high-profile potential target,” he says by
phone from his office at LAX. “All the federal
agencies have a footprint here—the TSA, the
FBI, all those—plus the LAPD, the airport
police and private security. More people get
arrested here than you’d ever imagine. Our
yearly budget, for security and safety, is in the
hundreds of millions of dollars, probably greater
than for any other single airport in the U.S.
It’s just a massive job.”
Before 9/11, Martin says, airport security
was the provenance of airline contractors, and
began and ended in one spot. No more.
“Now the TSA is in charge, the airlines
are participants, not leaders, in the security
business, and the goal is a layered, continuous
surveillance,” he says, adding that this is especially the case at major airports like LAX.
The layers begin with checkpoints outside
the airport, then continue inside with bombsniffing dogs, patrolling police and TSA agents,
and finally the shoes-off, pockets-empty pre-
S T O R Y
gate security checks—all augmented by the
watch-lists and intelligence gathering that go
on out of sight, and the exhaustive, neverending background checks of everyone from
pilots to baggage handlers and maintenance
employees.
“It’s an endless, daunting, expensive process,”
Martin says. “The passengers, or most of them,
are barely even aware of a lot of it.”
Still, for all the sniffing shepherds, patrolling
uniforms and sophisticated technology, in the
end much of the job comes down to simple
judgment calls, he says: “A passenger has a
gun in his bag, or illegal drugs—is he a terrorist,
a criminal or just a dumb kid? Is he truly a
threat, or just a distraction? That’s a decision
someone has to make.”
One day several years ago, Martin recalls,
airport security officers observed a passenger
with a backpack acting oddly. They approached
him. “I have a bomb in here,” he told them,
and dropped the bag on the ground.
“So what do you do then?” Martin asks.
“Do you close the terminal? Do you close all
nine terminals? Do you shut the whole airport
down? Or is this guy just a distraction? That’s
the call that trained people have to make.”
In the end, Martin says, there was no bomb
in the backpack, and the crisis was defused.
But it might have gone a different way: “A lot
of people, including a lot of law-enforcement
people, get their adrenaline-rush from reacting
to that sort of thing. You can’t be swayed by
that. You’ve got to go with the skilled people,
the ones with training, who stick with protocol—which [in that case] was to bring in a
bomb-sniffing dog, then, if necessary, to get a
robot-device to dispose of the thing.”
For Martin, who brings to his job more
than 25 years of airport and aviation leadership
in both the public and private sectors, it isn’t
so much the prospect of another 9/11, as the
countless small things that go into preventing
one, that keep him awake at night.
“In the end, I guess what I worry about
most is that,” he says, “if something were
to happen, would I be able to look in the
mirror and say I’d done everything I could
have done, everything within reason, to keep
those people safe?”
“You can’t do it all—you can never do it
all. You just aim to get better every day.” !
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23
Featurestory
Campus Gathers a Decade After 9/11
Memorial Honors Those Lost, Focuses on Unity
“UNITY ASKS
US TO REBUILD
AND REPAIR —
REBUILD TRUST
AND REPAIR
RELATIONSHIPS
ACROSS
COMMUNITIES.”
— Campus Minister
Imogene Stulken
24
A
decade after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks
on America claimed nearly 3,000 lives, UMass
Lowell gathered to remember its own family members lost that day.
In the first of a few events planned to mark the
anniversary, Chancellor Marty Meehan and 120 students,
family members and community officials rededicated
Unity, the 9/11 memorial designed by a trio of UMass
Lowell students.
Set along the Riverwalk near Leitch Hall on East
Campus and originally dedicated May 14, 2004, the
circular stone sculpture was designed by UMass Lowell
art students Gail Milligan and Rebekah Hermans of
Lowell and Janet Wittlinger of Auburn, N.H.
The disc-shaped Unity overlooks the Merrimack River
and carries the names of seven UMass Lowell alumni
and friends lost in the attacks in New York and Washington
D.C.: Douglas Gowell ’71, of Methuen; Robert J. Hayes
’87, of Amesbury; Brian K. Kinney ’95, of Lowell; John
Ogonowski ’72, of Dracut; Patrick Quigley, husband of
Patricia Quigley ’86, of Wellesley; former student Jessica
Sachs of Billerica, daughter of Stephen R. and Karen D.
Sachs, both ’69; and Christopher Zarba of Hopkinton,
who studied here in the 1970s.
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
By David Perry
Christian Elwood, a senior finance student and resident
of the Student Veterans Association, said the events of
9 /11 convinced him to join the Marine Corps. During
the ceremony, he read the biography of Ogonowski, a
Vietnam veteran and the captain of American Airline
Flight 11, the first of the airliners to be plunged into the
World Trade Center towers by terrorist hijackers.
The day of the attacks was “many things to many people,” Meehan told the assembled. It was “a tragic day
where Americans were brutally murdered, a call to arms
and a turning point in American and world history. But
above all, it will always be about the more than 3,000
Americans who were killed and the 30 families in the
Merrimack Valley who lost a loved one that tragic day.”
However, the Sept. 8 ceremony also served as a rededication to moving forward and mending fractured relationships.
“How can we best honor their memory?” asked Imogene
Stulken of the UMass Lowell Campus Ministry. “How
might each of us commemorate this day with service?
Unity asks us to rebuild and repair—rebuild trust and
repair relationships across communities. Say to yourself
when you visit, ‘to bring more peace to the world,
I will…’ ” !
Want to Stay in Touch?
4 Simple Ways!
1.
2.
3.
4.
Alumni Network
This simple social networking site on UMass Lowell’s website helps connect
alumni to each other.
How to: Visit www.uml.edu/alumni.
Facebook
Find long-lost friends, learn about events on campus and discover how to
become an active part of UMass Lowell’s growing River Hawks community.
How to: Go to www.facebook.com/umasslowellalumni.
Twitter
Get updates about the University and alumni events — in 140 characters or fewer!
How to: Visit www.uml.edu/twitter.
LinkedIn
Connect with other UMass Lowell alumni and expand your network,
post discussions, learn about events and advertise job opportunities.
How to: Go to www.linkedin.com and enter
“UMass Lowell Alumni” in the search field. Click “join.”
W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2 UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE
25
Featurestory
Raul Raudales sniffs arabica coffee
beans as he and Richard Trubey
(center) meet with Red Barn Coffee
Roasters President Mark Verrochi
to discuss the coffee drying process.
‘We Could Create
Huge Changes’
Brewing Coffee, Saving Forests, Bettering Lives
By Geoffrey Douglas
For Raul Raudales and Richard Trube, an engineer
and a technical writer who met at UMass Lowell as students
more than 20 years ago, world change begins with the
modest coffee bean.
26
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
F E A T U R E
S T O R Y
T
heir story, like the story of the coffee they produce
and the men and women who help to produce it,
is a story in many parts: of innovation, technology,
travel, teaching, research grants, and years and
years of work. But it’s as simple in its essence as
that little bean at the heart of your morning cup.
It begins with a problem: throughout the countries of
Central America, where much of the world’s best coffee
is produced, roughly 6,500 hectares—16,000 acres—of
forest are cut each year to supply firewood for the drying
of coffee beans.
“About three square centimeters,” as Richard Trube is
fond of translating it, “for every cup we drink.” It has
been this way, he says, for at least a century.
So might there be a more efficient way? This was the
question that Trube ’86 and Raudales, MS ’93 began to
consider together as students—and have been working
on answering for most of the last 17 years.
Not long after they began, realizing they would need
an entity through which to funnel their efforts, the pair
created a non-profit, the Mesoamerican Development
Institute, centered at UMass Lowell, to research new
ways to dry the beans—and in the process, to create a
more sustainable system. There were a lot experiments,
and a lot of false starts.
“We were in the talking stage,” concedes Trube, “for
quite a long while.”
THE WORLD’S FIRST SOLAR COFFEE
What they came up with, once the talking was done, was
a hybrid dryer that converts discarded coffee bean-husks
into fuel pellets; these in turn were burned with heat
from solar panels to dry the beans just picked from trees.
Then came the hard part: taking the new system to
the source.
The first piece of funding came from Sandia National
Laboratories in New Mexico. Since then, support has
come from myriad sources: the Inter-American Foundation,
the World Bank, U.S. Fish and Wildlife, the Humanist
Institute for Development Cooperation, and—most
recently—the National Science Foundation.
MDI’s new processing facility in Subirana, Yoro, Honduras.
This will be the world’s first coffee processing center to be powered
entirely with renewable energy.
MDI’s high-efficiency drying
chamber in Costa Rica. MDI
co-founder Raul Raudales is
at left.
At this point, there is a dryer in place in a village in
Honduras, where a cooperative of 150 farmers are sharing
the coffee-production work. Once fully operational, there
will no longer be a need to send the beans to remote locations—as far as 200 kilometers away in some cases, says
Trube—to dry in processing centers. The differences this
makes can be measured on a lot of scales: better coffee,
fewer trees lost, lower costs to the farmer.
“We could create huge changes,” Trube says.
The changes are happening on a second front as well.
A five-member consortium of university partners—UMass
Lowell, UMass Amherst and universities in Honduras,
Costa Rica and Nicaragua—is enabling an exchange program of students and faculty, bringing the principles of
sustainable development onto campuses on two continents.
Already, says Trube, half a dozen engineering students
and nearly as many faculty members have made the trip
south, where they do their part in bringing the theories
of solar energy come to life outside of the classroom.
Meanwhile, the product that results—Café Solar—is
coming north: Roasted at Red Barn Coffee Roasters in
Upton, it is now brewed and sold in UMass Lowell dining
halls, the only coffee brand on the market, as far as
anyone knows, produced using industrial solar dryers.
“This is a remarkable, incredibly rare opportunity,”
says UMass Lowell Professor Emeritus William Moeller,
an environmental engineer who has been working with
Trube and Raudales for more than 10 years. “To be able
to do all this, at the same time as you advance educational
research and expand the prestige of the University—
from an educator’s point of view, that’s about as good as
it gets.”
For Richard Trube and his Mesoamerican Development
Institute partners, it’s barely the beginning:
“We want to create a model, and to keep it growing,
until the big companies, the big coffee-makers out there,
come around to adopting the process. That’s the dream
we’re working toward.” !
“TO BE
ABLE TO DO
ALL THIS, AT
THE SAME
TIME AS YOU
ADVANCE
EDUCATIONAL
RESEARCH
AND EXPAND
THE PRESTIGE
OF THE UNIVERSITY—FROM AN
EDUCATOR’S
POINT OF VIEW,
THAT’S ABOUT
AS GOOD AS
IT GETS.”
— William Moeller
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27
Coverstory
Roots and Responsibility
The Generosity of Rob and Donna Manning
28
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
C O V E R
R
obert Manning looked out over his audience
at the Tsongas Center. It was a sea of black,
swathed in mortarboards and gowns. As the
crowd fanned out, there were parents, siblings
and other relatives, friends and mentors.
Manning dressed like the grads. He was one
of them.
He was different, too, of course. At 47, he’d
just committed to a donation of more than
$5 million toward the newly named Manning School of
Business and toward construction of a new school of
business building. He hopes to inspire others.
Harvard has a long line of folks writing checks, he’ll
tell you, but Manning fears too many others believe that
“state schools” are taken care of by the state. “Far from
it,” he says.
The lifelong UMass Lowell booster and former chairman
of the UMass Board of Trustees would like to spark a “pay
it forward”-style trend benefitting state universities. He
is an ardent fan of the energy and dedication Chancellor
Marty Meehan has brought to UMass Lowell.
And he married the former Donna Brown, who seemed
destined to partner with Manning from the moment they
met at Methuen High School. Growing up on a small
farm in Methuen, Donna saw philanthropy before she
knew it had a name.
In his May 28 commencement speech to the largest
class ever to graduate from UMass Lowell, Manning spoke
as one of them. Manning ’84, knew exactly how they felt.
He drove to Lowell from Methuen in 1981 in a car his
parents had bought for him, not sure what to expect but
ready to buckle down. He forged a steely determination
to get everything he could from the college’s finance
classes, earning a degree in business administration. Just
for good measure, he added a minor in computer science.
He did it all in three years.
After graduating, he got a job analyzing speculative
grade debt at MFS Investment Management in Boston.
The company was noted for establishing the first mutual
fund. It turned out to be a good match for Manning.
Now, as CEO and chairman of the global money management firm, he oversees $224 billion in assets and 1,650
employees.
Manning is among the most accomplished of the University’s graduates. Still, he wanted the Class of 2011 to
know he had once been in their shoes. He assured them
their accomplishments lay ahead, thanks to the preparation
they got at UMass Lowell. They’re ready for life, he told
them, for work, for the world.
Preparation trumps luck, he told the Class of 2011 in
a 14-minute commencement address: “You don’t need
good luck. The people you are going to compete against
need it.”
S T O R Y
By David Perry
PAYING IT FORWARD
At home in Swampscott, Rob and Donna Manning and
their black Labs, Rose and Willie, survey a very different
scenario. From the dining room, the Atlantic Ocean is a
reminder of how tides change, the water lapping at a
seawall on the edge of the stunning property. Days earlier,
Hurricane Irene tossed sea spray hard against the windows.
“An amazing show,” says Manning of Irene’s bluster.
“You couldn’t even see out there.” He waves a hand at
the windows showcasing a widescreen view of his vast
watery backyard neighbor. This morning, a lobster boat
bobs in the sunshine along the jagged coast.
Manning’s life in finance has made him no stranger to
shaping order from chaos and calm from tension, though
the seaside Swampscott house is for “getting away from”
stress, he says.
The well-equipped gym downstairs, the state-of-theart sound system and the movie area are designed as
refuge for the couple. They’re up at 4:30 a.m. to exercise
and usually in bed by 9:30. There’s little time or yearning
for TV. To really get away, there’s a house in Bretton
Woods, N.H., where Mt. Washington looms in the
distance and ski trails beckon the Mannings, who are
avid skiers and love to snowshoe.
Donna Manning ’85, ’91 also received an honorary
degree at commencement. Donna, who earned nursing
and master’s of business administration degrees from
UMass Lowell, has been an oncology nurse at Boston
Medical Center for the past 27 years. She donates her
salary to the hospital.
The Mannings previously endowed scholarships for
business and nursing students, but this runs deeper. Donna
says they usually don’t like the fuss that surrounds philanthropy, but the notion that this donation might inspire
others convinced them to shed anonymity.
Married 25 years, the Mannings are bookends, a pair.
Soulmates. It’s been that way since they went to high
school together in Methuen. They’d seen each other in
HARVARD HAS
A LONG LINE OF
FOLKS WRITING
CHECKS, BUT
ROB MANNING
FEARS TOO
MANY OTHERS
BELIEVE “STATE
SCHOOLS”
ARE FUNDED
BY THE STATE.
FAR FROM IT,
HE SAYS.
Continued
Donna ’85,’91 and
Rob ’84 Manning each
received honorary degrees at the University’s
2011 Commencement.
W I N TS E
UR
MM
2 0E1R1 -22001112 UMASS
UMASSLOWELL
LOWELLMAGAZINE
MAGAZINE
29
Coverstory
Rob says he joined MFS with folks with pricey,
prestigious sheepskins under their arms. His UMass Lowell
education served him well. He ascended “not because I
was smarter or worked harder, but because I was better
educated than they were.”
When the Mannings decided to give to UMass Lowell,
it was in part because of how comfortable they were with
Meehan’s leadership.
Rob Manning spends his
days at 500 Boylston Street
in Boston, home to MFS
Investment Management.
“MY PARENTS
DIDN’T GO TO
COLLEGE, BUT
IT CLEARLY MEANT
A LOT TO THEM
THAT WE COULD
GO, AND WE
DECIDED AT
THIS POINT IN
LIFE TO PAY IT
FORWARD.”
— Donna Manning
30
passing, and in a class or two, but didn’t begin dating
until they were seniors. That was 31 years ago. They’ve
just never stopped.
They are childless “by design,” he says. “Our lives are
so intense, that to do the few things we do outside of
work, we need time with each other. And we knew it
would be this way.”
Rob credits Donna with nudging him toward philanthropy.
“She’d give away everything I have if I let her,” he
says, smiling.
Growing up, Donna only associated philanthropy with
rich people. But she was part of it when she was 12, after
the barn at the farm next to her parents’ farm burned to
the ground. She and her dad loaded their pick-up truck
with bales of hay. They drove them next door so the surviving animals could eat. She spent the better part of
that summer bailing that hay with her dad.
“I was surprised how easily he gave it away,” Donna
says, since we would probably run out ourselves.”
She remembers many such kind exchanges with neighbors.
“It almost never involved money,” recalls Donna.
“Apparently, I was rich back then.”
Rob recalls one day a few years ago when he felt
everything was good personally and professionally yet ...
something was missing.
“Rob’s parents and my parents made a lot of sacrifices
to send us to school,” says Donna. “We appreciate that,
and try to pass it on to help those who need it. My
parents didn’t go to college, but it clearly meant a lot to
them that we could go, and we decided at this point in
life to pay it forward.”
UMass Lowell offered quality of education at an
affordable price, says Donna.
“Financially, I was able to work and pay for college,
semester to semester,” she says.
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
‘WE HAVEN’T SEEN THE BEST OF ROB YET’
“I’ll tell you one thing,” says Kevin Perry, an adjunct professor of finance on and off from 1978 to 83. “There is no
lacking for IQ points in that home.”
Rob Manning walked into Perry’s class “genuinely interested in the material, to the point where he wanted
not just to learn it, but to dominate it,” says Perry, who returned to Boston-based Loomis Sayles Co. L.P. as a money
manager in 1983.
“Listen,” he says, “Lowell is a place where working
kids bust their asses trying to make something of themselves.
I was pretty intolerant of people who were not there to
learn. But Rob was exactly
the kind of student you’d
hope you’d have. It’s hard
to look at someone and
say, ‘He’s going to be CEO
of a major financial company.’ But with Rob, you
could think. ‘This is the
kind of person with the
ability to excel.’ He is still
not arrogant in any way,
but you could tell he was
going to do something
significant.”
As with other former Rob Manning received a Circle of
students, Perry stayed in Distinction award from Chancellor
touch with Manning, at Marty Meehan, left, in October.
one point living up the See related story on page 40.
street in Swampscott. He
got Manning the job interview at MFS.
Perry imagines Manning will be active with his business
school investment:
“I think Rob is committed to what is going on in the
classroom. Some major institutions treat their undergraduates atrociously. That is not acceptable to Rob. He
looks at Lowell and sees enormous opportunity. He values
people who are smart and can hit the ground running,
and a faculty that is committed to active partnerships in
the business world.”
He pauses.
“I think that, quite frankly, we haven’t seen the best
of Rob yet.”
FROM FOOTBALL TO FINANCE
Until he arrived in Lowell, academics hadn’t been a centerpiece of Rob Manning’s life, as they had Donna’s.
He’d been a high school jock, captain of the Methuen
F E A T U R E
S T O R Y
Rob Manning ’84 delivered the commencemnt address in 2011—the largest class ever to graduate from UMass Lowell.
High Rangers football team, playing middle linebacker
and guard.
He was popular and “didn’t have any interest in grades
or where they could get me,” he says.
“I had a lot of fun playing sports,” he explains. “But
Donna was a good example for me.”
Manning says he initially chose UMass Lowell “because
I had a lot of friends here and it was close to home.”
He had long been drawn to the world of finance, and
quickly honed a focus on college academics. He was so
driven he took eight to 10 classes a semester.
The couple point to a foundation built from “extraordinary” role models. Rob’s parents, Dick and Dolores,
worked hard, especially to make certain he made it to
college. His father worked for 38 years at Raytheon Corp.,
earning his engineering degree at age 45, from Fitchburg
State. Part of his career was spent working on the Patriot
Missile project.
Donna and her sisters were also first to attend college
in their family. Her father, Frank, was a machinist.
“They gave us values, including working for everything
you had,” says Rob. “They taught us that work gives you
a sense of pride, a feeling of being accomplished at something. And they taught us honesty and integrity. And
they gave me the greatest gift in the world, an education.
That’s what drives us toward UMass Lowell with philanthropy. We both lived at home, and we couldn’t afford to
go just anywhere. It was up the street and it turned out to
be an excellent school.
“Most private universities are research-driven. The
professors have to publish articles, and that’s what they’re
worried about. At UMass Lowell, it’s always about the
students. I had phenomenal professors who were handson. Every one of them truly cared about the students.
They put their energy and passion into their teaching. It
was amazing. And there was a lot of opportunity to meet
with your professors one-on-one. It wasn’t a case of, well,
I guess I could ... they were there every time. They brought
so much real-world experience into the classroom. There
was just a culture of caring about students and being
around when you needed them. I hope that still exists.”
‘ONE OF LIFE’S GREATEST GIFTS’
Manning’s soulmate helped him see what was missing.
She always has.
“Donna always puts everyone else’s needs before her
own,” he says. “Part of what has driven our philosophy is
her belief that helping others is something you do. I’ve
been lucky enough to make good money. Some folks are
born with a bad hand of cards and we have a responsibility
to help.
“Listen, I saw what UMass Lowell did for me. Affordability and accessibility are two of the greatest gifts
students can have in an education, and an education is
one of life’s greatest gifts. So I figured it was time to give
back money to other people. I have all I need with
Donna and we have all we need and more.”
When word broke of the Mannings’ donation, the reaction was satisfying.
“The outpouring of people, you just would not believe,”
says Manning. “Not just people from UMass Lowell but
from around the state. Emails, handwritten notes, conversations with people. It’s a case of trying to get individuals
and groups to give back. That’s our challenge.”
Rob Manning wanted to tell the graduates what they
really got from UMass Lowell.
“Not only did you learn the subject matter and pass
the tests,” he told the Class of 2011, “you learned how to
be great human beings.”
Maybe they didn’t know it yet. Maybe he was the first
to tell some of them that. But it’s clear Rob Manning believed in them. He was, at least that day, one of them. !
“I SAW WHAT
UMASS LOWELL
DID FOR ME.
AFFORDABILITY
AND ACCESSIBILITY ARE TWO OF
THE GREATEST
GIFTS STUDENTS
CAN HAVE IN
AN EDUCATION,
AND AN
EDUCATION IS
ONE OF LIFE’S
GREATEST GIFTS.
SO I FIGURED
IT WAS TIME
TO GIVE BACK
MONEY TO
OTHER PEOPLE.”
— Rob Manning
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31
C O V E R
S T O R Y
S I D E B A R
New Building for the Manning School:
‘The Critical Catalyst’
R
oughly 15 months from now, in the
spring of 2013, ground will be broken
on North Campus for what will be the
third jewel in the University’s evolving
crown of new construction: a new building
to house the newly named Manning School of
Business. The school will take its place adjacent
to the also-new Emerging Technology and Innovation Center (ETIC), on the site of the
present Eames Hall.
The planned site, says Manning School of
Business Dean Kathryn Carter, will enable business students and faculty—already located on
North Campus—to continue working closely
with those in science and engineering programs.
The new building for the Manning School
of Business will complement the ETIC and the
new, $40 million Health and Social Sciences
Building on South Campus, both of which
broke ground in 2011—the first new academic
buildings to arrive on campus in more than
three decades. At 65,000 square feet, with a
bold, tiered façade rising four stories overlooking
University Avenue, its cost is estimated at $30
million, roughly a third of which will be raised
from private sources, according to Steven Rogers,
senior major gifts officer in the University’s
Advancement Office. The single largest endowment, $5 million, is the result of a endowment
from Robert and Donna Manning, both UMass
Lowell graduates (see accompanying story),
whose name the School will carry.
Other major donors to the new building’s
construction include Richard Grande ’72, senior
vice president at Morgan Stanley; Kathleen
Allen ’77, formerly vice president of Millipore
Corp. and James Regan ’88, CEO of Digital
Credit Union. As of mid-September, more than
$1 million of private funding had been raised—
in addition to the $5 million from the Mannings—with another $10-12 million being
sought from the School’s alumni and friends.
While the business school will carry the Manning
name in recognition of the couple’s gift, the
building itself—and very likely some of its features—will be named to recognize one or more
other donors.
“Its coming is long overdue,” says Morgan
Stanley’s Grande, “and couldn’t possibly be
more welcome. Along with other things, it’s
likely to attract additional strong faculty, which
in turn will attract better students. The result
32
of this, over time, I think will be predictable—
a marked upgrade in the visibility, quality and
culture of the business school, and of the University in general.”
The Manning School’s dean is another
who believes, like Grande, that the building
will play an inestimable role in ushering in a
new era:
“The construction of an appropriate and
competitive professional business school as a
home to our activities is the catalyst that will
visibly advance us,” says Carter. “We’ve been
at a tipping point for a few years now—actively
improving our faculty and student profile,
developing new, relevant academic programs,
expanding and deepening our corporate partnerships and adding experiential learning opportunities for our students. ”
Even before the announcement of the Mannings’ gift, says Carter, the college—which has
graduated more than 13,000 students in its 53
years and carries an annual enrollment of roughly
2,200—was already well into the process of a
strategic realignment. At the undergraduate
level, the School has increased its honors opportunities, expanded its study-abroad opportunities and added research scholarships—at
the same time expanding and formalizing its
students’ options for experiential learning. Undergraduate enrollment, as a whole, will remain
stable; the freshman class will be slightly smaller
and more selective.
At the graduate level, a planned shift in student population—to be achieved through the
addition of the master’s program in Innovation
and Technological Entrepreneurship, the launch
of the full-time, day MBA program and the fall
2012 kick-off of a master’s program in accounting—will result in a significant expansion of
master’s level enrollment.
Also, and most importantly, says Dean Carter:
“We expect final approval of our Ph.D. in
business administration, with concentrations
in technology management, international business, finance, MIS and leadership. This program
should launch within the next two years, with
an entering class of nine full-time and nine
part-time students.”
This improved enrollment profile, the dean
says, with its larger graduate enrollment and
better-quality undergraduate population, “will
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
Donna and Rob Manning visit with Kathryn Carter,
center, dean of the Manning School of Business.
support our ongoing efforts to recruit highquality faculty and students and strengthen our
research capabilities.”
The new building will provide the features
and spaces required for a competitive business
school today. On its ground floor alone: a fully
active trading room, enabling students and
faculty to conduct real-time research on global
companies, industries, economies and currencies;
a business development center, located very
visibly nearby, to serve as a hub for interactions
and active group learning; as well as a home for
a limited number of incubator companies. And
anchoring it all, a coffee shop/meeting space,
located within sight of both the trading room
and the business center—allowing for collaboration, networking and socialization.
“I believe the first floor of the new building
will be an energetic destination space for many
students and faculty on North Campus, perhaps
the most vibrant space North Campus has ever
seen,” says Carter.
The upper floors will be no less impressive:
office space for faculty, staff and graduate
students; work space for undergraduates, classrooms and meeting spaces for faculty and
students—as well as dedicated space for various
student initiatives, such as the honors and
study-abroad programs.
“The new building,” says Carter, “will reflect
and support our priorities for high-quality
education and research, student and faculty
interaction and interdisciplinary, experiential
learning. I see it as the critical catalyst to propel
us to excellence.” !
Featurestory
F E A T U R E
The Kindness of Strangers
S T O R Y
By Sheila Eppolito
Surprise Donor Gives Haitian Student the Opportunity of a Lifetime
P
ouchon Jean Amazan isn’t a gambler—he is,
instead, a logical man of science. But even Amazan
has to admit that the chance encounter 30,000
feet up in the air that changed the course of his
life was an astounding stroke of luck.
Amazan—the son of Haitian farmers—showed promise
in math and science early on, catching the notice of
private school instructors and one compassionate scientist
—Prof. Bob Giles—from the United States. Giles joined
his daughter as a chaperone on her youth group’s trip to
Haiti in 2003, and was forever changed by what he saw.
“Haiti is the poorest and most densely populated
country in our part of the hemisphere,” says Giles,
chairman of the Physics Department. “Aggravated by
soil erosion, drought and famine, the country has been
identified with fourth world status by the International
Banking System.”
Haitian student Pouchon Jean Amazan, third from left, meets his
benefactors Cumberland Farms Director George Haseotes, second
from left, and Kristen Williams, right, who learned about Amazan
during a plane ride with Prof. Bob Giles, far left.
Despite the brutal conditions, Giles saw possibility in
the faces of the Haitian people, and set his mind to doing
something to help.
Amazan is but one of dozens of students Giles has supported—educationally and financially—since his life
changing trip. Giles met Amazan through a network of
American colleagues, travel companions and advisors in
Haiti. He provided mentoring—and personal investment
—for Amazan for five years before encouraging him to
apply to the University to pursue a degree in physics.
Amazan was accepted, but fell $8,000 short of the
funds he’d need to attend.
Enter Kristen Williams.
Fresh from a cruise with her children with several
stops in countries that struggle to meet basic needs,
Williams, who was “disgusted by the contradictory overall
excess and waste of food on board ship,” struck up a conversation with the man in the airplane seat next to her.
“We got to talking, and I realized I was sitting with a
prestigious educator who was committed to training
young people to change the world,” says Williams, who,
along with husband George Haseotes, runs a charitable
foundation committed to improving education.
“My husband’s Greek immigrant family founded Cumberland Farms, and through generations of hard work
and dedication, the company has enjoyed financial
success,” says Williams. Cumberland Farms’ family founders
are quintessential believers in and examples of, the power
of hard work and education in realizing success.
Out comes the checkbook.
Williams was so moved by Giles’ story—and Amazan’s
potential – that she wrote a check on the spot. Not for
the praise the gift might earn—in fact, she is downright
reticent when her generosity is touted.
“My interest in philanthropy is in helping people who
can affect real change in the world,” says Williams.
“When Prof. Giles described the work he does, and the
kind of improvements in basic human needs a man like
Pouchon can make, it was a no-brainer for us to support
the cause.”
Amazan has settled in nicely at the University, and is
excited about his future. He also was delighted to see
snow for the first time, sharing the moment with his
mother during one of the calls Giles encourages him to
make on Gile’s phone.
For Giles, helping dozens of students isn’t enough—
he’s working on developing a University research program
to further expand student and faculty involvement in
Haiti. As for Williams, she continues her quiet, dogged
pursuit of investing in causes and people like Pouchon
who can use their minds to improve the world.
“There’s something very exciting about helping
students get excited about turning problems into solutions,”
she says. !
“MY INTEREST IN
PHILANTHROPY
IS IN HELPING
PEOPLE WHO
CAN AFFECT
REAL CHANGE
IN THE WORLD.”
—Kristen Williams
Children in Haiti
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33
Featurestory
From Haverhill
to Hollywood:
‘A Happy Accident’
By David Perry
34
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
F E A T U R E
S T O R Y
Despite Best-sellers and Film Deals, Andre Dubus III
Is Staying Put at UMass Lowell
I
n his youth, author and UMass Lowell
English professor Andre Dubus III built
his body into a fortress of muscle, blood
and tissue. Relentlessly pumping weights
and adhering to a strict diet, he carefully
cultivated musculature to better proffer
violence in the bars of Haverhill and
Newburyport. He refined his technique in the
boxing ring.
The physical walls he erected hid a scared,
bullied and abandoned young man, whose tale
is spread across the pages of Dubus’ acclaimed
memoir, “Townie.”
It was in the world of letters that Dubus
found his soul, his profession and his obsession.
Now 52, still fit and looking much younger,
Dubus has built words into a string of bestselling books.
He calls his career a “happy accident.” In
2001, he became the University’s first Kerouac
Writer-in-Residence. For the past seven years,
he has shared his wisdom with classes of UMass
Lowell students, last semester teaching a pair
of Creative Writing classes that meet Tuesdays
and Wednesdays.
“I really love being around young people,
and I love the Lowell scene,” Dubus says. “All
kinds of students,
including the kind
of people I grew up
with. I feel attuned
here.”
Despite a growing fame, a demanding schedule
and overtures from
other colleges and
universities, he isn’t
going anywhere
soon.
BUILDING A LIFE
While gradually building a literary career, Dubus
also built a home. Literally. Not just any home,
but a 6,700-square foot beauty, near which
much of “Townie” took place. A mix of art and
athleticism, the home he built with his own
hands has proven roomy and sturdy enough to
withstand games of football catch from the
kitchen into the family room. Its dimensions
may be palatial, but the huge living room with
the dramatic stone fireplace is built for comfort.
Downstairs is where he writes, in a room
five feet wide, six feet from floor to ceiling, 11
feet long and sound-proof.
“The prison,” he says, chuckling. “It’s like a
jail cell.”
He sentences himself to write there, six days
a week, “until my concentration starts to fade.”
He is a proud Luddite, who writes in longhand.
He answers emails from time to time, but laughs
at the notion of riding the “digital train”: “Facebook? Twitter? Ha!”
As Dubus—son of the celebrated short story
writer Andre Dubus—has cultivated his career
in the classrooms of UMass Lowell, fame and
critical and popular acclaim have followed the
release of each new book.
“I REALLY LOVE BEING AROUND
YOUNG PEOPLE, AND I LOVE
THE LOWELL SCENE. ALL KINDS
OF STUDENTS, INCLUDING
THE KIND OF PEOPLE
I GREW UP WITH.
I FEEL ATTUNED THERE.”
And when Oprah Winfrey named Dubus’
“House of Sand and Fog” a selection of her
book club, he became even more popular.
He has been serenaded by other colleges
and universities near and far to teach their
prospective writers. The previous week, he says,
stretching out his legs to prop the heel of a
pointy boot on a coffee table, a Lone Star State
university called waving a Texas-sized offer.
Dubus is flattered but says he isn’t going
anywhere: “I love it where I am now. UMass
Lowell has been great to me.”
He still can’t believe he made a career of
this. He wasn’t trying, he says.
His kids attend private school. The house is
big, though hardly one that announces itself to
the world. His name is big. But a fan of junkyard
piano poet Tom Waits, Dubus treats writing
like workaday labor. He strives to hang on to
his blue-collar roots.
DEATH THREATS AND MOVIE DEALS
In Haverhill, where Dubus grew up, “Townie”
is known as “the book.” It is a naked recollection
that the writer struggled to get right. He even
called old friends and family members to crosscheck details.
When he did a book signing there, 600
people showed up. The author says “Townie”
has spawned three basic reactions: “I can’t
believe how perfectly you nailed this place!” is
the most pleasant.
“Then there’s ‘I don’t know what Haverhill
you’re writing about,’ ” he says. “And the third:
threats on my life.”
The Haverhill Dubus writes about is one
he’ll never forget. His roots are there, he
explains, and they are excavated in “Townie,”
which recounts in painstaking detail Dubus’
hardscrabble youth in 1970s Haverhill and
Newburyport.
A lot has changed since those days.
When Dubus received Chancellor Marty
Meehan’s Medal of Recognition during last
May’s Commencement ceremony, he told
students not to worry so much about “success.”
He told them to find something unique about
themselves and cultivate it—and then success
will follow.
It’s a formula that’s worked for him.
“Townie” has been optioned for the silver
screen by Gina Amoroso, co-producer of 2008’s
“Revolutionary Road.” Amoroso also helped
bring “Being John Malkovich” to the big screen
in 1999.
Dubus will write the script with a veteran
English scriptwriter.
“There’s just too much at stake for me not
to be involved,” he says. “This is me, my family,
my friends.”
Son Austin is in his first semester at Miami
University in Ohio, having left Dubus and his
wife of 22 years, Fontaine, with Ariadne, 16,
and Elias, 14.
Fontaine is owner and director of The Dance
Place, a studio in Newburyport where Ariadne
dances. The boys are dedicated “and pretty
damn good” baseball players, according to their
father.
In a room off the kitchen, Dubus has stacked
hundreds of his father’s books in vertical piles,
as if there are ghosts in the room.
“I finally took them out of storage,” he says.
“I thought I could give them away, but ...” He
couldn’t. He will soon build shelves. !
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35
Face of Philanthropy
By Geoffrey Douglas
Saving Lives and Growing Grapes
Forty Years After Graduation, This Chemical Engineer is Still not Slowing Down
H
is dad was a truck salesman, his mother
a psychiatric social worker. It was the
late ’60s; there were three children in
the house, and not much extra to go
around. So when the time came to think
about colleges, Bob Ward remembers, the
decision pretty much made itself.
“I think the tuition [at Lowell Tech] was
something like $200 a semester,” he says. “Whatever it was, it was a bargain—which was the
number-one factor in my mind.”
He had a job on weekends, another in the
summers. And the family lived in Reading,
which made for a long commute. So between
classes, studies, job-time and drive-time, there
weren’t a lot of hours left in the week. “To be
honest,” he says, “it was a drag sometimes.”
Somehow, though, he found time to pursue
two of his passions: the bass guitar (“when I
probably should have been studying instead”)
and a young Merrimack College student named
Gail, who was studying to be a microbiologist.
He graduated in the spring of 1971 with a
degree in chemical engineering. He and Gail
were married three weeks later. Only weeks
after that, he began his first real-world job: at
the Avco-Everett Research Laboratory in Everett,
a division of the Avco Corp. It was the start of
an extraordinary career, in a field—biomaterials—that was itself only then getting its start.
He stayed until 1978. By the time he left, as
director of research in Avco’s Medical Products
Division, he had helped oversee the commercial
development of a pioneer product: the intraaortic balloon pump, the world’s first, commercially available cardiac assistance device. Still
in use today, it has been used worldwide on
3 million people, saving countless lives.
Bob Ward had found his niche—and his
next employer: Thoratec Laboratories in Berkeley,
Calif., a start-up that designed, manufactured
and sold products for heart-failure patients—
and that had just completed financing for yet
another pioneer product: the first commercial
Ventricular Assistance Device (VAD), a mechanical invention used to replace the circulatory
functioning of a failing heart.
By the time he left Thoratec 10 years later—as president of its Biomaterials Division—
the VAD was in full-scale commercial develop-
36
ment, well on its way to becoming the world’s
most popular cardiac-assistance device. Today,
Thoratec is a publicly traded, global corporation,
with 1,100 employees and yearly revenues of
more than $300 million.
MATTERS OF THE HEART
Ward’s next career step was his boldest. In
1989, he founded Polymer Technology Group
(PTG). For the next 19 years, as founder and
CEO, Ward oversaw the Berkeley, Calif.-based
company’s growth, guiding the application of
PTG polymers and specialty chemicals for use
across myriad specialties: in pacemakers, orthopedic implants, catheters, stents, implantable
sensors and artificial hearts. Its early work in
the development of contact lenses made from a
mix of silicone-hydrogel polymers set the standard
for such lenses worldwide—and made a fortune
for the company.
The world, of course, had taken notice. In
the spring of 2008, PTG was acquired by the
Dutch giant Royal DSM, a global life-sciences
company with 22,000 employees and more than
$6 billion in sales. Ward was asked to stay on as
president and CEO of the newly formed DSM
PTG.
Yet another major move came at the start of
2011: the chairmanship of the PTG spin-off
Emergence, founded in 2007 to provide inventors
and entrepreneurs with both technical expertise
and initial seed money to bring new medical
products to market. It wasn’t long before the
venture was proclaiming an early success.
ExThera Medical Corp., a company within
the Emergence incubator, announced early this
summer the development of a new product,
Seraph, for the treatment of sepsis (or blood
poisoning). While other medical treatments for
sepsis rely on antibiotics and are only partially
successful, Seraph—based on a blood-cleansing
process known as apheresis—aims to empower
the body’s immune system to fight the disease.
Early laboratory studies, Ward said when news
of the breakthrough was first announced in
June, “strongly suggest the likelihood that [Seraph] may become an effective treatment.”
And so it is that, 40 years after earning his
diploma as a bass-playing LTI commuter student,
Ward has built a name for himself at the very
top of his no-longer-new profession:
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
“Bob Ward is without peer in manufacturing
polymeric biomaterials for application in the
hostile environment of the human body,” wrote
James M. Anderson, a Case Western professor
and editor-in-chief of the Journal of Biomedical
Materials Research.
But his contributions aren’t confined to the
biomaterials field. The Wards recently committed
nearly $1 million in support of University initiatives. When $2 million was gifted last year
to UMass Lowell to create professorships in science and engineering—part of a $14 million
anonymous gift to the UMass system from the
sale of land on Nantucket—Bob was one of
five alumni to put up the funds to match it, creating the $600,000 Robert and Gail Ward Endowed Professorship in Biomedical Materials
Development. Gail was born on Nantucket, he
says, “so that gives this gift special meaning.”
He has also given $250,000 toward funding for
the new Emerging Technologies and Innovation
Center, creating the Robert and Gail Ward
Biomedical Materials Laboratory, and another
$100,000 to create an endowed scholarship
fund for engineering students.
“Support for public education is such an important priority,” he says. “Public universities
are a critical antidote to the concentration of
wealth in the hands of a very few, something, I
think, that’s getting worse as time passes. It’s
really so important that anyone from anywhere
who wants it has access to an education.”
Meanwhile, as active as he is, Ward still
finds time for the guitar, now as part of a group
near his home. But his real passion these days—
outside of scouting the life-science companies
of tomorrow—is something else entirely: the
growing of grapes for Syrah (or Shiraz) wine.
“We bought a house and small vineyard,
two years ago, in Orinda [Calif.], where we
have about 70 vines,” he says. “Gail’s even
more involved than I am—she’s taking courses
in viticulture at Napa Valley State College.
She good at it, being the microbiologist she is.
For me, it’s kind of an extension of the beermaking I used to do as a kid. Just more involved,
and a lot more expensive.
“It’s fun, though. And this year looks like
it’s going to be a great yield.” !
A L U M N I
L I F E
“P
ublic universities are
a critical antidote to the
concentration of wealth in
the hands of a very few,
something, I think, that’s
getting worse and worse as
time passes. It’s really so
important that anyone from
anywhere who wants it has
access to an education.
So whatever I’m able to do
toward that goal, I’m happy
to try to do.”
— Bob Ward ’71
Bob ’71 and Gail Ward
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Featurestory
KILLING FIELDS SURVIVORS
TELL THEIR STORIES
By Sarah McAdams
38
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
Raymond Kong, left, and Sidney Tang helped paint
a mural depicting Cambodian history at the
Bartlett Middle School in Lowell.
F E A T U R E
S T O R Y
UMass Lowell Educators Team Up With Cambodian Students
and Their Families for StoryCorps Project
G
eorge Tang was 5-years-old when
Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot launched
his brutal “cleansing campaign” in
Cambodia in the 1970s.
For the next five years, the young
Tang watched as the world around
him crumbled—as death camps, starvation, executions and mass graves became
everyday sights. In that time, an estimated 2
million Cambodian people died, about a quarter
of the country’s population; among them many
members of Tang’s own family.
Now a 43-year-old accountant living in Lowell, Tang says the painful memories will never
leave him:
“I saw people lying down and get shot. You
could see people get hacked in the head with
an axe. You could see dead bodies—and they
smell terrible. You’d see people being whaled,
maybe 20 or 100. I saw people killed—I saw it
with my own eyes.”
Tang’s teenage son, Sidney—who was named
after a character in the film “The Killing
Fields”—heard about this for the first time
while sitting in a room on UMass Lowell’s
South Campus.
He nervously asked his father more questions
about the Khmer Rouge, about where he grew
up, about family members he never met.
As the elder Tang recounted the gripping
stories from his past, understanding dawned in
his son’s eyes. This is why you are the way you
are, he seemed to think.
And it’s why, more than anything, George
wants Sidney to understand this about the
United States:
“This is heaven for you. You’re lucky to be
born here. Be a productive citizen.”
The Tangs were invited to campus by
Pat Fontaine, an assistant professor of history
education in the University’s Graduate School
of Education.
Fontaine was talking to a friend one day
when the latter, a literary specialist at the
Bartlett Middle School in Lowell, mentioned
that she was worried about a particular group of
Cambodian students.
“She said, ‘This is really bothering me … It
looks like these eighth-graders are joining gangs,’
recalls Fontaine. “She said that after talking to
them, it was clear that the main reason was
that they lacked a certain identity.
“They were born here, and their parents
and grandparents haven’t told them anything
about their heritage—
The group had the students read
especially the time durthe memoir “First They Killed my
ing Pol Pot’s reign.”
Father: A Daughter of Cambodia
Remembers” by Loung Ung, and view
Thus, the kids were
portions
of films like “New Year Baby,”
turning to gangs for a
“Monkey Dance” and “The Killing
sense of belonging and
Fields.”
shared heritage, she says.
“My students, for the most part,
A light bulb went
didn’t know anything about Cambooff in Fontaine’s head—
dia—and for many of them, this was
and a short while later
their first time teaching,” says Fontaine.
“I
plan
to
follow
three
she applied for a UMass
Lowell service-learning
of the Cambodian students “So they learned just as much as the
Bartlett students.”
grant to work with
through high school,
Cambodian children mentoring them and helping
Julie Mangan, who graduated in
in the Bartlett School,
May and is now teaching in Chelmsthem script their lives.”
helping them underford, says the experience taught her a
— Pat Fontaine
stand their history.
lot about considering the cultural
During the resulting after-school program, perspective of one’s students.
Fontaine asked the middle-school students if
“This was the first time I realized it’s important
any of their relatives had experienced the to consider the students’ personal history,” she
horrors of that time (“the majority said ‘yes,’ ” says. “When you keep that in mind, you can
the professor says) —and whether they would see them become more interested.”
be willing to share their stories with the class.
Following the 10-week program, the entire
Three of the Bartlett students’ parents agreed group of 12 students, with the help of a Bartlett
to do so; Tang was one of them.
School art teacher, created a mural of remembrance
depicting Cambodian history and heritage.
It occurred to Fontaine that interviews with
these survivors might make great additions to That mural hangs in the middle school’s entrance
StoryCorps, one of the largest oral history hall today.
projects in the world. The stories—which
The program is over, but Fontaine says her
millions of people listen to every week on connection the young students is not.
NPR’s Morning Edition—are archived in the
“I plan to follow three of the Cambodian
American Folklife Center at the Library of students through high school,” she says, “menCongress in Washington, D.C.
toring them and helping them script their lives.”
And so earlier this year, Fontaine and a
Each of the students is close to people in
team of her graduate students spent a Sunday gangs, Fontaine says—whether a family member
morning on campus, recording interviews with or good friend—and she wants to help ensure
three men who had lived through the killing they don’t follow suit.
fields in Cambodia. Bartlett students each helped
“I see enormous potential—they’re so funny
interview his or her own father.
and so bright,” she says. “They each touched
The recordings are now archived in my heart.”
Washington, D.C.
Her biggest hope is that they each eventually
attend
college—ideally UMass Lowell, and she
MIDDLE SCHOOL AND GRAD
plans to give each a scholarship if and when
STUDENTS TEACH ONE ANOTHER
that day comes.
The after-school program that bore the
The prospect sounds good to her young
StoryCorps interviews began when 12 Bartlett
friend
Raymond Kong.
students in grades five through eight volunteered
“Going to a great college—that was always
to participate because, Fontaine says, “they just
my dream,” says Kong, now a freshman at
wanted to learn about their country.”
The professor, along with a handful of her Lowell High School. “My future is yet to be
graduate students who were hoping to teach discovered … the world holds a lot of opportusecondary history upon graduation, met with nities.” !
the students in 10 afternoon sessions to teach
them about Cambodia—its geography, historical
sites, cultural customs and political history.
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Featurestory
Circle of Distinction award recipients, top row from left: Gururaj “Desh” and Jaishree Deshpande, Charles Hoff ’66, John Kennedy ’70, George Leahey (accepting on behalf
of his mother, Mary Jo Leahey ’37), Mark Saab ’81, Gail and Robert ’71 Ward; bottom row, from left: Vice Chancellor of Advancement Edward Chiu, Chancellor Marty
Meehan ’78, Executive Vice Chancellor Jacqueline Moloney ’75, Robert Manning ’84, Deb and James Dandeneau ’80. Not present: Josephine Hoff, Donna Manning ’85,
’91, David Pernick ’41, Elisia Saab and Roy Zuckerberg ’58.
Circle of Distinction
The Few, Whose Generosity Lights the Way
I
t is a rare thing, in this era of trilliondollar deficits, default threats and mortgage
foreclosures, to hear talk of new economic
frontiers. Which makes the news
celebrated here in October that much
more remarkable.
Today, four years into the chancellorship of
Marty Meehan—and thanks in good part to his
efforts—there are nearly a dozen high-level benefactors. In fact, fundraising has grown by 84 percent—gifts and pledges have grown by $7 million
since 2007, from $8.2 million to $15.2 million.
Ten of the men and women responsible for
much of that growth were honored on Oct. 27
at the UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center.
During the Chancellor’s inaugural Leadership
Society reception, all 10—whose collective
support of the University exceeds $35 million—
were formally welcomed into the University’s
newly minted Circle of Distinction, a society of
top benefactors who have made generous contributions over their lifetimes.
40
The support of these 10 donors, much of it
recent, has resulted in the creation of many
hundreds of scholarships, endowments, professorships and infrastructure improvements—which
in turn have directly touched the lives of UMass
Lowell students, and will continue to do so for
decades to come.
“The generosity of these few men and women
has literally transformed the University,” says
UMass Lowell Vice Chancellor for Advancement
Edward Chiu. “On the strength of their gifts, we
are able to achieve goals that will take us to the
next level. Their impact on our students, through
the scholarships, facilities, professorships and
faculty chairs they have endowed, is almost
beyond measure.”
Perhaps the most recent arrivals to the group
have been Robert and Donna Manning, whose
gift toward the creation of a new home for the
University’s business school is outlined in the
cover story of this issue. Other outstanding examples of support, some of them nearly as recent,
have likewise added to the University skyline.
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
These include gifts by alumni John Kennedy
’70, Bob Ward ’71 and Mark Saab ’81 and his
wife Elisia, earlier this year, to finance parts of
the University’s new, $70 million Emerging Technologies and Innovation Center (ETIC), slated
to open in the fall of 2012. The Saabs are responsible also for the creation of an endowed
professorship in green plastics, gifted to the University in 2008. A second gift, received the same
year from James Dandeneau ’80—another of the
10—likewise endows a green-plastics professorship.
Ward, in addition to his support for the ETIC
construction, was also the source of a gift in
2010 to create a professorship in biochemistry.
(He, like the Mannings, is the subject of a
separate story in this issue.)
The gifts from other members of the 10,
though less visible from the air or roadside, are
every bit as critical to the University’s longterm future—and to the future of the larger
world. The contributions, for instance, of David
Pernick ’41, endow a Plastics professorship;
provide scholarships to students in both man-
F E A T U R E
S T O R Y
2
1
3
1 Vice Chancellor of University Advancement Edward Chiu presents David Pernick ’41 with a Circle of Distinction Award. 2 Students thank donors during the Chancellor’s
Leadership Society Reception, during which benefactors who have made generous contributions over their lifetimes were inducted into the Circle of Distinction. 3 Chancellor
Marty Meehan ’78 presents Roy Zuckerberg ’58 with a Circle of Distinction Award.
4
5
4 Members of the Circle of Distinction who are graduates the Francis College of Engineering: Robert ’71 and Gail Ward, Mark Saab ’81, and Deborah and James ’80
Dandeneau. 5 Robert Manning ’84, Professor Emeritus and Founder of the School of Management Stuart Mandell ’11, Charles Hoff ’66, John Pulichino ’67, and
Dean of the Manning School of Business Kathryn Carter ’78.
7
6
8
6 Chancellor Marty Meehan ’78 presents Jaishree and Gururaj “Desh” Deshpande with the Circle of Distinction Award. 7 Kennedy Family Merit Scholarship recipients
Courtney James (l) and Michael Staub (r) with John Kennedy ’70. 8 A Circle of Distinction ice scuplture, surrounded by honorees’ awards, served as a centerpiece.
agement and plastics; and fund the continuing
exchange of doctoral students and faculty, between
UMass Lowell and the plastics program of an
Israeli university.
Roy Zuckerberg ’58 has helped fund the recruitment of exceptional out-of-state students;
endowed the Zuckerberg Chair in Leadership,
rewarding faculty and staff for outstanding leadership in their departments; and supported the
Assistive Technology Program within the Department of Electrical Engineering.
The name Charlie Hoff ’66 might be familiar
to more students at the University than that of
any other of the 10. Hoff, over the past 20-plus
years, has been responsible for scholarship funds
for at least 551 UMass Lowell students—many
he and members of his family have met with
personally—as well as aid to other UMass campuses. The numbers continue to grow.
Gururaj (“Desh”) Deshpande, the only one
of the 10 not an alumnus, is unique as a benefactor
in other ways as well. A native of India, he has
donated to support the advancement of business
and technology in his country, including a large
gift to help UMass Lowell to advance collaboration
between United States and Indian engineering
students, and support grants to promote entrepreneurship in the Merrimack Valley.
Mary Jo Leahey* ’37, the only one among the
10 who could compete with Charlie Hoff for
name recognition among current students, was a
legend among those with a longer history here.
She has supported scholarships for local high
school student-musicians at a yearly, week-long
residential summer band camp on the UMass
Lowell campus. The camp, headed by Deb Huber,
associate director of University bands, has been
a summer highpoint for many hundreds of area
youngsters since its founding 16 years ago. !
*Note: As the magazine went to press, the University received the sad news that Mary Jo Leahey ’37
died at her home in Florida. Look for a profile on Mary Jo in the next issue.
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F E A T U R E
S T O R Y
Legacy of Giving Luncheon
First-ever Event Brought Together Students and Their Benefactors
1
2
1 Dean of the Francis College of Engineering John Ting, Thomas ’64 and Josephine Hughes, Aruna Vedula, Tonita McKone, Professor and Dean Emeritus Krishna Vedula
and Francis McKone ’56. 2 Director of the MBA Program Gary Mucica ’71 (middle) with Gary and Sally Mucica Endowed Scholarship recipients Vanessa Kent (l)
and Brianna Mahoney (r).
3
4
5
3 Carole Barrett, Sarah Treacy, recipient of the Margaret Holland Barrett Teaching Scholarship, and Edward “Ned” Barrett ’58. 4 Recipient of the PL ’80 Plastics Engineering Endowed Scholarship Ezequiel Ortiz with James Dandeneau ’80. 5 John Pulichino ’67, with Alyssa Brooks, recipient of the John V. Pulichino Scholarship.
6
6 Arakelian Endowed Scholarship recipient Jacqueline Bradley, with Bruce Arakelian ’82 and Dean of the School of Health & Environment Shortie McKinney.
7 Charles Hoff ‘66, with student recipients of the Charles J. Hoff Scholarship.
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7
Alumni Life
Inside...
44
ALUMNI EVENTS
47
CLASS NOTES
55
IN MEMORIAM
The Unpretentious
Playwright
Jack Neary ’73—who’s published
34 plays—works on his newest script
at the Starbucks on South Campus.
Read more about Neary on Page 48.
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Alumnievents
Fall Festival 2011
Alumni Reconnect During Weekend Celebration
1
2
1 Alpha Sigma Tau alumnae at Fall Festival’s Fraternity and Sorority Reunion. 2 Chatting at the Fraternity and Sorority Reunion are, from left, Richard Lockhart '67
and Mary and Walter '59 Dawson.
4
3
3 Racers meet at the Jennifer's Run starting line. 4 Track team athletes Craig Bennett and Evan White with Chancellor Marty Meehan after Jennifer’s 5k Run.
5
6
5 Kappa Delta Phi alumnae at the Fraternity and Sorority Reunion. 6 Omicron Pi alumni at the Fraternity and Sorority Reunion.
7
8
7 Meeting up at the Student Leadership Reunion at Fall Festival are, from left, Monica Leureat, Jemica Cropperpam, Sade Jean-Jacques, Marck Clerveau, Marie Aka,
Ike Iloputaise, Foffi Selom Egbeto, Ariane Egbeto and Amy Liss. 8 Delta Kappa Phi alumni, from left, John Tardelli '64, '70, George Dixon '69, Yena and Bernie '56 Shapiro.
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A L U M N I
E V E N T S
2
1
1 The 50th Reunion alumni of classes of 1961 from Lowell Tech and Lowell State march in commencement, from left: Leonard Bennett, LTI; William Moylan, LTI;
Hubert Bonfili, LTI; Sandra Harvey, LTI; JoAnne Connolly, LSC; Charles Mitsakos, LSC; Sally Trice, LSC and Barbara Kinnaird, LSC.
2 A team of Plastics Engineering Alumni, faculty and current undergraduate students participated in the annual New Hampshire “Reach the Beach” relay race, with help
from sponsor Synventure Molding Solutions of Peabody. Top row, from left: Asst. Prof. Meg Sobkowicz-Kline; Jonathan Wilk ’03; Rob Duncan, student; Jim Biggins ’03;
Stephanie Dubay ’05; Prof. Robert Malloy ’79; Prof. David Kazmer; Brian Beaudoin, senior. Bottom row, from left: Melissa Siopes ’03; Melissa Egan ’03;
Bill Siopes ’03; Cristina King ’03.
3
4
3 Children's Hospital Boston Director of Radiation Safety William (Rusty) Lorenzen '90 and a group from UMass Lowell were invited to observe a “Longwood Thunder”
counterterrorism exercise, held by the National Nuclear Security Administration and the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Boston in October. Front row, from left: students
Thuquynn Dinh, Alexandra Robinson and Erin Sole and UMass Lowell Asst. Radiation Safety Officer and Laser Safety Officer Steven Snay. Back row, from left: Student
SuHan Kim, radiological science faculty Mark Tries and Clayton French, Lorenzen and students Warnie (Sonny) Gick and Thompson Joe. 4 Atlas Venture Partner
Peter Barrett '74, third from left, who spoke to a chemistry class on campus, with, from left, College of Sciences Assoc. Dean Fred Martin, Provost Ahmed Abdelal,
Chemistry Department Chair James Whitten, Vice Provost for Research Julie Chen and Dean of Sciences Robert Tamarin.
5
6
5 From left, Ken Pickering, David Vario, Larry Acquarulo ’81 and Tony Listro ’88, ’89 enjoy the 2nd Annual Plastics Golf Tournament at Connecticut National Golf Club.
6 Turnout was great for the First Annual Sigma Phi Omicron Golf Tournament at Merrimack Valley Golf Course in Methuen.
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Alumnievents
1
2
3
1 Scott Huennekens, CEO of Volcano Corp., wears the UMass Lowell corporate rowing shirt for his hike up Mount Fuji in Japan with a friend. 2 Getting caught up at the
Delta Kappa Phi Reunion are, from left, Walt Brown ’69, Jim Denuccio ’69 and Dave Healy ’69. 3 Jose Pino ’08 and Jineyda Tapia ’06 relax at the Young Alumni Professionals River Walk at Salvatore’s in Lawrence.
5
4
4 Participating in the Rowing Alumni Day at the Bellegarde Boathouse are, from left, David Cormier ’12, Hengky Susanto ’04, Brian Legg ’07, Robby Walters ’10, Robert
Pitkin ’04, Bridget Mahoney ’13, Katrina Walthers ’11 and Denny Wirth, current doctoral student and captain of men’s team. 5 Rowing Alumni Day supporters, from left,
Catherine Curran ’84, Karen Scammell ’85 and Steve Curran ’82.
6
7
8
6 Sitting in the Alumni Rowing Day coach’s launch boat, from left, are Bob Bowles ’67, Chad Moore ’97, and Asst. Coach Leigh Eubanks.
7 Field hockey alumnae enjoy a Sunset Social at the Bellegarde Boathouse, from left: Sara Hohenberger ’06, Asst. Coach Chelsey Feole, Lizzy Ales ’11 and Erin Stewart ’01.
8 Linda Carpenter '90 and Larry Ardito '69 at the Ninth Annual Wine & Dine at the UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center.
9
9 Attending the Ninth Annual Wine & Dine are, from left, Mary Anne Durand, J.P. Durand, Stacey Hubbard '91, Dana Hubbard, Beth Doyle
and Matthew Hubbard. 10 Al Peterson ’55 throws out first pitch at the Annual Alumni Night at the Lowell Spinners game.
46
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10
Classnotes
A L U M N I
DON FINEGOLD writes that, in 1953, he was the first
graduate of the Leather Engineering program and that he
has many fond memories of the school. He hopes to attend
the next reunion.
1963
Ron Lafond played third base
for the Wilmington (N.C.)
Port City Pirates slow-pitch
softball team that won the
2011 championship in the
65-69 age group division at
the National Senior Games
in Houston, Texas.
1964
Two recipes from Ann Fox
Chandonnet’s cookbook,
“Gold Rush Grub” (University of Alaska Press), have been
selected for inclusion in a
Parks Canada smart phone
app for the Chilkoot trail site.
The recipes are for Sourdough
Starter and Sourdough Flapjacks. Parks Canada has been
compiling phone apps about
that country’s food and
heritage for all its national
historical sites.
George Perrone conducted
concerts and lectured in
Spain and St. Petersburg,
Russia, throughout the 1990s
and part of the present
decade. In 1994, he was the
first American to conduct
the new Russian National
Anthem at the Palace of
Peter The Great in St. Petersburg and, in 2011, he was
inducted into the ItalianAmerican Hall of Fame.
With George in the photo is
his son, Alexander, a musician and basketball player at
Loomis-Chaffee School, who
accompanied his father on
trips to Russia and Spain.
Marilyn Pinschmidt has
moved to North Carolina
where husband
Bob is employed
by the University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill. She moved
her piano studio
to the area and is very active
in local music groups. One of
her high school students won
first place recently in the
Chapel Hill Music Teachers
Association piano auditions,
playing Kabalevsky and Liszt.
In December 2010, Marilyn
brought Netherlands concert
pianist Misha Fomin to a
Raleigh venue. She also is active in local book clubs and
occasionally does freelance
writing. She says she would
enjoy hearing from former
classmates.
earned bachelor’s and
master’s degrees in electrical
engineering at Lowell Tech.
1971
A piece by Vince Bennett has
been included as one chapter
in the book, “Young Scientist
Journeys.” The book is the
first of a trilogy written for
those aged 12 to 20 who are
inspired to pursue careers in
science or to use science in
other careers. Vince’s chapter
details his journey from an
engineer focused on improving the papermaking process
to one viewing life as a
process focused on improving
his corner of the world by
making every interaction
positive. Vince is now
semi-retired and focused
on consulting and contract
engineering.
1966
Carol Baldwin is entering her
42nd year of teaching elementary music in Vernon, Conn.,
and says she thoroughly enjoys
every day with the kids and
her colleagues. She was named
the Vernon Teacher of the
Year in 1985, received Connecticut's Celebration of Excellence Award in 1986 and
was included in Who's Who
Among America's Teachers in
2004, 2005 and 2006.
1967
Donna Lane Nelson's latest
novel, her sixth, is “Murder in
Argeles: A Third Culture Kid
Mystery.”
1970
Richard J. Lynch retired this
past summer as executive vice
president for Enterprise-Wide
Strategic Technology Initiatives at Verizon Communications Inc. after 39 years of
service at Verizon and its predecessor companies. He had
Mark Cocozza and his wife
Susan (Scanlon) ’69 visited
the Stanley Cup in the home
of their neighbor, Boston Bruins’ player Zdeno Chara, after
the Bruins 2010/2011 season.
Betty Yokell, director of Performing Arts for Fall River
public schools, has retired
after completing a 40-year career. Husband Louis, a music
teacher in the city, retired at
the same time and the two
say they will keep busy traveling and dabbling in digital
photography. Betty also will
continue to put her French
horn to good use as a member
of the Fall River Symphony
Orchestra.
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L I F E
CLASS OF 1980
Inspired by Catastrophe,
Today She Makes Music for Peace
Opportunity, as we all know, sometimes comes in
unlikely guises. But few unlikelier than the one it
took for Gael Berberick ’80 in the spring of 1995.
She was living with her husband and their four
children in Fort Sill, Okla., where her husband had
then been stationed for two years. It was the day
after the Oklahoma City bombing; she was on her
way to a sing-along at her daughter’s school.
“I didn’t have a
song to sing,” she recently told a reporter
in Rhode Island, “but
all of a sudden this
beautiful song just
came [to me].”
She wrote down
its beginning in the
car on the way to the
school, the following
four verses later at home. The next day, “Hope for
Peace” was performed at St. John of God’s Parish in
Fort Sill, where she worked as a church musician.
Not long after, it started airing on local radio—and
is still heard regularly on stations throughout the
Midwest. The song earned her $3,500, which she
donated to a scholarship fund for the children of
some of the bombing victims.
It was the first of many such songs Berberick
would publish, though she had been involved with
sacred music for years—beginning as a young girl in
Marshfield, singing and playing the guitar for her
local parish. Writing songs, though, had begun later
for her: inspired by the day, in 1989 in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, when she’d discovered liturgical
music. “It was the most uplifting music I had ever
heard in the Catholic Church,” she would remember
later. [From that moment on] I wanted to write
music for the Church.”
And so she did. Not long after, she began
composing songs and sending them off to liturgical
publishers; but until “Hope for Peace,” none would
see the light of day.
The rejection letters, though, are long behind
her now. As of early this year, Berberick had published
more than 50 songs with liturgical- music publishers—including the recent “Mass of the New
Covenant,” co-written with Barney Walker, which
was introduced in Catholic parishes beginning in
November. “You don’t make a living doing this
kind of work,” says Berberick, who is orchestra
director at Tiverton High School in Rhode Island.
“You have to have some higher calling—a vocation.”
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Classnotes
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CLASS OF 1973
By Sheila Eppolito
Actresses, from left, Sheriden Thomas, Ellen Colton and Cheryl McMahon perform Jack Neary’s
“The Porch” at the Stoneham Theatre.
Jack Neary: The Unpretentious Playwright of Lowell
Precisely at 9 a.m.—the appointed meeting
time—actor, director and playwright Jack
Neary ’73 is outside the River View Diner,
checking his phone to make sure I haven’t
canceled or gotten lost. Signature Red Sox
hat perched atop an engaging Irish mug, his
handshake reveals a bit of shyness.
Without looking at the menu—it’s clear
he’s been here before—he orders up an omelet.
I do, too, but I skip the home fries, explaining
that I’m trying to “behave.” He tells me he’s
behaving, too, by skipping the bacon.
I tell him I’m awestruck—this man has
published 34 plays, in addition to his storied
career directing, acting and serving as artistic
director of the summer theater programs at
Mount Holyoke and Northampton’s New
Century Theatre, which he co-founded at
Smith College. His work has been widely
produced; perhaps his best-known work, “Jerry
Finnegan’s Sister,” was performed all over
the country, played in Paris and toured France.
“To Forgive, Divine,” professionally introduced
at the Merrimack Repertory Theatre, was
purchased for film by Walt Disney Pictures.
I confess that I’ve read every available excerpt online. “Jesus Christ!” he responds.
“Seriously?”
This reaction is indicative of a special
kind of Irishman. The antithesis of the often
typecast Lucky Charms rogue, Neary is a
man who won’t—for a single minute—get
too full of himself.
“My great uncle was right off the boat
from Ireland. I remember him sitting with
48
my uncle at the table, going on about how
he was hit by ‘the very first automobile ever
driven in Ireland!’ He goes on and on with
the story, and my uncle is just looking at him
straight in the eye. At the end of the story,
my uncle simply says, ‘That is a lie.’ ”
His favorite playwrights include Neil Simon, whom he describes as a master at
creating characters who ring true, and are
funny. They aren’t forced—they feel real,
and absent the phony sitcom laugh tracks.
Neary strives for the same in his characters,
mining his own truth to present fully formed,
fallible people. The inspiration for “The
Porch” came from none other than his own
mother and her two porch-sitting friends.
“I know what to give actors, I know how
to sell an audience,” he says.
He’s not making empty boasts. “The Porch”
earned wide critical acclaim. Dick Flavin,
Emmy-award winning author and humorist
said, “ ‘The Porch’ is everything theatre should
be. It is endearing, drop-dead funny, heartbreaking and, in the end, triumphant.
I left the theater thinking to myself, gee, I
wish I'd written that."
Perhaps more importantly, audiences loved
it—68 of the 72 performances at the Stoneham
Theater ended with standing ovations. “But
standing O’s are easier to get these days,”
Neary cautions. “You know, the lights go up,
and people stand up to leave, then one person
claps and everyone sort of joins in.”
But for all his success as a playwright,
Neary’s art has a deeper foundation. “I spent
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
many years acting and directing, so I have a
good sense of what will work,” he says.
In fact, Neary was 35 before he wrote his
first play, “First Night.” A member of the
Dramatists Guild, the Actor’s Equity Association and the Screen Actors Guild, he recently
had a role in Ben Affleck’s Boston-based
movie “The Town” and auditioned for the
role of Alice Ward’s husband in “The Fighter.”
Earlier roles include both Felix and Oscar in
“The Odd Couple,” Clarence in the musical
“A Wonderful Life,” Amos in “Chicago” and
Maurice in “Beauty and the Beast.” On network television, he has appeared in “Spenser:
For Hire” and, more recently, on “Law and
Order” and Showtime’s series “Brotherhood.”
He also directed Cindy Williams from TV's
“Laverne and Shirley” in 2009 in his play
“Kong’s Night Out” at the Meadow Brook
Theatre in Michigan.
As far as the writing process goes, Neary
says, “I often begin with an idea about a play
with a particular actor in mind—‘First Night’
started with a role I knew would be perfect
for Maryann Plunkett.”
Plunkett—a Tony-Award winning actress
who attended Lowell State with Neary—
very nearly played the role off-Broadway in
1994, but had to bow out when she learned
she was expecting. “First Night” was first
produced professionally at the MRT.
So, what’s next for this man of many talents? Two things: children’s plays, and a book
proposal.
“Lately, I’ve been writing a lot of stuff for
kids—a lot of parodies of classic stories,”
Neary says.
He’s also forayed into another creative
outlet: developing a book proposal for Jeanne
Stawiecki, a remarkable woman who has
completed marathons and climbed the highest
peak on every continent—including Everest
on her third try.
And he has high hopes for his most recent
play, “Auld Lang Syne,” a two-character comedy that is currently being considered by an
Emmy Award-winning TV star and a Tony
Award-winning actress.
Oh yeah, and then there’s the summer
musical theater program he’d like to create
for Lowell.
While many would rest upon such accomplishments—boast about them, even—Neary
isn’t that guy. !
A L U M N I
1972
Michael Paloian, an instructor at UMass Lowell, is a recognized expert in plastics part
design. His vascular imaging
device, VeinViewer, which
won the 2011 Medical Design
Excellence Award, uses
near-infrared light and other
patented technologies to project a real-time digital image
of patient vasculature directly
onto the surface of the skin.
1976
Ted Stokes has published a
book about entrepreneurship.
1977
Pervez Qureshi has been
named president and chief executive officer of Epicor Software Corporation, an international business with customers
in 150 countries. Pervez had
been president and CEO of
Activant Solutions from 2006
until that company and Epicor were combined. He brings
to his new post more than 20
years of management experience in the software and
technology industry.
Susan Laite Tansey is an
elementary music teacher in
Wareham, where her duties
include classroom music for
grades 1-5 as well as directing
the chorus and two bands.
Susan also participates in
local chorus and woodwind
ensembles.
1980
Joseph Carelli, executive vice
president for commercial
lending at Citizens Bank, has
been named president, heading up the bank’s New Hampshire and Vermont operations.
Barbara Balch Packales recently became technology
chair for the North Carolina
Music Educators Association.
She continues to participate
as a board member of both the
TI:MENC Chapter and of the
National Association for
Music Education Society for
General Music. Her current
assignment is at Olds Elementary School in Raleigh, teaching K-5 music and technology
integration.
1981
1978
Jerry Colella, vice president
and COO of MKS Instruments, joined other senior
management of MKS in ringing the NASDAQ opening
bell on June 15, 2011 in
recognition of the 50th anniversary of the founding of
the company. Jerry also serves
as a member of the Manning
School of Business Advisory
Board.
Gale Pemberton was remarried in March 2011, to Robert
Knowles, a retired teacher
from Michigan. Her grandson,
Joseph Beagley, is a freshman
at UMass Lowell.
Bonnie Comley, and husband
Stewart Lane, recently
visited campus to attend the
Chancellor’s Leadership
Society reception at the
UMass Lowell Inn &
Conference Center.
1986
Michael McGovern has been
vice president of Information
Technology at the Cambridge
Trust Company for the last
eight and a half years. He has
been in the IT field for more
than 25 years.
L I F E
DARLA HANLEY ’86, dean of the Professional Education
Division at Berklee College of Music in Boston, has been
elected to the Jazz Education Network board of directors.
This national organization is in its third year and replaces
the former International Jazz Educators Association.
1987
Stephen Russell is a senior
talent acquisition manager for
CVS Caremark Corp., a Fortune 25, $100 billion healthcare company with more than
200,000 employees and 7,200
stores across the United
States. He manages national
recruiting efforts to identify,
attract and secure top business, healthcare and retail
professionals. Steve, the son
of Richard Russell, ’61, began
his career with Citizens
Financial Group and Fidelity
Investments. He lives in
East Providence, R.I., with
his wife, Rosa, and their children Zachary, Christopher
and Monica.
1989
Rich Cusolito, vice president
of Sales, North America for
Technicolor, has been named
a director of business development for Pelican Products, a
manufacturer of high-performance protective case solutions and advanced portable
LED lighting systems. Rich
brings more than 15 years of
business development, sales
and customer relationship
management experience to
his new post.
1992
Susan Dirks ’92, ’95 is coowner of North Shore Nurse
Practitioners LLC, which provides mental health services.
1993
Tina Santos has been named
vice president for patient care
and chief nursing officer at
Heywood Hospital in Gardner. Prior to this appointment,
Tina was director of adult and
in-patient services at Lowell
General Hospital.
Dante Varrasso has been
named head coach of the
varsity wrestling team at McQuaid Jesuit High School, a
private Catholic college
preparatory school in
Brighton, N.Y. Dante, who
has taught history at McQuaid
Jesuit High since 2004, also
coached wrestling at various
other levels during that time.
1996
After a 13-year career in
financial services, Steve
DeSimone began classes this
fall at Bentley University to
pursue a Ph.D. in accounting.
Steve has also
been teaching
a Financial
Accounting
course at
UMass Lowell
since January
2010.
Cheryl J. Henry is chief
branding officer and senior
vice president of Ruth's Hospitality Group Inc. (RHGI),
the company that owns the
Ruth's Chris Steak House,
Mitchell's Fish Market,
Mitchell's Steakhouse and
Cameron's
Steakhouse.
Cheryl is responsible for
developing
and executing
the company’s
marketing and
branding strategy, enhancing
existing sales initiatives and
developing new revenue centers for all RHGI brands. Prior
to joining the RHGI team,
Cheryl was the chief of staff
for the mayor of Orlando,
where she was instrumental in
the development of $1.2 billion in downtown entertain-
ment venues, including
a performing arts center
and new arena.
1997
Adam Miloro has been
named a vice president of
Longfellow Advisors, a
Boston-based retirement plan
consulting and advisory firm.
Adam previously had served
as a senior consultant and
has written for the Employee
Benefit Plan Review. He
recently was granted the
Certified Financial Planner
(CFP) designation by the
Certified Financial Planner
Board of Standards. CFP is
the industry’s top designation
for financial planners.
1998
Jodie Minahan is the senior
placement specialist for the
Youth Villages Intercept
Intensive In-Home services
program in Woburn and
throughout Middlesex County. The organization helps
children with
emotional,
behavioral
and mental
health issues
and their families. Jodie
now lives in Haverhill.
2003
Kate Hanson Foster has
had her first book of poems,
“Mid Drift,”
published by
Loom Press of
Lowell. The
compilation
of 38 poems
reflects the
drama of family life and other
subjects she observed while
growing up in Andover and,
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49
Classnotes
later, while attending UMass
Lowell. Kate holds a master
of fine arts degree from the
Bennington Writing Seminars
at Bennington College.
Rosalind Gendreau and her
wife, Nicole, celebrated the
birth of their
daughter,
Dillon May,
last July 9.
2004
Amy Berdos, who spent the
last 15 years in the Norton
Public School system—first as
an elementary school teacher
and most recently as K-12
director of Curriculum and
Instruction—has been appointed assistant superintendent of Foxboro Public Schools.
Amy, who topped a field of
34 applicants for the position,
holds a doctorate in Leadership in Schooling from UMass
Lowell. She also earned a
degree in architecture and
building construction from
Texas A&M and considered
working on Boston’s Big Dig
project before her love of
math, science and children
pointed her toward the
teaching profession.
Ali Bogdan has joined Avison
Young, a commercial real estate company in Boston, as a
brokerage assistant, a post in
which she leads various marketing projects and supports
the company’s suburban brokerage team. She came to Avison Young from Noble Wealth
Management, an independent
financial planning firm.
2005
Isa Cann is a
director, website designer
and website
video producer
at Media
Architects,
which serves clients in the
New England area.
Greg Maloney, an SRT major,
has been working in Los
Angeles as technical music supervisor for Oscar-nominated
film composer Danny Elfman
for the past three years. His
most recent project was
“IRIS,” a new
Cirque du Soleil
show that will be
featured at the
Kodak Theatre
in Hollywood.
Greg is currently
working with
Elfman on the film scores to
“Hunger Games” and “Men
in Black 3.”
Beth Odian graduated cum
laude from Marquette University Law School in May 2011.
Following graduation, she accepted a temporary position
clerking for federal magistrate
judges William Callahan and
Patricia Gorence in the Eastern District of Wisconsin. Her
clerkship ended
in November.
Although she
does not currently have job plans
following the
conclusion of her
clerkship, she is
excited to begin the next
stage of her career. A native
of Wenham, Beth graduated
magna cum laude from UMass
Lowell in 2005 with a degree
in business. While at UMass
Lowell, she was a member
and two-year captain of the
women’s varsity soccer team.
2006
Mandy Whittier Breton was
married in July 2010 to Jeremie Breton. She is working
toward a master's degree in elementary education at Salem
State University and expects
to graduate in May 2012.
Cam Preciado, who earned
his degree in graphic arts, is
using the talent acquired in
that discipline to provide free
design work for nonprofit humanitarian organizations. His
first “customer” was Living
Continued on Page 52
50
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
19u CLOSE-UP CLASS OF 1992 AND 1993
The Odd Couple: Sharing a Home and a Marriage,
From Different Sides of the Fence
To all those who lament the incivility of our society, who bemoan that we’ve
grown too polarized as a people to any longer see past the differences between
us—there is a living, breathing rebuttal:
Dwight Robson and Lena Robinson, husband and wife.
Robson ’93 and Robinson ’92 are the James Carville and Mary Matalin of
Massachusetts politics, but without the fanfare. She’s a consultant to Republicans,
he to Democrats; her values run to low taxes and small government, his are
rooted in more help for the little guy. He wrote a check last fall to the Deval
Patrick campaign; she canceled it out with a bigger one to Charlie Baker. When
it comes to politics, they don’t agree on much.
And yet.
And yet they’ve been together since they met at ULowell—where she was as
left-wing as he was (“of the ACLU card-carrying persuasion”) until she read Ayn
Rand. They have two children together, share a home on the North Shore, and
only rarely give way to screams. ("Occasionally I lose my cool,” she told a
reporter last fall. “Dwight really doesn't.") They made it through last year’s
election by agreeing on no lawn signs.
But there are moments. There are flash points.
Mitt Romney is one. ("Dwight has a personal thing with that," Robinson told
the reporter.) Al Sharpton is another. (“Don't even go there,” she said to her
husband; “he’s kryptonite to me.”) And he’s never been happy with her
membership in the NRA.
Still, there is common ground—which is something they work hard to stress.
She is friends with Shannon O'Brien, former Democratic candidate for governor;
he’s worked on behalf of charter schools, which have strong Republican backing.
"I never did see things in black and white," he said last year. "Democrat, good;
Republican, bad—I don't see politics [that way]."
So the next curmudgeon you come across, arguing that we’re too divided to
get past our differences, or that Congress is too partisan to ever get anything
done?
Send him out to Marblehead to take a lesson from Lena and Dwight. ! –G.D.
A L U M N I
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L I F E
CLASS OF 1987
From a Teenager’s Passion
to a Lifetime Career
It began as a volunteer summer job, more
than 30 years ago. She was 15, a highschool student with an interest in science.
But somehow, the job never ended.
“It just kept on expanding,” says UMass
Lowell Education Asst. Prof. Michelle
Scribner-MacLean ’87, ’90, ’99 of her
relationship with Boston’s Museum of
Science. “I just kept going back—working
different jobs, at the front desk, in the
library, just about
everywhere you could
work. I finally did
leave to teach elementary school—but
I came back to work
in the summers.”
Over the years,
her jobs there grew
more diverse, and more responsible: “I
did the research for my master’s degree
in the butterfly lab. There I was, with
the keys to collections of butterflies going
back to the 1800s. There’s almost no
way to describe the things I learned.”
Recently, the museum produced a
video, “The Heart of the Museum,” which
profiles four people whose lives have
been touched by their exposure to it.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg,
who grew up in Medford, was one of the
four; another was Scribner-MacLean. “It
was a real honor,” she says, “to be able to
talk about how important, how truly special, the place has been for me.” ! –G.D.
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Classnotes
Waters Center of Hope in
Lowell, which needed new
logo and design work when
it changed its name from
“ministry” to “center.”
Cam and his fiancée have
launched Christian Hill
Studios, a graphic arts and
apparel business.
2007
Marine 1st Lt. Matthew
White, of East Bridgewater,
who earned his degree in
sound recording technology,
returned from Afghanistan
this past summer after deploying with the 8th Engineering
Support Battalion as a battery
communications officer.
Salem’s Derby Wharf to New
York City this past summer
along with more than three
dozen members of SCIP, the
Park Service’s Student Career
Intake Program. The program
gave the Massachusetts participants an opportunity to bond
with other SCIP students from
New York and Baltimore.
Saoran, who had been in the
program for three years, is the
first SCIP student from Lowell
to secure a permanent position
with the Park Service.
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CLASS OF 2010
2010
Ryan Cahill has graduated
from the U.S. Navy Officer
Training Command in
Newport, R.I., and was
commissioned with the rank
of ensign.
2011
Matt says he’s going to stay
in the Marine Reserves and is
looking for a job in the audio
visual, audio engineering or
television fields. Meanwhile,
he says he’s trying to become
adjusted to civilian life.
Sara Shipley, a certified family nurse practitioner, joined
Family Practice of South
Nashua. Sara is affiliated with
Foundation Medical Partners
and is on the active staff at
Southern New Hampshire
Medical Center.
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Alum Stars in Microsoft Video
In a new video produced by Microsoft, Mark Micire, who received his doctorate
in computer science from UMass Lowell, demonstrates how his DREAM controller
can command a swarm of robots by using his fingertips. Computer Science Prof.
Holly Yanco and her Robotics Lab are also featured in the video.
CLASS OF 2011
2008
Amanda Coffey, a board-certified physician assistant, has
joined the Amherst (N.H.)
Family Practice. Amanda is
affiliated with Foundation
Medical Partners and is on
the staff at Southern New
Hampshire Medical Center.
After earning her bachelor
of science degree summa cum
laude from UMass Lowell, she
earned a master’s in physician
assistant studies at the Manchester campus of the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy
and Health Sciences.
2009
Saoran Roeuth, an administrative support assistant at the
National Park Service in
Lowell, sailed aboard the
Friendship of Salem, a replica
of a 1796 cargo ship, from
52
Pair Win First Place in National Design Contest
Adam McLaughlin and Jordan Tye met as middleschool students at the University’s summer Design
Camp. Nearly a decade later, the pair were part
of a team that won first place in a national
design contest. The recent graduates—
both working as teaching assistants at
the University as they each pursue their
master’s in mechanical engineering—
took top honors in the recent Design for
Direct Digital Manufacturing Competition, beating 11 other schools from across
the country. Their entry (created along
with current students Lisabet Sizer and
Mark Damplo) was a custom forearm
handgrip that allows people using crutches
to comfortably and effortlessly control
an iPod while walking. “With such a
large number of crutches sold, if this
product could reach even just a small
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
fraction of crutch users, the product would still
make a huge positive impact on the lives of people
with physical disabilities,” says McLaughlin.
A L U M N I
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L I F E
CLASS OF 1989
Fear and Fulfillment
By Sheila Eppolito
At 6-years-old, huddled in an attic apartment in
Vienne, Isere in German-occupied France, Marguerite Waldron ’89 was terrified. She sat in
darkness—strict curfews meant lights out at an
early hour—and heard the clicking of German
soldiers’ boots as they
marched down her cobblestone street. She hoped
they weren’t coming for
her—they knocked at the
door of her neighbor instead. Today, life is much
different for Waldron, but
a part of her never forgets.
After putting her husband through MIT and her three children through
college (one at UMass Lowell) she cast around
for something for herself.
“When the children were grown, I had the
luxury of more introspection,” says Waldron.
She’d always been interested in painting and,
at the urging of a friend, took a class at the
DeCordova Museum. Following that, she began
lessons with Lowell art instructor Ann Schecter,
and she was on her way.
She enrolled in the University’s art program
at 50, and her official love affair with art began.
“I love abstract expressionism—it is an active
kind of communication; the person viewing it
has their own personal, individual reaction to
it,” she says.
She doesn’t like art that is simple, or too
literal. “I don’t like pretty little pictures,” says
Waldron.
Her canvases are typically filled with vibrant
colors, and often contain images of ladders and
doors, a throwback to her fearful childhood. “I think the ladders may
represent trying to get out—a means of escape, and the doors evoke
fear of who might be behind them,” she says.
After graduation, Waldron exhibited work at the Kingston Gallery
in Boston before moving to York, Maine.
Recently, in a moment of serendipity, her daughter, Nicole, invited
her to a wine tasting and art exhibit at The Clown in York. After surveying the featured artist’s work, Waldron felt a renewed confidence
in her own abilities, and approached the Clown’s manager, Monique
Meadows.
“I asked her if she would consider showing my work, and she asked
what kind of medium I use,” recalls Waldron.
“When I told her I paint abstract, she nearly jumped out of her
skin! She said ‘I love abstract!’ ” And a friendship was born.
“Ajmer” by Marguente Waldon
“I visited Marguerite’s studio, and I imagine I felt the way Alfred
Stieglitz did upon discovering Georgia O’Keeffe,” Meadows says. “I
was absolutely blown away with the quality and quantity of her
work—I wanted to yell at her and say ‘Where have you been? ’ ”
A showing of 28 of Waldron’s pieces soon followed, with critical
acclaim and sales. But selling her work isn’t a huge motivator for
Waldron. She says, “If a work sells, so be it. If it doesn’t, I get to have
it back, and look at it on my wall.”
She credits Meadows’ enthusiastic reaction with a new commitment
to her work.
“She has reenergized me to continue to work—I value her friendship
enormously,” she says. !
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Classnotes
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CLASS OF 2000
Harish Hande Wins
‘Asia’s Nobel Prize’
Harish Hande, who earned a master’s
degree in renewable energy engineering
in 1998 and a doctorate in mechanical
engineering (with a concentration in energy) in 2000, was chosen to receive the
2011 prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award.
The co-founder and managing director
of Solar Electric Light Company (SELLCO) India was recognized for his “passionate and pragmatic efforts to build a
social enterprise that brings customized,
affordable, and sustainable electricity to
India’s vast rural population, encouraging
the poor to become asset creators.”
SELCO has pioneered access to solar
electricity for rural families living below
India’s poverty line through a combination
of customized home-lighting systems and
innovative financing.
The annual Magsaysay award—widely
considered to be Asia’s equivalent of the
Nobel Prize—is named in honor of the
former Philippine president who died in
a plane crash in 1957. Awardees receive
a cash prize of $50,000. ! –E.A.
54
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
In memoriam
A L U M N I
Leo King, Remembered:
a Legacy of Caring
Marianne Heimburg Knowlton:
Teacher, Writer, Artist
Leo King, who died this fall at the age of
81, was a man who touched lives. And,
nearly as often, changed them.
The memories that trailed his nearly
30 years as dean of students—beginning
at Lowell Tech in 1967, finally retiring
from UMass Lowell in 1996—are vivid.
“He was definitely
pro-student,” remembers Ellen Duggan,
who served as his
assistant dean for
years, then took over
upon his retirement.
“He was absolutely
devoted [to them].”
“A 24-hour policeman, a 24-hour
chaplain, and 24-hour friend of the students,” said Larry Martin, who was dean
of admissions through much of King’s
tenure, to a reporter earlier this year.
“He had the hardest job in the
University, without question.”
A former student, writing from Florida, remembers a crisis 30 years ago: “I
asked your secretary for five minutes with
you to explain a problem. You gave me
an hour. You extended a hand, and held
me accountable. You made an impact
on my life, an impact I am still [feeling]
today. I thank God for you.”
Today’s Dean of Students, Larry
Siegel, who says he came to UMass Lowell in large part because of King, remembers the phone calls he made to arrange
student loans, or credit at the bookstore
for a student who couldn’t afford his
texts, or a proper graduation ceremony
for a prison inmate who’d completed his
coursework through the mail. At least
once, says Siegel, he remembers King
taking out his wallet to give a student
money for food.
“Hundreds of students owe their college degrees to him. He would spend a
lot of his time meeting with [those] who
felt they were at dead ends – whether it
was personal, academic or financial.
He really felt like they were his kids.
He used to refer to them like that.”
Donations in Leo’s memory can be
made to the Leo F. King Scholarship
Endowment Fund. Checks, payable
to UMass Lowell, can be sent to the
Office of University Advancement,
One University Avenue, Southwick Hall
250, Attn: Kristen Walsh.
Marianne Heimburg Knowlton, who taught English
at the University for 35 years, was a devoted student
of the artistic and the literary.
“She sought out places her favorite authors knew
and loved in order to know the writers better,” says
Martha McGowan, a retired English professor and
longtime friend. “I have photos she took of one of
Jane Austen’s homes, and of a café Hemingway
frequented in Spain.”
Knowlton’s family—including former husband
Ted, daughters Polly and Liza and son Larry (another
son, Kned, predeceased her) recently held a memorial
service for her following her death at 81.
“Whether deeply immersed in a popular pageturner or a dog-eared classic, my mother was perhaps
happiest when surrounded by stacks of beloved
books,” says Polly.
Knowlton found common ground with students
in challenging the status quos of the ’60s and ’70s.
“Students flocked to enroll in her course, The
Modern Lyric, where Joni Mitchell and James
Taylor songs were played and discussed in their
cultural contexts,” says Polly.
Brenda Atwood Pinardi:
Portrait of Generosity
L I F E
Moonchild by Brenda Atwood Pinardi
Every once in a while, a teacher comes along who
changes lives. From all accounts, Brenda Atwood Pinardi
was one of these. Pinardi was a fixture in the Art Department—as both professor and chair—for 35 years before
her death in 2011.
Pinardi and her husband. Enrico (Henry), an art
instructor at Rhode Island College, each went beyond
the traditional role of teacher, and became—to a lucky
Prof. Rudolph Deanin:
group—more like parents. Doug Bell, a former student of
Plastics Hall of Fame
Henry’s, describes spending time at the couple’s Hyde
Prof. Rudolph Deanin of UMass
Park home:
Lowell’s Plastics Engineering
“A few of us would visit them for the weekend, and in
Department died on Aug. 7 in
return for yard work, Brenda would prepare wonderful
Lowell. He was 90.
meals for us. We’d stay up until all hours working on our
A member of the Plastics Hall of Fame and
artwork in their studios. My father died in the ’80s, and I
a fellow of the Society of Plastics Engineers, the
turned to Henry. Then my mother died a few years later,
longtime Westford resident taught at the University
and I turned to Brenda. Since then, I have considered
for 41 years, until his retirement in 2008 at age 87.
them my parents.
He authored more than 300 technical papers and
Former Art Dept. colleague Jim Coates remembers
12 books and held 36 patents.
Pinardi as a mentor: “Brenda was chair when I was
“Rudy’s greatest accomplishment was establishing
hired. She was extraordinarily generous with her time
the Plastics Engineering Graduate Program, which has and showed genuine patience and compassion.
elevated the status of the department and has attract- I’ve often described her as the glue that held the
ed graduate students from around the world,” says
department together.”
department chair Prof. Robert Malloy. “He served as
For former student Jay Kamins, Brenda’s voice is a
the program’s coordinator throughout his academic
powerful memory. “Whenever I think of Brenda, it’s
career. He will be missed by all.”
her voice that first comes rushing back—her tone was
“I still remember when I applied for the M.S./Ph.D. buoyant, relaxed and accepting,” he says.
program in Plastics Engineering, Dr. Deanin provided
“Last week, I spent some time in her old studio,
me with all the necessary information promptly via
seeing everything as she left it a year before. Collections
email or via letter typed using his favorite typewriter,”
of every sort filled the room—including playful assemsays former student Rahul Panchal. “When I met him
blages of shells, old dolls, and unusual objects found from
for the first time, I was amazed that at 80+ he was so
years of hunting with Henry. On her desk, CDs of Elvis,
active, prompt, polite and down-to-earth.”
The Doors, Bob Dylan. Off to the side, brushes are lined
Donations in Rudy’s memory can be made to the
up, well cleaned and ready to go,” he says.
Professor Rudolph Deanin Blending and CompoundColleagues and former students honored Atwood
ing Laboratory Fund. Checks, payable to UMass
Pinardi at two recent exhibits, both of which benefited
Lowell, can be sent to the Office of University
the Brenda Atwood Pinardi Scholarship. !
Advancement, One University Avenue, Southwick
Hall 250, Attn: Kristen Walsh.
W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2 UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE
55
In memoriam
A L U M N I
Russ Willingham ’06: Died Serving the Public
Russell Willingham Jr. used to work
multiple security shifts at a hospital
on weekends to make his UMass Lowell
dream come true. While also holding
down a job as an RA on the ninth
floor of Fox Hall, he wanted desperately
to earn a criminal justice degree. And
he did, in 2006.
But it was the dangerous profession
he loved that claimed his life. Willingham, 28, died in the
line of duty on July 30, during a shift with the Winston-Salem
(N.C.) police department. Willingham was responding to a
call regarding a possible drunk driver when he crashed into a
tree and became trapped in his patrol car.
A native of Framingham, Willingham is survived by his
wife, Courtney, in addition to his parents, two brothers and a
sister.
“The first time I met him, he was the resident advisor in
Fox Hall, and I was director of Fox Hall,” recalls Nicholas
Piscitello, associate director of Parking and Transportation for
the University. “He was an easygoing guy, but very passionate
about criminal justice. He really wanted to be an officer.”
L I F E
Catherine Goodwin ’43: Drawing Life Out of Gravestones
and Old Canvasses
Lowell was her life, and her lifelong love. She
was rooted in its present, but made of herself—above all other things—a curator of its
past. When Catherine Goodwin ’43 died, in
June at the age of 89, she took with her a
knowledge and intimacy with the city that
may never be seen again.
“She always struck me as someone who
straddled two worlds,” says Richard Howe, a
local attorney and blogger who, sadly but willingly, will now carry on the tradition of leading
the cemetery walking tours that Goodwin
made her calling for nearly 30 years. “She was
a very modern person, with one foot squarely
in the 21st century, but so immersed in the
history of the city, it’s as if she had her other
foot planted firmly in the 19th.”
She was a researcher, historian and scholar
of all things Lowell. Beginning in the mid1970s and continuing until near to the end of
her life, she choreographed exhibits at the
city’s museums and galleries that put the city’s
past—its artists, mill workers, silversmiths,
city fathers, the clothes they wore, the fabrics,
china and portraits they crafted—vividly and
memorably on display. Her cemetery tours,
beginning in the early ’80s and informed by
her exhaustive and loving research, revivified,
for thousands of today’s residents, the longdead men and women who made the city
what it is. Her 1992 book, “Mourning Glory:
The Story of the Lowell Cemetery,” brought
many of these figures to the page.
“She always found the human connection,”
says Irene Finneral, office manager of the
Lowell Cemetery, “and translated the stories
in a way her audience could feel.”
Deceased
YEAR*
NAME
YEAR*
NAME
YEAR*
NAME
YEAR*
NAME
YEAR*
NAME
1922
1922
1922
1922
1923
1923
1923
1923
1924
1924
1924
1924
1927
1927
1927
1928
1928
1928
1929
1929
1929
1929
1931
1931
1932
1933
1933
1935
1936
1936
1937
1937
1937
1938
1939
1940
1940
1941
1941
1941
1942
Gertrude Kenney Buckley
Julia Canty
Lillian Cohen
Dorothy Griffin Evans
Leon Davieau
Helen Powell Dorsey
Earl Hoffman
Henry Macher
Charles Bachelder
Samuel Burger
Winthrop Cody
Eleanor Costello
Mary Lynch Fisher
Mary Lenihan Fairbanks
David Currier
Edna Berry Learned
Thomas Connor
Paul Fasig
Marion Bustead Howard
Paul Evans
Patrick Hetherman
Fred Kennerley
David Taft
Ruth McKeon Kierstead
John Meehan
Marie Powers
Mildred Shanahan
Faustina Hall Dorr
Edna Steele Rittershaus
Loretta Gorman Francis
Barbara Thompson Havercamp
Clinton Grossman
Mary Jo Leahey
Dorothy Welch Breen
Estanislao Ocoma
Helen Fiske
Alice Foye
Phyllis Pidgeon Colucci
D. Ethel Cleary
Sidney Saltsman
Ellen Tierney O'Toole
1942
1942
1942
1943
1943
1945
1946
1946
1947
1948
1949
1949
1949
1950
1950
1950
1950
1950
1950
1950
1951
1951
1951
1952
1952
1952
1953
1953
1953
1954
1954
1954
1954
1954
1954
1955
1955
1955
1957
1957
1957
Irene Lidwin
Josephine Peary Sankus
Janet Kenney Duffy
William Haggerty Jr
Catherine Hill Goodwin
Margaret Morgan Cunniff
Allen Sideman
Robert Bent
Kalman Kobrin
M. Dorgan
Parker Downing
Charles Sheehan
Seymour Lash
Joseph Weldon
Robert Sloan
Angela Orlando Russotto
Richard Fifield
Charles Squire
George Spicer
Norman Brunelle
Morris Socransky
Paul Cushman
John Knight
Harold MacLean
Charles Mack
Margaret Peters Smith
Lucinda Silk
Michael Dielendick
Charles Flamand
Donald Nichols
Harry Woessner
Lloyd Whitney Jr
Joseph Iannazzi
Charles Sturm
David Austin
Margaret Thomas Doyle
Ellen Lyons Martin
Barbara Slavin Axon
Terry Husson Kadir
Sultana Poulios Daoulas
Lewis Miller
1958
1958
1958
1958
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1962
1962
1962
1963
1963
1964
1964
1965
1965
1965
1965
1965
1966
1967
1967
1968
1969
1969
1969
1969
1970
1970
1970
1970
1970
1971
1971
1972
1972
1972
1972
1973
Mona Griffin
Thomas Stanton
Elizabeth Haggerty Gunnery
Sherman Spiegel
Catherine Lee Kimball
Emile Genest
Rene Gaillardetz
Edward Anderson
Shalaby Shalaby
William Hadley
Charles Como
Kenneth Jacobs
David Preston
James Rice
James Nicosia Jr
Carlton Clark Jr
Raymond Lord Jr
Ronald Lareau
Donald Beede
Wayne Liptak
Robert Twigg
Carl Pitasi
Lois Choquette Sergi
Janice Thiel Leahy
Sandra Dlugosz Boileau
Neil Vallencourt
Joyce Scherer
George Zinkus
Walter Jones
Frederick Matthes Jr
John Bielat Jr
Donald Samowski
Francis Sevigny
Yu Wang
Judith Ozdemirer
Robert Moran
Gary Federici
James Fiore
Peter Mazur
James Pelletier
Robert Coleman
1973
1973
1973
1973
1973
1974
1975
1975
1975
1975
1975
1976
1976
1976
1976
1976
1976
1977
1977
1978
1978
1978
1978
1978
1978
1979
1979
1979
1979
1979
1979
1979
1979
1980
1981
1982
1982
1982
1982
1983
1983
John Crosby Jr
Arthur Driscoll
Miles Robinson Jr
William Gallagher
Frederick Greathead
Bruce Cecere
William Pelosi
Thomas Toner
Bruce Fitzpatrick
George Vetter
Douglas Jenkins
Fred Heselton
Jacob Eyssi
William Gallagher
Douglas Abbott
Henry Croteau
Helen Sable
Irving Anderson
Karen Zaccardi
Nancei Radicchi
Paul Cavanaugh
Robert Dwyer
Pauline Michaud
Michael Savastano
Stanley Haney
Vivian Moores
David Phinney
Catherine Evans LeClaire
Patricia Blake Fuller
Robert Roche
John Johnston
Kin-Chan Chen
Peter Gagne
Karen Page
Edwin Zale Jr
Gary Richard
Catherine Privitera
Gerald Halstead
James McCaffrey
Petra Grant Kivikoski
William Cooper
1983
1983
1984
1984
1984
1985
1986
1986
1987
1989
1990
1991
1991
1992
1992
1993
1993
1994
1994
1994
1994
1994
1995
1996
1996
1996
1998
1999
2000
2000
2000
2002
2002
2003
2006
2006
2008
Daniel Ryan
Michael Ackerman
James Patton Jr
Jenifer Thomas
Anthony Cavalieri
Mark Krawczyk
David Flaherty
Monique Ledoux Hines
Patricia Jacques
Joseph Vincent
Thomas Gleason
Karen Lacasse
Francis Trowbridge
Monica McGuire
Ruth Saltman
Frederick Wheeler
James Winter
Gordon Feltman
William Peacock
Michael Szufnarowski
David Birchenough
James Leonard Jr
Edward Lavigne
Burton Coburn
Marc Couture
Alexander d'Arbeloff
Mary Dunn
Charles Waldner
Paul Becker
Richard Orto
James Smith
Mary Gillis
Sheri Nilsen
Joanne Lindmark
Charles Panek
Russell Willingham Jr
Kim Forte
Rudolph Deanin
Brenda Pinardi
Leo King
* year of graduation
56
UMASS LOWELL MAGAZINE W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2
DONOR REPORT of GIFTS 2011
Thank you for providing the support that
gives so much meaning to every aspect of
campus life at UMass Lowell.
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
Chancellor’s Leadership Society
Giving with Purpose: UMass Lowell Launches
New Philanthropic Recognition
This year marks the launch of revised giving clubs at UMass Lowell.
The Chancellor’s Leadership Society is a distinguished group of
donors who, year after year, provide vital support to the University
with annual gifts of $1,000. This year, UMass Lowell also welcomes
the inaugural members of the Circle of Distinction, comprised of
top benefactors who have made generous contributions over
their lifetimes.
Within the Chancellor’s Leadership Society, there are the following
recognition levels:
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
$100,000 or more
Benefactors Circle
$50,000-$99,999
Fellows Circle
$25,000-$49,999
Innovators Circle
$10,000-$24,999
Additional Recognition Levels
No matter the size, your gift truly makes a difference and allows
UMass Lowell to maintain its position among the nation's leading
universities. The following levels recognize the loyal support of all
UMass Lowell donors.
Principals Circle
$5,000-$9,999
Patrons Circle
$2,500-$4,999
Graduates of the Last Decade (GOLD)
Recognizes graduates of the last 10 years who give $500-$999
Sponsors Circle
$1,000-$2,499
Benefits
Members of the Chancellor’s Leadership Society receive numerous
benefits based upon their giving levels. Among them are invitations to exclusive events; VIP receptions; insider updates from
University leaders; special gifts of gratitude; books signed
by faculty or alumni authors; complimentary tickets to certain
events, including athletics; listing and recognition in University
publications; acknowledgment at campus events and more.
Partners Level
$500-$999
Associates Level
$250-$499
Century Level
$100-$249
Friends Level
$1-$99
A Message to our Readers
We make every effort to accurately list all donors. If we made
an error with your name or listing, please call the Office of
University Advancement at (978) 934-2223 and we’ll correct
our records. This report includes those who made a gift
between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011. Thank you for your
generosity and commitment to the University.
2
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
L O W E L L
chancellor’s leadership society
Transform the Future
Leave your legacy to UMass Lowell
The new UMass Lowell Legacy Society recognizes donors who support UMass Lowell through
bequests, gift annuities, life insurance policies, retirement plans and other estate intentions.
Discover how a legacy gift can benefit you and UMass Lowell in ways you may not have
considered possible.
UMass Lowell Circle
of Distinction
The Circle of Distinction recognizes
top benefactors who have made
generous contributions over
their lifetimes.
James ’80 and Deb Dandeneau
Gururaj and Jaishree Deshpande
Charles ’66 and Josephine Hoff
John F. Kennedy ‘70
Mary Jo Leahey ‘37 (Deceased)
Robert ’84 and Donna ’85 Manning
David Pernick ‘41
Mark ’81 and Elisia Saab
Robert ’71 and Gail Ward
Roy Zuckerberg ‘58
FRANCIS CABOT
LOWELL CIRCLE
($100,000+)
Howard R. Berke
Boston Scientific
Corporation
James V. Dandeneau '80
Gururaj Deshpande
Jaishree Deshpande
Charles J. Hoff '66
Josephine Hoff
Cheryl V. Katen '66
Paul C. Katen '64
John F. Kennedy '70
Konarka Technologies
Ernest P. Liporto '62
Irene Liporto
Lucy Gregory Henderson
Trust
Motorola Foundation
Elisia Saab
Mark A. Saab '81
Loddy Weisberg '53
(Deceased)
Arthur S. Zamanakos
Roy J. Zuckerberg '58
BENEFACTORS
CIRCLE
($50,000-$99,999)
ARAMARK Corporation
Arburg, Inc.
Harry F. Bean (Deceased)
Nancy L. Donahue
Richard K. Donahue, Esq.
Mark Ian Gelfand
Eamonn P. Hobbs '80
L. Donald LaTorre '59
Gloria LaTorre
Arjun Malhotra
Leo J. Montagna '70
David Pernick '41
FELLOWS CIRCLE
($25,000-$49,999)
Anonymous
John Alden
Mary Alden '60
Kathleen B. Allen '77
Analog Devices,
Incorporated
Aldo Crugnola
Datacolor Inc.
Joseph C. Day '66
Thomas A. Huff '49
(Deceased)
IUCEE Consortium
Kistler Instrumental Corp.
Mary Jo Leahey '37
Donna M. Manning '85
Robert J. Manning '84
Gary M. Mucica '71
Alexander Ogonowski
INNOVATORS
CIRCLE
($10,000-$24,999)
Anonymous
William C. Blake '73
Clairmont P. Carter
Kathryn M. Carter ‘78
Cynthia Chamberas
George Chamberas
Comcast Corp.
Thomas M. Costello
Arthur T. Demoulas
Extreme Networks Corp.
ExxonMobil Foundation
Mark V. Forziati '78
May Futrell
Joseph C. Gandolfo '66
Richard L. Grande '72
International Wire and Cable
Symposium
To join the UMass Lowell Legacy Society or for more information on estate planning, contact
Carolyn Flynn in the Office of Gift Planning at (877) 775-1992 or [email protected].
UMass Lowell Legacy Society
Dean Bergeron
Alice Brockway ‘99
Claire Chamberlain
Jeffrey Cosiol ‘67
Paul DesCoteaux ‘51
Alan Desrochers ‘72
James Dillahunty ‘67
Steven Dudek ‘74
Linda FitzPatrick ‘68
Karen Fung ‘03
May Futrell
Howard Gorlin ‘58
Arthur Hillson ‘42
Kronos Inc.
Massachusetts International
Academy
Francis L. McKone '56
Joey L. Mead
Martin T. Meehan '78
Ellen Murphy Meehan
Microsoft Corporation
Minnesota Mining &
Manufacturing Foundation
Edward J. Moloney, Esq.
Jacqueline F. Moloney '75
Mary Jane Nehring
Diane C. O'Connor '84
Thomas C. O'Connor '77
William T. O'Shea '69
Richard A. Pierro Jr. '83
Marie C. Profio
John V. Pulichino '67
Kary Robertson '76
Bernard Shapiro '56
Diana Shapiro
Solectria Renewables
Theodore Edson Parker
Foundation
Thomas Chamberas Runners’
Memorial Scholarship Fund
Aruna Vedula
Krishna M. Vedula
PRINCIPALS CIRCLE
($5,000-$9,999)
Anonymous
Ahmed T. Abdelal
Lawrence A. Acquarulo Jr. '81
Bruce Z. Arakelian '82
Sandhya Balasubramanian '05
Carole Barrett
Edward J. Barrett '58
Carol F. Barry '96
Mary R. Bedell '81
Russell D. Bedell '81
Boott Hydropower, Inc.
Gertrude Hirsch ‘42
Allan Hobson ‘70
David Holmstrom
John Kennedy ‘70
Fang Lai
David Lear ‘79
Louise Levingston ‘46
Irene & Ernest Liporto ‘62
Alan Litman ‘70
Gary Madison ‘90
Clyde Magaw
Ada & Stuart Mandell
Ellen Mellen
Fleurette L. Boutin
Elizabeth M. Brackett '84
Joseph M. Brice '81
John Chemaly
Linda Chemaly
Mark J. Cocozza '71
Susan M. Cocozza '69
Gerald G. Colella '78
Joyce Colella '77
DCP Midstream Partners, LP
Carol Duncan
George L. Duncan
DuPont (E.I. DuPont de
Nemours & Co.)
Dynisco Inc.
Eastern Salt Company Inc.
Enterprise Bank and Trust
Company
Linda R. FitzPatrick '68
Stephen A. Fossey '78
General Electric Foundation
Goodrich Corporation
Albelee Haque '89
Eric J. Helliwell '88
Swanee Hunt
Independent University
Alumni Association at
Lowell
Joseph P. Donahue
Charitable Foundation Trust
Mitchell E. Kertzman
Jayant Kumar
Shalin Liu
L.L. Bean Inc.
Lockheed Martin Corporation
Foundation
Lowell General Hospital
Lowell Sun Charities, Inc.
Gary M. Madison '90
Ashwin Mehta
Merck Company Foundation
Millipore Corporation
Keith J. Motley
Ramaswamy Nagarajan '98
Arthur Miller ‘51
Marion Muskiewicz ‘91
Darlene O’Donnell ‘85
Dorayne Passler ‘75
David Pernick ‘41
Marie Profio
William Roberts
Ted Rothschild
Andrew Routsis ‘83
Bonnie Shepard
Douglas Tammelin ‘98
Laurence Walsh ‘56
Barry W. Perry '68
Raytheon Company
Red Mill Graphics
William G. Rhodes III '82
RI Consultants, LLC
Johanna Bohan Riley
Sheila A. Riley-Callahan '80
Brian Rist '77
Savings Bank Life Insurance
Company of Massachusetts
Robert K. Sheridan
Jean Sheridan
Joan Sparrow
Summer Star Foundation for
Nature, Art, and Humanity
SunDrum Solar, LLC
University of Massachusetts
Boston
Kendall Wallace
Scott D. Waugh '90
David Wegman
Kristen E. Williams
PATRONS CIRCLE
($2,500-$4,999)
Anonymous
BAE Systems
Battles Foundation
Kristine A. Beaudette '74
Louis D. Beaudette '74
Behrakis Foundation
Paul A. Bessette '73
Boston Sim Inc.
Ronald R. Boudreau '75
Bushong Industrials,
Incorporated
Robert M. Bushong '67
Robert A. Caruso '93
Julie Chen
Edward Chiu
Choon-Bo Choe '94
Nina M. Coppens
Paul C. Coppens
Francis C. Corcoran
Michael Costello
Day Pitney LLP.
Robert F. Davis '60
Stephen B. Driscoll '66
Thomas W. Giants '61
Susan A. Goodwin
Anita M. Greenwood '84
Grossman, Tucker, Perreault
& Pfleger, PLLC
Hearthstone Homes, LLC
S. Braxton Hinchey
Aloke Jain
Ehud D. Laska '75
Robert D. Lefort '83
Lowell Bank
Lowell Five Cent Savings
Bank
Amaresh Mahapatra
Charlotte Mandell
Caroline M. McAndrews '84
Melisenda McDonald
Metabolix Inc.
Thomas F. McGrail Jr. '78
George Michaels ‘79
Middlesex Community
College Massachusetts
David P. Myers '76
Subhalakshmi Nagarajan '08
Next Specialty Resins, Inc.
Nypro Inc.
Jack D. O'Connor
Therese M. O'Connor
Michael J. Orroth '92
Peg Palmer '73
Susan J. Pasquale '75
Chetan N. Patel '81
John H. Pearson Jr.
Robert Peirent '84
William C. Penney Jr. '75
William J. Perciballi '86
Kevin J. Perry '74
Albert C. Peterson '55
Demetrius P. Rizos '91
3
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
Susan P. Rizos
Rubbermaid Inc.
Michael T. Ryan '74
Daniel J. Sandman
Carmen Joseph Scarpa
SMC, Ltd.
Miriam D. Smith '57
Source Production &
Equipment Co. Inc.
Ellen L. St. Cyr '82
Kevin F. St. Cyr '80
Alexandra S. Tayebi '94
Amad Tayebi
Susan Tripathy
Gerard E. Vitti '69
Carole Ward '62
Wellington Management
Company
Mark A. Yates '80
SPONSORS CIRCLE
($1,000-$2,499)
A. Routsis Associates, Inc.
Prakash R. Ajmera '80
Jason Allen
Frank P. Arcury '72
Lawrence J. Ardito '69
AT&T Inc.
Autodesk Inc.
William T. Babcock '81
Peter A. Baglioni '70
Robert B. Barnett '71
Sandra C. Barnett '72
James E. Barrett
Linda A. Barrington '04
David M. Basile '76
Robin H. Begley
Leonard Bennett '61
Dean J. Bergeron
Joseph J. Blonski '78
Sara M. Bogosian
Vas Bogosian
Meg Bond
Mark Bonifacio '87
Patricia M. Bonifacio '90
Robert E. Boudreau Jr. '79
Craig S. Brown '00
Hank Brown '67
H. James Brown Jr. '70
Rob Budd
Rosie Budd
Steven M. Burke '84
Emily D. Byrne '02
James T. Canning
Linda C. Carpenter '89
Carris Plastics
Kathryn M. Carter '78
John J. Catallozzi '64
Jeng-i Chen '89
George P. Cheney '68
Commodore Builders, Inc.
Community Counselling
Service Co., LLC
Louis B. Coiro '82
Brian L. Connell '76
Suzanne Lane Conrad '81
Steven S. Cottrell '66
Debra Darby
Roger E. Darois '75
John C. Davis
Davol, Inc.
Richard N. Dawson '77
Mary Elizabeth DeMallie
Ann Shanahan Delfuoco
Joyce G. Denning
Alan A. Desrochers '72
Amit N. Dharia '86
Kerry F. Donohoe '95
Donald F. Doyle
Kathleen M. Doyle '77
William R. Doyle '77
Douglas Russell, Inc.
Robert F. Dudley III '74
Daniel Durkin '83
4
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
chancellor’s leadership society
Stephanie Durkin
Wayne Eaton '65
Edison International
Entec Polymers, LLC
Entergy Corporation
Everett Mills Real Estate
Federal Carpet
Deborah Ellen Finch '03
H. W. Flood
Robert Forrant
Foster Corporation
William C. Fothergill III '71
Duane E. Fox '71
Linda E. Fox '02
Jeffrey J. Gallant '82
Doris K. Gayzagian '71
Kathleen C. Geary '78
William C. Geary III '80
John D. Geraci '97
Frank S. Gerry '75
Donald P. Gill '75
Timothy Goodell
Robert W. Goodnow Jr. '79
James J. Goudouros '84
Dana M. Granville '75
Steven Grossman
Haartz Corporation
Hamilton, Brook, Smith &
Reynolds, P.C.
Hanser Gardner Publications
Peter J. Harrison '77
Margaret M. Ogonowski
Hatch
William Hatch
Debbie I. Hauser '79
Bill Heffron
Greg Herenda
Richard J. Hoeske '66
Kenneth W. Horton '79
Jan Chan Huang
Mary Lou Hubbell '85
Graham A. Hughes '65
Marie F. Hurd '75
Ann Marie Hurley '82
Timothy A. Hutchison '92
Illinois Tool Works, Inc.
International Medical
Industries, Inc.
James P. Jajuga
Jajuga Associates Inc.
Jamesco Development Inc.
Jeanne D'Arc Credit Union
Donna L. Jenkins, RN '78
Victor E. Johnson '89
Alan G. Johnston '72
Lillian A. Johnston '96
Russell Karl
John D. Kattar '82
David O. Kazmer
Joseph J. Kekejian
Catherine A. Kendrick
Kilkenny Pub
Patricia Koczera
Robert G. Kunzendorf
Chang-Shu Linus Kuo '02
Joseph V. Lacoste '83
Fang Lai
David J. Laurello '81
Peter Laursen, MD
George B. Leahey
Richard Lemoine '96
William Lemos
Arnold S. Lerner
Maureen A. Lerner
Lowell Fruit Co. Inc.
Mark D. Lozier '73
Carlos N. Lukac '71
Lutheran Church of the
Redeemer Foundation
Ellen M. Malloy '80
Robert A. Malloy '79
Stuart L. Mandell
Ada Mandell(Deceased)
Paul F. Marion '76
Sutiyao Marturunkakul '93
Thomas C. McAvinew '63
Patricia A. McCafferty
Matthew P. McCafferty III
'79
Stephen P. McCarthy
Daniel J. McCormick '83
Donny McCoy
David P. McGrath Jr. '98
Suzanne L. McHendry '65
Walter J. McHendry '64
Terrance P. McMahon '90
Jeffrey E. Mead '78
Deepak H. Mehta '93
Roland R. Meijer '82
Karen Devereaux Melillo '78
Robert M. Melillo '73
Marjorie R. Miller '67
Pascal Miller '91
Alex Moschella '03
Richard J. Musgrave, Esq.
'88
James J. Nason '80
Richard J. Neal Jr., DMD '80
Thomas P. Nerney
New England Rubber and
Plastic Group Inc.
Rosemary E. Noon
Patricia Noreau
Steven R. Normandin
Alfred L. Nuttall '65
Marie A. O'Connor '52
Stephen A. Orroth '66
Over-Thirty Baseball, Inc.
Marianne Paley Nadel
Robert F. Penfield '80
Melissa M. Pennell
Stephen A. Pennell
Robert Perris '68
Geoffry Phillips-McEnany
Scott Pierce
Donald E. Pierson
Patrese Obrien Pierson '05
Laura J. Pollard '89
RF Walsh Collaborative
Partners
Francis A. Reed '80
Andrew Routsis '83
Carol A. Royal '80
Gerald E. Royer '71
RTP Company
Rubber Division American
Chemical Society
Michael F. Rubner '82
Anthony L. Sagona
Nicholas Sannella
Karen L. Scammell '85
Nick R. Schott
Patrick Scollin '01
Edward W. Sheehan '90
Laurence Siegel
Judith Sizer
Nancy F. Sizer
Dana K. Skinner
Keith A. Sommer '73
Specialty Materials, Inc.
Sports Zone Inc.
Satchit B. Srinivasan '92
Alfred A. Stadnicki '71
Steven L. Starkey '79
Theresa M. Starkey
Kathryn T. Sullivan '80
Patricia A. Sullivan-Talty '78
Jack F. Swartz '72
Francis T. Talty '77
Robert H. Tamarin
TESco Associates, Inc.
Roger E. Temple '80
John C. Thibault
Shirley G. Thomson
Garrett S. Thurston '90
Lisa M. Thurston '96
John Ting
Transystems Corporation
Tyco Electronics Foundation
U.S. Charitable Gift Trust
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
L O W E L L
Joseph L. Vaillancourt '90
Michele L. Vercellin
Jonathan J. Vitello '79
Wei-Dong Wang '87
Watermark Environmental,
Inc.
Waters Corporation
Steven E. Weisfeldt '88
Deborah Anne White
Martin Wolf
Peter A. Woog '64
Yang Yang '88
Charles B. Yestramski '76
Joanne L. Yestramski '76
YPS, LLC
Victor J. Zelny '87
GOLD SPONSORS
CIRCLE
($500-$999)
Robert Backofen '03
Mary Cotter-Lemoine '10
Jennifer A. Desa '02
Bon-cheol Ku '05
Maria A. Millett '10
Robert W. Montgomery III
'03
Mital Madhusudan Parikh '01
donor listing by class
1941
1948
Benefactors Circle
($50,000-$99,999)
David Pernick
Century
($100-$249)
Ethel J. Doherty
Steven S. Marder
Alvin Rothman
Helen M. Smith
Partners
($500-$999)
Frank J. Symosek
Century
($100-$249)
Alice B. Jezak
Friends
($1-$99)
Sidney I. Saltsman
Number of Class Donors: 4
Total Class Gift: $50,725.00
1942
Century
($100-$249)
Arthur L. Hillson
Gertrude L. Hirsch
Alice G. Kiernan
ALUMNI
Friends
($1-$99)
John A. Murphy
P. Andrea Walsh
Number of Class Donors: 5
Total Class Gift: $460.00
1936
1943
Century
($100-$249)
Mark Markarian
Century
($100-$249)
Muriel F. Landers
Friends
($1-$99)
Rita J. O'Neill
Number of Class Donors: 2
Total Class Gift: $130.00
Friends
($1-$99)
Rita Aronoff
Teresa Collier
R. George Hochschild
Bruno Petricek
Number of Class Donors: 5
Total Class Gift: $200.00
1937
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Mary Jo Leahey (Deceased)
Friends
($1-$99)
F. Thelma Blakeman
Irene M. L'Herault
Number of Class Donors: 3
Total Class Gift: $25,060.00
1939
Century
($100-$249)
Janet A. Ratcliffe
Friends
($1-$99)
Margaret A. Allen
Mary D. LaBay
Number of Class Donors: 3
Total Class Gift: $200.00
1940
Associates
($250-$499)
Eleanor M. Priestley
Century
($100-$249)
Mary C. Laganas
Friends
($1-$99)
Rudolph W. Meuser
Dorothy Shapiro
Number of Class Donors: 4
Total Class Gift: $410.00
1944
Shirley E. Bennett
Milton J. Jay
Mary A. Rodger
Number of Class Donors: 3
Total Class Gift: $135.00
Friends
($1-$99)
Gertrude M. Bailey
Patricia C. Gill
Number of Class Donors: 6
Total Class Gift: $522.00
1949
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Thomas A. Huff (Deceased)
Associates
($250-$499)
Ida G. Simpson
Century
($100-$249)
Robert D. Brassil
Friends
($1-$99)
Mary S. Bassett
Patricia C. Drummey
Richard L. Hallett
Jacqueline A. Markham
Walter Schwarz
Number of Class Donors: 8
Total Class Gift: $33,713.12
1950
Partners
($500-$999)
Manuel D. Feldman
Associates
($250-$499)
Julius I. Fox
Century
($100-$249)
Alfred W. Canova
Sumner B. Goldman
Century
($100-$249)
Isaac L. Cohen
Charlotte P. Johnson
Number of Class Donors: 2
Total Class Gift: $300.00
Friends
($1-$99)
Michael M. Besso
Warren D. Douglas
Arthur D. Levinson
June E. Nickless
Marie E. Pekarski
Alphonse M. Tatarunis
Marcia A. Tatarunis
(Deceased)
Number of Class Donors: 11
Total Class Gift: $1,267.00
1946
1951
Friends
($1-$99)
Rose Demasi
Number of Class Donors: 1
Total Class Gift: $25.00
Associates
($250-$499)
Arthur P. Miller
1945
1947
Century
($100-$249)
Joseph H. Rosenbaum
Friends
($1-$99)
John J. Bernard
M. Marie Doleva
Stanley L. Helfgott
Number of Class Donors: 4
Total Class Gift: $235.00
Century
($100-$249)
Frederick B. Bischoff
Joseph J. Ducharme
Theresa A. Fenton
Paul C. Girouard
Barbara M. Lemiesz
Edward S. Morris
Frank T. Reilly
Mary L. Rock
Friends
($1-$99)
Hildreth Aldrich
Nancy N. Cook
Leonard I. Gilman
donor listing by class
Gerard W. Hirschhorn
Arnold M. Horwitch
M. Nancy Keeffe
Elizabeth M. McAvinnue
Janet D. McCarthy
Frances M. McDonald
Peter M. Rowe
Katherine H. Seidenberg
Priscilla Teixeira
Eugene C. Winter
Number of Class Donors: 22
Total Class Gift: $1,725.00
1952
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Marie A. O'Connor
Associates
($250-$499)
Mary L. Kelley
George E. Membrino
Century
($100-$249)
Miriam Kassel
Denis M. McNulty
Edward Mettler
Janet C. Reinhart
Vito J. Selvaggio
Friends
($1-$99)
Donald W. Aldrich
Joan N. Beumel
Edward S. Byrne
Arthur W. Claridge
Barbara J. Green
Virginia W. Jackson
George B. Jordan
Christine M. Lamontagne
Parker W. Longbottom
Marlene M. McKinstry
Ursula K. Nania
Janet Smith Parsons
Donald J. Schaaf
Patricia L. Turner
Number of Class Donors: 22
Total Class Gift: $2,740.00
1953
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
Loddy Weisberg (Deceased)
Partners
($500-$999)
Joseph P. Flannery
Century
($100-$249)
Harry J. Demas
Donald E. Finegold
Rita Z. Mehos
Mildred A. Mulno
James A. Nelligan
Vasiliki Selvaggio
Earl Sidelinker
Ann M. Sousa
John V. Walsh
Friends
($1-$99)
Stanley Berger
Elizabeth A. Connolly
Anne M. Deurell
Donald D. Dooley
Harvey M. Fishman
Gerald R. Hamel
Mary P. Keaney
Constance R. Lanseigne-Case,
EdD
Edson S. MacKenzie
Helen K. Maurice
Manuel M. Rocha
William H. Uster
Elaine K. Whittaker
Melvin Wiener
Number of Class Donors: 25
Total Class Gift: $127,337.53
1954
Partners
($500-$999)
Stephen E. Adler
Charles P. Riley Jr.
Century
($100-$249)
Daniel L. Brier
Nancy C. Scire
Abram Weiser
Friends
($1-$99)
Robert T. Cassidy
Ronald A. Cohen
Charlotte Dehning
Melvin W. Ettenson
Joan M. Francis
Thomas F. Garvey
Jerome H. Gilmore
Martina Grover
Charles J. Higgins
Herbert J. Hodus
Paul D. Horgan
Doris D. Kelley
Melvin C. Kleeman
Tristan A. Laurion
R. Wayne Legge
Rosemary A. Macklin
Mary R. Mansur
Christine E. Marocco
Raymond P. Pecci
Charles A. Smith
Number of Class Donors: 25
Total Class Gift: $2,554.00
1955
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Albert C. Peterson
Partners
($500-$999)
Donald W. Frazee, USAF, Ret.
Henry J. Powell
Associates
($250-$499)
Patricia Fuller
Century
($100-$249)
J. Joel Berger
Ellen F. Burton
John W. Chapin
Joan L. Cinq-Mars
George E. Lanciault
Friends
($1-$99)
Dorothy A. Clark
Daniel F. Crean
Claire M. Cyr
Dorothy C. Downing
Carol L. Folkins
Nancy G. Garvey
Ann M. Grady
Lorraine M. Kalil
Betty L. Mann
Allen C. Marcus
Raymond A. Moissonnier
Iris Phillips
Robert E. Wagner
Number of Class Donors: 22
Total Class Gift: $5,045.00
1956
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Francis L. McKone
Bernard Shapiro
A Lesson in Giving: Alumna From
Class of 1953 Cherished Teaching
Associates
($250-$499)
Cornelia A. McIntosh
Century
($100-$249)
Clementine F. Alexis
Gildo V. DiLoreto
William F. Frei
Gerald T. Gallagher
Jane E. Gallagher
Frederick W. Obear
Francis A. Raudelunas
Raymond P. Sharkey
Lora A. Sheridan
Laurence B. Walsh
Eugene F. Welch Jr.
Shirley R. Wilkinson
Friends
($1-$99)
Richard B. Aldrich, USAF, Ret.
Mary B. Colarusso
Marguerite A. Devine
Nancy M. Dowe
Frank A. Durant (Deceased)
Regis Fanaras
Barbara F. Fitzgerald
M. Lois Hosmer
Patricia A. Howe
Richard L. Peckham
Ann R. St. Cyr
Jean Stockton
Number of Class Donors: 27
Total Class Gift: $32,666.00
1957
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Miriam D. Smith
Associates
($250-$499)
Pauline Dyer-Cole
Raymond A. Masse
Century
($100-$249)
Ann G. Anstiss
Terry Husson Kadir
(Deceased)
Allen J. Killeen Sr.
Nancy A. Leclair
Jo Van Der Linden
Friends
($1-$99)
Joseph J. Bellemore
Nancy A. Bloom
Ruth C. DeMartinis-Zabierek
Elaine C. Dever
Beatrice M. DiLavore
Janet M. Donahue
John T. Finnegan
Ann V. Gardella
Janice Gosselin
Joan F. Halpin
John C. Higby
Mary Priscilla Higby
Alice E. Jones
Martha A. Leahy
Evelyn M. Smith
William C. Terris
Roy J. Zabierek
Number of Class Donors: 25
Total Class Gift: $4,950.00
Yearbook photo of
Loddy Weisberg ’53
Loddy Weisberg ’53 created a legacy at UMass
Lowell this year when she left a surprise
gift to the University. Unbeknownst to the
University, Weisberg, who died in 2010,
remembered her alma mater (then called
the State Teachers College at Lowell) in her
estate with a generous gift. The funds created
the “Loddy Weisberg ’53 Memorial Endowed
Scholarship Fund” to support students in
the Graduate School of Education.
“Mrs. Weisberg’s gift is the largest single
gift that the Graduate School of Education
has received,” says Anita Greenwood, dean of the Graduate School
of Education. “With the increasing cost of education, her scholarship
will be of real benefit each year to an exemplary student who is
beginning a student teaching practicum in one of Lowell’s
elementary schools.”
Weisberg retired from the Wilmington Public School system and
had resided in Hyannis.
1958
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
Roy J. Zuckerberg
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Edward J. Barrett
Partners
($500-$999)
Barbara H. Krysiak
Associates
($250-$499)
Leo P. Devarenne
Gerard I. Savarese
Century
($100-$249)
Karla D. Conway
Raymond F. Dunn
James T. Giles
Ernest Glantz
Toby Hodes
Richard A. Labrie
Athena G. Letsou
James E. Murray
Carol J. Neville
Harold F. Neville Jr.
J. Leon Poirier
Bruce W. Sharp
Edward R. Sheldon
Dolores L. Smith
Kathryn C. Tymorek
Friends
($1-$99)
Merlene L. Bennett
Irene C. Bourne
Theodore B. Brother
Frank G. Cagliuso
W. Preston Cooper
Paul A. Couture
Richard T. Devito
Marguerite M. Dorsey
Jo Ann M. Elder
Arnold Forsch
M. Richard Girouard
Anne M. Guzzo
Deborah M. Harlan
Catherine F. Menzie
Clyde L. Paulauskas
Paula M. Petrone
Paul R. Roussel
Earl F. Starr Jr.
Paul H. Sutherland
Claire M. Vervaert-Lemieux
Albert J. Weil
David L. Wood
Number of Class Donors: 42
Total Class Gift: $337,175.00
1959
Benefactors Circle
($50,000-$99,999)
L. Donald LaTorre
Partners
($500-$999)
Frederick P. Poznick Sr.
Associates
($250-$499)
Walter F. Dawson, Esq.
Joseph F. Dixon
Victor M. Forsley
Century
($100-$249)
Ronald Vincent Canova
Paul D. Finnegan
Rosemarie Giovino
Sheila M. Hardy
Gertrude L. Kelleher
Robert H. Leclair
Paul R. Lemieux
Richard Papoojian
Lyman E. Pevey Jr.
Martin H. Sokol
Frederick A. Szmit
H. Eugenia Thomas
Harry K. Thomas
Friends
($1-$99)
Vito L. Augusta Sr.
James W. Bell
Sandra Y. Burne
Cornelius A. Cunningham Jr.
Lawrence R. DeBenedictis
George F. Dillon Jr.
Joanna C. Doykos
Eleanor A. Durant
Richard Carl Freeman
Gilbert P. Gagnon
Carole A. Marcotte
June M. McGrath
Joseph V. Petrone (Deceased)
Carol Pineau
Frederick F. Seymour Jr.
Forrest R. Stickney Jr.
George P. Trearchis
James C. Weatherbee
Beverly A. Wiggins
Kathleen Wilson
Mary E. Wood
Number of Class Donors: 39
Total Class Gift: $53,775.00
1960
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Mary Alden
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Robert F. Davis
Partners
($500-$999)
Hiram E. Connell
Associates
($250-$499)
Barbara B. Allen
Gunnar M. Reslow
Anne M. Sheeran
Century
($100-$249)
Ronald A. Burba
Brendan F. Cassidy
Charles N. Darling
Jeanne T. Dunn
Patricia H. Joyce
Roger L. Marchand
Sandra A. McDermott
George E. Oehler
Helen C. Picanso
Harriet E. Pugh
John P. Riley
5
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
donor listing by class
Partners
($500-$999)
Thomas P. Burke
Roger W. Gagne Jr.
Raymond A. Galloni
James E. Hunt Jr.
One for the Books
“A library is the heart and soul of a university. That’s why we chose the gift we did.”—Cheryl Katen ’66
Associates
($250-$499)
Carolyn J. Lumenello
Century
($100-$249)
William A. Beresford
Jacqueline Frost-Young
Kenneth J. Gucwa
Edward B. Kaplan
Ronald H. Lafond
William F. Lipchitz
Katherine J. Manousos
William W. Mull
Roger L. Paradis
Michael C. Parnarouskis
Edward J. Roberts
Robert A. St. Denis
Theresa A. Vail
The Katen Learning Commons at the Lydon Library was dedicated Oct. 28, 2011. Paul Katen ’64 cuts the ribbon at the dedication
ceremony. Pictured with him, from left: Vice Chancellor of Advancement Edward Chiu, Retired Director of Libraries Patricia Noreau,
Chancellor Martin Meehan ‘78, Paul Katen ‘64, Executive Vice Chancellor Jacqueline Moloney ‘75, Vice Chancellor of Administration
& Finance Joanne Yestramski ‘76 and Provost Ahmed Abdelal (missing: Cheryl Katen ’66).
As students at Lowell Tech some 50 years ago, Paul
and Cheryl Katen of Oregon fondly remember their
studies at the Lydon Library and their ensuing love
story. After marriage, their locally fostered passions
for science and technology took the couple far, both
having ambitious and successful careers.
Now in retirement, they decided to return a favor to
their alma mater through a generous donation to
UMass Lowell. Thanks to their contribution of almost
$240,000—the largest gift ever to the University
Friends
($1-$99)
Ellen R. Busch
Lee R. Caron
Glen D. Chambers
Gerald Grasso
Louis D. Masiello
Mary J. McCaffrey
Patricia L. O'Neill
Henry A. Pellerin
Mary E. Phelps
Paul A. Robinson
Francis R. Sheehan
Sylvia L. Starkie
Frederic W. Turcotte Jr.
Jane M. White
Frank R. Zichelle
Number of Class Donors: 32
Total Class Gift: $41,346.00
1961
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Thomas W. Giants
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Leonard Bennett
6
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
Partners
($500-$999)
Hubert F. Bonfili, MD
Jo Anne Connolly
John B. Connolly
George L. Duggan Jr.
Sandra J. Harvey
Margaret E. Hayes
Barbara J. Kinnaird
Allan M. Lurvey
Associates
($250-$499)
Angelo P. DeBenedictis
Forest J. Dostaler
James J. Heenan Jr.
Richard A. Maloon
Thomas V. Marcella
Charles L. Mitsakos
Century
($100-$249)
Patricia D. Berry
Rosemary Costello
Pauline P. Gallagher
Elaine Gallo
Ethel S. Healy
Judith A. Hersey
Anna R. Hingston
Kenneth P. Joncas
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
libraries—the Katen Learning Commons opened this
fall on the second floor of the Lydon Library. The
reconstructed facility is a redesign of library space
that dynamically engages students and actively
encourages learning outside the classroom with 21st
century equipment that fits today’s learning styles.
The Katen’s gift also provides students and faculty in
the sciences and engineering with valuable online
database resources to support learning and research
in the advancing digital age.
Charles J. Keenan Jr.
Nancy C. Melia
William P. Moylan
Paul B. O'Sullivan
Dorothy R. Riley
Richard J. Russell
Charles S. Santagati Jr.
Jeanne Seaquist
Robert S. Smith
Sally J. Trice
Claire P. Watterson
Friends
($1-$99)
Francis P. Delaney
Noreen O. Grady
Daniel A. Hubecky
Robert P. Lamprey
Herbert J. Nelson Jr.
Joyce E. Nison
Esko J. Nopanen
Walter J. O'Connor
Judith A. Reilly
Raymond L. Rosatone
Deanna M. Szymczak
John M. Vervaert
Number of Class Donors: 47
Total Class Gift: $14,825.00
L O W E L L
1962
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
Ernest P. Liporto
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Carole Ward
Associates
($250-$499)
Richard J. Dauksys
Century
($100-$249)
Carol A. Buchanan
Carol M. Collins
Joseph Colombo
Georgia D. Dodge
Judith I. Fisher
James J. Galleshaw
Francis Georges
Pauline M. Golec
Stephen L. Kaplan
Richard J. Rodgers
Virginia Ann Sheehan
Joseph P. Smith
Joseph F. Trepanier Jr.
Jean C. Wilson
Friends
($1-$99)
Kathryn A. Aletto
Nancy E. Begley
Christine Cruickshank
Robert W. Etter
John C. Haggis
Ruth A. Hassett
Gilbert J. Hulme
Marie A. Izzi
Patricia M. Kelley
Raymond H. Lambert
Anne M. Meservey
Joel L. Newberg
Janice M. Oberti
Margaret Ogden
Nancy G. Vartabedian
Philip J. Veneziano
Ellen-Marie Winson
Number of Class Donors: 34
Total Class Gift: $255,307.00
1963
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Thomas C. McAvinew
Friends
($1-$99)
James E. Anastos
Robert J. Bernier Jr.
Ellen M. Blackwell
Rose M. Browning
Richard J. Cacciapouti
Diane S. Carroll
Beverly A. Darwent
Edward J. Davis
Serge R. Dery
Maureen F. DiPalma
Andrew T. Dudek
Ann M. Dziadose
Daniel B. Dzioba
David J. Gleneck
Gail E. Gordon
Edward M. Harris
Robert D. Hookway
David G. Hopwood
Barbara J. Manseau Hamer
Margaret M. Martin
Carole R. McDonough
Geneva M. Molloy
Joan M. Morrison
David E. Preston (Deceased)
Richard A. Profio
Linda Queller
Maureen A. Roberts
Raymond N. Vachon
Ronald R. Volungus
Joseph F. Zmuda
Number of Class Donors: 49
Total Class Gift: $6,127.00
1964
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
Paul C. Katen
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
John J. Catallozzi
Walter J. McHendry
Peter A. Woog
Partners
($500-$999)
G. Stuart Pearce
Associates
($250-$499)
Walter Brunner
Norbert B. Lavigne
Century
($100-$249)
William H. Barnes
Thomas N. Basile
Richard J. Campiola
Ralph W. Cook III
John S. Haley
donor listing by class
David E. Humphrey
Ronald F. Morales
Marie P. Sweeney
Robert E. Wheaton
Friends
($1-$99)
Jonathan A. Aldrich
Coula Barakitis
John J. Blouin
Elaine Conner
Mary L. Cullinan
Jeremy G. Dain
Richard G. Donovan
Mary Jane Farley
Thomas D. Flynn
Arlene M. Friel
Eileen C. Gleason
Paul J. Grace
Leo G. Grondine
Marie M. Habib
Marcia J. Harlfinger
Joyce F. Hashem
David V. Healy
Kathleen B. Hogan
Phyllis A. Irvin
Arthur C. Lowell
John J. Maguire Jr.
Emile O. Montminy
Thor E. Peckel Jr.
Marilyn T. Pinschmidt
David R. Sarre
Timothy P. Shea Jr.
Judith R. Simone
Michael C. Sokolowski
C. Douglas Stagnaro
Diane B. Stetson
Christine H. Themeles
Harvey A. Wiseberg
Number of Class Donors: 48
Total Class Gift: $248,895.99
1965
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Wayne Eaton
Graham A. Hughes
Suzanne L. McHendry
Alfred L. Nuttall
Partners
($500-$999)
Kyle F. Pero
Associates
($250-$499)
Dana B. Anderson
George A. Bednarz
George B. Inglis Jr.
Century
($100-$249)
Russi N. Dastur
Jane M. Duffley
Janice G. Gaboriault
Sheila V. Harrington
Patricia Lippitt
Chester F. Milensky
Richard G. Mousseau
Paul A. Schneider
Robert A. Simpson
Donald R. Susla
Friends
($1-$99)
Jerome I. Barancik
Joseph C. Barbagallo
Julia A. Bessett
Virginia A. Borst
Paul J. Carroll
Melville W. Clarke
Raymond J. Croteau Jr.
John P. Dagdigian
David E. Dickinson
Mary E. Donovan
Thomas P. Donovan
Richard A. Falke
Henry L. Fredette
Joanne E. Grant
Harry L. Hodgkins
Mary C. Law
Philip J. MacSweeney
Andrew S. Miller
Joanne R. Morrow
John R. Nazzaro
Frances A. Nowak
Nancy A. Nugent-Harley
William S. O'Neil
George R. Ostlund
David P. Piligian
Joseph F. Radice
James C. Smith
Richard F. Testa Sr.
Sharon L. White
Number of Class Donors: 47
Total Class Gift: $8,495.00
1966
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
Charles J. Hoff
Cheryl V. Katen
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Joseph C. Day
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Joseph C. Gandolfo
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Stephen B. Driscoll
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Steven S. Cottrell
Richard J. Hoeske
Stephen A. Orroth
Partners
($500-$999)
Charles R. Cordeau
Karen M. Walsh
Associates
($250-$499)
Lloyd J. Donnelly
Louis K. Mansur
Century
($100-$249)
David V. Anderson
Emilee J. Blanchet
Edward L. Cornwall Jr.
Leo R. Creegan
Richard B. Denning
Rita P. Georges
Hilde J. Gilman
Francis J. Hainey
Gerald M. Lydon
James J. O'Brien
John C. Rodda
Francis E. Souza
Penelope A. Zwieker
Friends
($1-$99)
Gerhard T. Anderson
Bruce W. Andrews
Kathleen A. Breen
Laurence F. Brundrett Jr.
Norman R. Brunelle
Edward J. Christopher Jr.
Peter D. Cooney
Harold T. Deane
John M. Donaldson Jr.
Leda M. Drouin
Susan I. Evans
Paul W. Fernald
Robert K. Girling
Pamela A. Hatton
Mary E. Hayes
Carol Hirsch
Richard A. Hylan Sr.
Joseph H. Kolakowski
Maureen McCarthy
Carla M. McCoy
Thomas R. Moore
Lewin E. Nyman
Alexander A. Olsen
Frank L. Pioli
Penelope Poirier
Jacqueline M. Randazza
William M. Reis
Mary Ann Sarris
Richard J. Savard
Donna M. Shanahan
Marlene F. Stiles
William C. Szekely
Sheila A. Vernon
Albert E. Walker Jr.
Thomas D. Whittaker
Carol A. Wickens
Number of Class Donors: 61
Total Class Gift: $417,592.35
1967
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
John V. Pulichino
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Anonymous
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Robert M. Bushong
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Hank Brown
Marjorie R. Miller
Partners
($500-$999)
John F. Silveria
Associates
($250-$499)
James J. Healy
Christina B. McGuirk
Keith E. Reno
Century
($100-$249)
Robert J. Bowles
Barbara A. Delehanty
Robert R. Gilman
John A. Hill III
Edward F. Kittredge
Jacqueline J. Kudron
Paul Laquerre Sr.
Joan M. Leyland
Joseph W. Mulherin III
Paul A. Rainey
Kenneth A. Shilinsky
Frank B. Smalarz
David H. Smith
Russell E. Stocek
Anthony M. Swierzbin
Jack C. Thibeault
Mary A. Tighe Mulherin
Stanley J. Wozniak
Friends
($1-$99)
David P. Brzezinski
Miriam J. Buckley
Joseph H. Cartwright
Albert L. Choquette
Louis Cincotta
Wallace H. Cooledge Jr.
Joanne M. Cudihy
Kathleen T. Desilets
Louise-Andree Erbe
Marcia Falke
Rosemarie J. Folk
Diane M. Frechette
Roy A. Fyfe
Maureen R. Haley
Michael G. Hanauer
Margaret A. Hassey
Jean E. Jacoppi
Leonard H. Karnow
Janeann Kay
James J. Kirkiles
Patricia A. Lapointe
Russell MacLeod
Flora E. Manning
Marilyn L. Mercier
John R. Moore
Joseph K. Mulcahy
Stephen P. Petrie
Dolores B. Rainey
Harry W. Rice
Robert C. Rogers Jr.
Carol A. Sandoval-Houston
Henry D. Shapiro
Suzanne R. Skea
Dorothy L. Smith
Brian D. Sougnez
Joan E. Spencer
Bernard D. Vaillette
Joan Van Horn
William L. Wacks
Kenneth R. Walker
John W. Walkinshaw
Amelia H. Wright
Number of Class Donors: 69
Total Class Gift: $30,330.00
1968
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Linda R. FitzPatrick
Barry W. Perry
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
George P. Cheney
Robert Perris
Partners
($500-$999)
Brenda J. Costello
Ferdinand J. Diaferio Jr.
Raymond A. Shepard
Associates
($250-$499)
Penny A. Berube
Winfield S. Hancock
Michelle E. Healy
Michael J. Lalli
Lee R. Minardi
Joseph C. Moynihan
Richard F. Picanso, USAF,
Ret.
Thomas S. Tycz
Century
($100-$249)
Joseph J. Bean Jr.
Lawrence J. Bonczar
Anthony J. Bruzzese
Eric J. Chaisson
Daniel F. Crowley
Kathleen A. Desmarais
John D. Donovan
Dennis J. Doyle
Joseph A. Gianotti
Stanice E. Gibbs-Mancuso
Merle R. Green
Julius D. Jones
Stephen J. Larkin
Samuel S. Lin
Robert K. Lyle Jr.
Robert T. Nadeau
Jean F. Nelson
George J. Ouellette Jr.
William J. Selawsky
Olivia Sintros
Sandra J. Wheaton-Ryan
Jin B. Yoon
Friends
($1-$99)
Norman J. Allard
William C. Allen
Susan L. Barrett
Ellen M. Barry
Kenneth W. Bassett
Joseph M. Bokser
Janine E. Bowes
Maureen A. Buckley
Madeline M. Calcagno
Robert Carcich
Gertrude M. Carey
Michael G. Casey
William E. Chamberlain
Denise A. Coffey
David B. Collins
Marcia L. Cutlip
Peter F. Czupryna
Kenneth G. Desilets
Daniel R. Evans Jr.
John C. Golec
Karen M. Golec
Cheryl A. Guernsey
Catherine M. Hanson
Randall L. Hanson
Linda A. Healy
Stephen B. Helfant
Richard W. Hildebrand
Charles R. Hill
James A. Justice
Cheryl E. Lindsay
John Maher
Frank J. Malabarba
Bruce C. Martin
Amleto Martocchia
Joseph J. McMahon
Lynne M. McSheehy
Anthony U. Messa
Donna S. Michael
William F. Moloney Jr.
Dianne M. Moran
Josephine M. Napolitano
John R. Nardini
Barbara R. Naroian
Paul R. Niemi
Andrew B. Noel Jr.
Margaret S. Ochs
Arnold J. Piellucci Jr.
Phyllis D. Poor
Syed A. Rashid
Mary J. Reis
Robert D. Shultz
Robert R. Swistak
Julia P. Taylor
Richard A. Trenck
Steven B. Veno
Norma K. Waring
McGranaghan
James R. Wittine
David R. Zwicker
Number of Class Donors: 95
Total Class Gift: $22,391.00
1969
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
William T. O'Shea
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Susan M. Cocozza
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Gerard E. Vitti
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Lawrence J. Ardito
Partners
($500-$999)
James A. Denuccio
Richard A. Kenney
Associates
($250-$499)
James M. Matheson
Joseph H. Rodgers
Century
($100-$249)
Michael F. Barnoski
Ellen M. Bowles
Martha A. Brennan
Walter L. Brown
Carole F. Callahan
John J. Callahan III
Everett W. Coonan Jr.
Mary J. Creegan
Paul Glassman
Joan B. Haviland
Robert A. Hederman
William R. Henry
Gary S. Hunt
Gaile T. Jenkins
Michael G. Kizner
Stephen F. Lange
Linda R. Messia
William J. Montbleau
Peter J. Olsta
Lillian T. Pearsall
Charles F. Puglisi
Philip M. Ricciardiello
Rosemary Sullivan
Friends
($1-$99)
M. Kathleen Adgate
Paul L. Adrien
Claude R. Bessette
Thomas F. Bowlen
Joseph S. Boziuk
Dennis J. Brandt
Linda E. Bryan
Kathleen A. Callagy
Kathleen D. Casey
Mary E. Cavanar
Maureen M. Chamberlain
Dennis J. Cotter
Patricia A. Del Llano
Dennis R. Desmarais
George A. Dietzler
Paul F. Doherty
Donald R. Duffy
Marilyn A. Farina
Ruth A. Faucher
Edward S. Gass
William J. Gill
Judith A. Gosbee
Allen G. Grew
David J. Healy
Richard M. Hirtle
Barbara A. Hutchinson
Kenneth M. Inamorati
Katharine A. LaBranche
Susan J. Lagace
Susan M. Larson
Rita J. Lichoulas
Diane M. Loughran
Kathleen M. Maher
Natalie Wojcik Marek
Leo F. McCue Jr.
Joseph E. McKenney
Frank S. Merrifield
John E. Pearson
Ronald J. Peterson
Joanne M. Ralls
Donna M. Sadof
Roxanne L. Savinelli
Robert D. Sedgwick
Lawrence A. Shuhy
Robert G. Simoneau
David R. Sullivan
Neil Vallencourt (Deceased)
Richard S. Vangel
William White
Richard P. Wiik
Number of Class Donors: 81
Total Class Gift: $35,740.00
1970
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
John F. Kennedy
Benefactors Circle
($50,000-$99,999)
Leo J. Montagna
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Peter A. Baglioni
H. James Brown Jr.
Partners
($500-$999)
Robert N. Gingue
Rodger F. Martin Jr.
Charles Joseph O'Neil
Associates
($250-$499)
John N. Caruso
7
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
James T. Davies
Anthony J. Iarrapino
Corinne M. Kelliher
Robert A. LaBrecque
Robert J. Marseglia
Alfred P. Olson
Dennis J. Sheehan
Fang-Jen Tuan
Phyllis M. White
Sharon M. Wilson
Margaret Zoto
Number of Class Donors: 93
Total Class Gift: $348,482.70
1971
Century
($100-$249)
Norman V. Beaudette
Mark A. Boldrighini
Roger H. Brown
Pauline A. Carroll
Kathleen M. Clark
William J. Conole Jr.
James T. Donovan
Marjorie E. Henkin
Alan P. Johnson
David C. Kennedy
Paul R. Loconto
Kathleen E. MacDonald
Paul H. McKinstry
Richard P. Morse Jr.
Richard W. O'Brien
Richard A. O'Neil
Christopher J. Pentheny
Bodo W. Reinisch
Richard R. Roy
Richard H. Scheel
Sabra L. Scheel
Edith B. Soley
Robert E. White
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Gary M. Mucica
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Mark J. Cocozza
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Robert B. Barnett
William C. Fothergill III
Duane E. Fox
Doris K. Gayzagian
Carlos N. Lukac
Gerald E. Royer
Alfred A. Stadnicki
Friends
($1-$99)
Forrest E. Badmington
Donna J. Bakios Cicale
Rosemaria A. Beaudette
Richard R. Berube
Robert D. Binovi, USAF, Ret.
Robert C. Bowen
Judith Breslin
Carol A. Burkett
Jonna M. Burns
Robert V. Casciani
Mark S. Corbett
Susan Currier
David F. Delorey Jr.
Dennis G. Di Gangi
Gerald A. Dragon
Eileen T. Earle
Virginia F. Early
Raymond D. Fischlein Jr.
Dana R. Frankel
Gerald N. Goldberg
David P. Gooch
Paul E. Heartquist
Angela J. Hutchinson
Michael A. Hyde
Stephen F. Johnson
Jarvis M. Kilgore III
Virginia M. Kirwin
Lorraine D. Kovacs
Margaret Legal
Cheryl A. Leone
James Madenjian Jr.
Paul E. Matys
Michael F. McNamara
Joann Menzia
Richard A. Mungo
Angela S. Papandreou
Pamela E. Parkinson
Robert T. Pasky
Shirley Ann Pelletier
William J. Pimley Jr.
Janet S. Pinard
William A. Polin
Roy V. Richard II
Ann Rivanis
Leon B. Rothman
Stephen F. Royal
Charles R. Scoggins Jr.
James F. Scully
Joseph B. Selva
Nicholas F. Siviglia Jr.
Steven F. Tigar
8
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
Associates
($250-$499)
Laurence A. Cate
Gerard Charles Dismukes
Robert E. Giencke
Paul G. Gilbert
Veronica P. Gliniak
Robert P. Kinsman
William H. Lynch
Thomas F. Malone
Timothy M. McMahon
James D. Nolan
JoAnn M. Nolan
Glenda D. Ouellette
George F. Perry
Mark S. Strum
Century
($100-$249)
Wayne O. Aruda
Raymond A. Champi
Kenneth H. Classon
Sharon L. Cushing
Richard B. Davis
Denyse C. Densmore
Lidia M. Desrochers
Carol V. Drapeau
James Drew
Patricia T. Ferrin
Joseph V. Garelli Jr.
Sandra A. Houde
Ara A. Jeknavorian
Stephen L. Kelley
Philip Tat Y Kwok
Stephen A. Madison
Wayne D. Moore
Deborah A. O'Brien
Daniel E. O'Neill
Josephine A. Paolino
John G. Radner
Kenneth C. Roscoe
Rachel Sagwitz
David J. Shea
Beverly A. Stone
George H. Townsend
Deborah M. Walsh
Diane S. Yee
Friends
($1-$99)
Marianne Beauregard
Vincent B. Bennett Jr.
Peter C. Bixby
Bruce W. Blaschke
Patricia M. Callahan
Sheila M. Callahan
Robert E. Early
Clark L. Grendol
Ann M. Gross
William B. Harrington
Donald Hasselman
Raymond L. Hebert
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
donor listing by class
Nancy E. Hillner
Joanne M. Kelleher
John T. Krowchun Jr.
Joseph A. Leon Jr.
Jeffrey S. Lunde
Charles T. Maguire
Mary E. Marsh
Sandra M. Mastas
Maureen L. McCue
Patricia R. McDonnell
Donna M. Michitson
Kathleen J. Moynihan
Frederick J. Nohelty Jr.
Sandra F. Olejarz
Margaret R. Orlando
David C. Raia
Jay Rizzetto
Carl J. Rondina
Marcus A. Samale Sr.
Aline C. Sanz
Richard R. Sasseville
Suzanne M. Trudel
Russell L. Varney
Charles J. Vergados
Number of Class Donors: 87
Total Class Gift: $64,808.00
1972
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Richard L. Grande
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Frank P. Arcury
Sandra C. Barnett
Alan A. Desrochers
Alan G. Johnston
Jack F. Swartz
Partners
($500-$999)
Walter S. Kuklinski
Michael D. Paloian
Associates
($250-$499)
Joanne P. Bushong
Charles R. Collins Jr.
William H. Fossey Jr.
George B. Fowle
Lloyd H. George
Donald G. MacLean
Geoffrey K. Mitchell
Noel T. Vander
Century
($100-$249)
G.Raymond Ahrens
Jack B. Allston
Joel Aroyo
Victor W. Baur
Stephen R. Byrnes Sr.
Robert P. Dickey, USAF
Rosemary E. Eaton
Paul E. Falman
Paul M. Faynor
John R. Geoffroy
David W. Houde, USAF
Kenneth E. Johnson
Shakeh A. Johnson
Alan F. Jones
Michael S. Kaplan
Michael R. Moran
Mary R. Paris
Anne Hurton Patriquin
Iris C. Shea
Maura J. Sheehan
Robert William Simoneau
Franklin D. Stabile
Kevin J. Stewart
Peter H. Tsaffaras, JD
Shirley M. Zebroski
Friends
($1-$99)
Kathleen M. Akashian
Pranav P. Antani
L O W E L L
Barry T. Aubrey
John D. Barry
Alison Bernard
Melanie P. Buccola
Dennis A. Calderone
Ronald J. Cannistraro
James F. Chastney
Karen Elaine Cintolo
Roberta A. Conte, RN
Richard C. Delaney Jr.
Joseph R. Depetrillo
William Ewers Sr.
Christine S. Farris
Thomas K. Follett
Robert L. Geddes
Paula S. Gendron
Stanley C. George
Paul D. Giguere
Paul F. Gillis
Ellen M. Goggin
Elaine G. Hall, RN
Monique W. Healy
David B. Holt
Herve E. Houde
Steven P. Ivas
Judith A. Junker
Theresa Koukias
David J. Kowalski
Harry M. Leonard Jr.
Robert M. Luke Jr.
Arthur L. Major
Patrick T. McCartin
Rosemary E. Mercier
Jane K. Mingolelli
Patricia T. Moysenko
Peter P. Novello
Stephen M. Papik
Martha I. Pedone
Sharon L. Pellerin
Bruce R. Pivero
Dennis M. Prebensen
Donald V. Rosato
Charles E. Serpa
John M. Sheehan
Jeffrey J. Sougnez
Richard R. St. Jean
Patricia M. Whiting
Nicholas A. Young
Number of Class Donors: 91
Total Class Gift: $26,230.00
1973
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
William C. Blake
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Paul A. Bessette
Peg Palmer
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Mark D. Lozier
Robert M. Melillo
Keith A. Sommer
Partners
($500-$999)
Thaddeus J. Dudziak
Robert D. Kearin
Associates
($250-$499)
Charles R. Cullen
Dale H. Hall
Paul H. Hamel
James W. Lawson
Howard W. Martin Jr.
Stanley M. Nalepa
Paul P. St. Pierre
Ellen M. Stokinger, RN
Century
($100-$249)
Steven E. Antos
Stephen A. Bolduc
Neil S. Crimins Sr.
Kenneth R. Ferron
Edward M. Flaherty
Michael F. Gionfriddo Jr.
Lee W. Hodson
Jean D. LaCroix
Donald E. Labbe
Linda L. Lockwood
Mark H. Mortensen
Donald G. Patch
Arthur C. Sacco
Ann M. Scannell
Arthur K. Smith
Michael W. Ward
Friends
($1-$99)
Arthur F. Bopp Jr.
Kathleen M. Boudreau
Hedwige A. Brown
Kenneth A. Brown
Charlotte T. Browne
James R. Buja
John B. Campbell
Richard P. Caruso
Peter F. Cornetta
Stanley F. Cwalinski Jr.
John J. D'Agata Jr.
Elaine M. Daminakis
Louise A. Deignan
John J. DiNapoli
Michael F. Dilorenzo
Janet Doherty
Barbara N. Dunsford
Gary L. Ewing
Janet A. Fahey
Teresa F. Frye
Ronald L. Fuccillo
Kathleen M. Galvin
Iva Gardner
William A. Gendron
Jill Gidge
Jane M. Gilmore
Brenda M. Grassello
Frederick J. Haley Jr.
Ernest M. Johnson
Denise M. Kane
Vikram C. Kapasi
Alan W. Keagy
Judith A. Kelley
William C. Kerrigan
Paula King
Joseph R. Lanthier
Victor H. Legault
Alan E. Lewis
Robert Lussier
John J. Lynch Jr.
John Barry Mahoney
Gerald R. Marsella
Jean L. Matthes
Joann M. Miller
Robert M. Minarik
Sandra K. Musgrave
Maureen A. Newton
Robert G. Nichols
Anne K. O'Connor
Peter C. Oberg
Deborah A. Olson
Elizabeth F. Papik
David A. Paradis
Joseph A. Pepin
Linda E. Perigny
Brian P. Richards
David F. Rideout
Thomas C. Sargent Sr.
Ellen M. Selfridge
Steven Shea
Stephen E. Slomski
Francis J. Smith
Richard R. Stevenson
John M. Tarpey Jr.
Carolyn M. Vieira
Edward W. Vitiello Jr.
Robert Yee
Stuart A. Young
Joseph J. Zabik
Number of Class Donors: 101
Total Class Gift: $37,343.00
1974
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Kristine A. Beaudette
Louis D. Beaudette
Kevin J. Perry
Michael T. Ryan
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Robert F. Dudley III
Partners
($500-$999)
Dean W. Broga
Jeannie Sargent Judge
James L. Roberts
Marc L. Sandler
Thomas J. Sharkey
Associates
($250-$499)
Alice C. Coughlin
Arthur W. Iworsley
Susan E. Stemporzewski
Century
($100-$249)
Denise Aggott
James D. Calore
John A. Casali
Peter P. Czajkowski
Patricia A. Duff
Mary Ann Durkin, RN
Richard A. Enos
Frederick C. Esposito
Kevin L. Giovanetti
Bruce W. Gordon
Donald N. Holmes
Thomas F. Jenkins
Joseph P. Kelly
Douglas H. King
Peter A. Krumsiek
Michael E. Madden
(Deceased)
Richard A. Madej
Martha L. Miller
George W. Paradis
Thomas H. Pendergast III
Raymond J. Pineau
Christine M. Raymond
Brad J. Roberts
Kathleen M. Robinson
Eugene J. Rogers
Kevin N. Ross
Louis D. Tacito
Betty A. Themeles
Thomas S. Yip
Friends
($1-$99)
Emily R. Adler
Stephen M. Alexander
Joan M. Arcand
Peter V. Barrett
Deborah D. Beaudoin
Judith R. Beaudry
Mark B. Berry
Kenneth A. Bishop
Richard T. Boisjoly
Stephen M. Bolognese
John E. Bukala
Donna M. Burns
Florence A. Calore
Robert G. Cameron
Barbara A. Campbell
Alan R. Carlson
David E. Cate Jr.
Frank E. Clapp III
Ann M. Clark
Christine M. Cohen
George B. Cudd Jr.
Edith S. Daley
Timothy F. Desmond
J. Edward Eliades
Brenda M. Floria
Richard H. Francis
Mark R. Frye
donor listing by class
Gerald B. Gauthier
Paul A. Giansiracusa
Donald L. Goodick Jr.
Paula Grady
Peter F. Grelle
Dean P. Gulezian
Glenn R. Hearn
Robert E. Howe Jr.
Octavio Hurtado
Louis P. Jacques
Marilyn P. Jewett
Lewis T. Karabatsos
Diane Kaye
Donna M. Kilgore
Gary S. Klein
Pauline Ladebauche
William E. Lekas
Edward T. Lessard
Anne M. Lynch, RN
Kathleen M. MacDonald
Rose A. Magliozzi
James A. Mahon
James G. Mamonas
Martha A. Mangan
Kevin P. McArdle
Kathleen A. McNamara
Modur L. Mohan
John J. Moloney III
Alan S. Mosier
Beth G. Mosier
David E. Newton
Thomas L. O'Donnell
Richard E. Osberg Sr.
Patricia A. Parow
Allan B. Percy
Elizabeth A. Quigley
Charles C. Ripley III
William F. Sarro
William S. Scanzani
Jacqueline A. Smith
Claire P. Stecchi
Joann Y. Stevens
Holly L. Sykes
Spyros A. Traiforos
Paul N. Turco
Eileen M. Williamson, RN
Joan R. Willis
Carol C. Wilson
Frederick J. Zelonis
Number of Class Donors: 118
Total Class Gift: $21,327.00
1975
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Jacqueline F. Moloney
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Ronald R. Boudreau
Ehud D. Laska
Susan J. Pasquale
William C. Penney Jr.
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Roger E. Darois
Frank S. Gerry
Donald P. Gill
Dana M. Granville
Marie F. Hurd
Partners
($500-$999)
David P. Evangelista
James N. Lepage
Associates
($250-$499)
Barbara M. Maloney
Hanna Nye
Brian T. Phillips
Donna M. Sunderland
Robert F. Vaillancourt
Raymond J. Veno
Century
($100-$249)
William E. Barnhart
Richard E. Barry
Gail L. Burnett
Gregory G. Bush
William T. Carroll
Jeffrey L. Chaffee
Lauren M. Chaney
George M. Chory
Thomas O. Conte
Maryann Coravos
Peter R. Cowley
Karen M. Fierley, RN
Deborah A. Giokas
Thomas E. Gorman
Susan Houde
Brian Hurley
Michael T. Keller
Richard C. Laflesh
Michael R. Lane
Francis S. Lazgin
Rita M. Macomber
Harold G. Macomber III
James B. McGrath
Marianne E. Messina
Alleyn W. Parkinson
Fred T. Perlstadt
Barbara M. Saunders
Gary R. Southard
Susan J. Southard
Brian C. Tower
Friends
($1-$99)
Mohammed R. Afshari
Robert R. Andrews
Nicholas A. Artimovich II
Jane B. Austin
Robert J. Bastien
Normand H. Belanger
Robert F. Bibeau
Martha F. Boisclair
Ronald J. Calkins
Peter A. Carbone
Lorna E. Clarke
Anne J. Clough
Lois Anne Collins
David F. Consalvo
William F. Crowley
Harry T. Culberson II
James P. Culhane
Gerald T. Cushing Jr.
John C. Dawson
Christine A. Delolio
Patricia A. Dube
Jane L. Dufault
Gary F. Fadden
Nicholas G. Fountas
Richard E. Gannon
David H. George
Rosemary Giacalone
Stephen E. Girard
Edmund J. Hajjar
Catherine A. Hanley
Patrick L. Hearn
Margaret M. Hendriks
Robert W. Hilton
Thomas R. Horan
Michael J. Horrigan
Allan P. Jussaume
Burton H. Koske
Karen A. Kycia
Leona E. Latorre
Joseph A. Leprohon
William A. Liberis
Vasilios Limberopoulos
George J. Mailloux
Kevin F. McGrath
Maureen C. McHugh
Daniel C. McLemore
Gerald P. Miller
Maryjane Mitchell
Maureen Mulryan
Maureen P. Niven
Michael J. O'Malley
Marietta M. Paquette
Roger J. Paquette
Dorayne L. Passler
Frank E. Payson
Karen J. Pezdek
Michael L. Picariello
Mary Ann Piemonte
Anna V. Pratt
Cheryl R. Rashid
Daniel P. Robichaud
Joseph A. Rodricks
Robert D. Rose
Dennis G. Rosene
Cathy L. Rumery
Paul A. Saia
Karen E. Salis
Robert E. Sargent
John P. Silvia Jr.
Jeffrey R. Simone
Stanley R. Smith
Carole A. Stoney
June A. Szymaszek
Gail C. Tangard
Richard H. Therrien
Laurence E. Tighe Jr.
Stephen H. Tolman
Susan P. Turcotte Gavriel
Joyce A. Vecchiarelli
George A. Veves
Robert A. Vigeant
Robert T. Wade
Karen Walton
Number of Class Donors: 131
Total Class Gift: $32,810.50
1976
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Kary Robertson
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
David P. Myers
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
David M. Basile
Brian L. Connell
Paul F. Marion
Joanne L. Yestramski
Charles B. Yestramski
Partners
($500-$999)
Marygail Jaggers
Eric J. Schindwolf
Associates
($250-$499)
Brett Z. Blaisdell
Henry W. Garzia
Paul Kelly
Heung Wing Li
Michael J. Morin
Darlene Kolodziej Steffen
Stephanie D. Turner
Century
($100-$249)
Dorothy E. Aste
Richard F. Bates
Heidi Blais
Michael J. Budge
Bernard R. Buteau
William I. Calhoun
David R. Carchedi
Joanne Doherty
Gilbert C. Donatelli Sr.
Robert G. Egbers
Stephen O. Fabri
Paul E. Fillo
Robert M. Fuller
Richard R. Gabree Jr.
Tai-Deh T. Hsu
Stuart E. Jeans
Hector E. Marchand Jr.
David W. McInerney
Charles H. Miller
John E. Miniter Jr.
Peter K. Ng
David R. Paolino
John P. Petrowicz
David Pietras
Paul A. Rey
Jeanne A. Spann
Jean E. Wood
Friends
($1-$99)
John J. Amato
Sharon Y. Baker
Thomas H. Bartram
Judy Berger
Julian P. Bielawski
Kurt D. Boisjolie
A. Paul Bourgeois
Maryann E. Brady
Wayne R. Braverman
Pauline A. Brazil
James P. Burns Jr.
Robert Burrows
Raymond R. Bursey
John T. Butler
Lawrence E. Caprari
Kevin J. Carmody
Mark B. Caron
Phyllis J. Cate
William E. Chetwynd
Thaddeus J. Choinski
Nicholas Ciambella Jr.
James D. Cossaboom
Michael J. Crowley
Maureen A. Daher
Thomas D. Driscoll
Marc P. Dubreuil
Richard C. Dyson
James J. Evans
Maryann P. Fitzhugh
Kathleen M. Flynn
James R. Fraser Jr.
Arthur L. Gaudette
Robert Gelles
William A. George
Paul A. Gold
Thomas C. Goodale
William B. Gordon
Andrea E. Grande
James F. Hallet
Janice P. Hannah
Darrell L. Hill
Arthur G. Hunt
Mary Ann Jaynes
Alan J. Kapinos
John T. King Jr
Sheila Lynn Kirschbaum
Thomas J. Krafton
Barbara L. Labelle
Thomas Laird
Mark S. Lammi
Henry B. Landry Jr.
Brian W. Leary
Albert J. Lepage
Robert W. Lombard Jr.
Edmund H. Lord
James B. Lynch
William E. Lysik
Kathleen E. Mackinnon
Joanne H. McCraw
John R. McCutcheon
James M. McDonough
Francis T. McLaughlin
Debra L. Meredith
James M. Meredith
Dale Marie Merrill, Esq.
Brian M. Mulloy
Jacqueline J. Nee
Catherine A. O'Neil
Richard R. Paradis
Pravinchandra M. Patel
Elizabeth M. Pesce
Cecile M. Provencher
Bryan C. Ruffenach
Richard L. Rush
Kevin D. Senders
Alan P. Stevens
Judy A. Timko
Antonio L. Toscano
James F. VanBever
James G. Vergados
Joanne Warburton
Richard J. Whalen Jr.
Dennis M. Winn
James J. Yankauskas
Woon-Shing Yeung
John Zajac
David T. Zelonis
Number of Class Donors: 129
Total Class Gift: $35,436.00
1977
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Kathleen B. Allen
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Thomas C. O'Connor
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Joyce Colella
Brian Rist
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Richard N. Dawson
Kathleen M. Doyle
William R. Doyle
Peter J. Harrison
Francis T. Talty
Partners
($500-$999)
Thomas B. Brigham
Joseph W. Donahue
William F. Haley III
William N. Hellmuth
Dick J. Liberty
George N. Tsapatsaris
Associates
($250-$499)
Janet L. Benvenuti
Pamela M. Blotcky
William G. Hanley
Janet C. Johnson
Henry A. Kozlowski
Mary Jane Levasseur
Jon K. Tapply
Century
($100-$249)
Gregory A. Auchter
Thomas Bezigian
Mary L. Cahalane
Nunzio M. Cavallaro
Stephen L. Cerand
William H. Cormier
Michael J. Darche
Barry M. Donahue
Donald R. Ensign
Richard F. Ferris
Barbara A. Flowers
Peter M. Ghiloni
Melinda G. Goodick
Edward M. Hanrahan
Gerald A. Lagro
Paul J. Lake
Michael T. Languirand
Roger L. Lapointe
Myron G. Matras
Kevin H. McCarthy
Robert C. McNamara
Frederick J. McOsker
Sandra C. Naddif
Jerome A. Pepin
Elaine A. Pietras
Kevin G. Plummer
Richard H. Quaglia
Marcia A. Rodriguez
William J. Sapone, Esq.
Elizabeth M. Townsend
Thomas J. Vaughn
Lise A. Wilson
David C. Woodin
Friends
($1-$99)
Gina L. Balestracci
Patricia A. Brazee
Thomas L. Brogan Jr.
Kathleen M. Brooker
Debora Carrison
David O. Chase
Stephen W. Connolly
Robert J. Cook
Ronald F. Cote
Catherine J. Crawford
Michael P. Dabransky Jr.
Brian J. Fitzgerald
Francis J. Flynn Jr.
David C. Follweiler
Michele R. Fournier
Richard A. Frusciante
Joseph A. Gagnon Jr.
Joel Gordon
Mark R. Hargreaves
Barbara B. Helfrick
Carol A. Hildebrand
William W. Houghton
Susan W. Juhola
John F. Kade
John F. Leak
Peter C. Lecam
Jim Limperis
James F. Linnehan Jr., Esq.
William R. Livingston
Lynne Maniscalco
Maryanne R. Maus
Paul E. Maus
Susan J. McPhillips
Gerard M. Miller
Mark A. Morse
Deborah M. Mousley
Donald G. Munro
Jeffrey J. O'Brien
Joseph R. Palermo
Mario N. Palmeri
Michael A. Pelletier
Peter F. Perri
Daniel G. Peters
Gary H. Rust
Carl J. Schweizer
Edward C. Soomre
Bruce D. Stacy
Karen M. Streeter
Maureen Sullivan Berry, RN
Joseph J. Tremblay
Susanne Uzdavinis
Carlos E. Vega
Ronald F. Viola
Mark W. Wall
Robert G. Wallace
Elizabeth A. Watson
Bryan J. White
Ann Marie Wilk
Barbara Wilkins
Steven F. Williams
Rhonda E. Zambernardi
Number of Class Donors: 116
Total Class Gift: $64,105.70
1978
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Anonymous
Mark V. Forziati
Martin T. Meehan
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Gerald G. Colella
Stephen A. Fossey
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Thomas F. McGrail Jr.
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Joseph J. Blonski
Kathryn M. Carter
Kathleen C. Geary
Donna L. Jenkins, RN
Jeffrey E. Mead
Karen Devereaux Melillo
Patricia A. Sullivan Talty
Partners
($500-$999)
Humphrey W. Chow
9
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
William E. Haskell III
Barry J. Yeadon
Stewart K. Jackson
Susan Jussaume
Paul C. Kennington
Michael M. Kmon
Karen H. LeBlanc
Raymond W. Lenox
Richard J. Lesiczka
Robert B. Mackle
Jeffrey T. Mader
Donna M. Mailloux
Johnny A. Martin, USAF
Anita Massie
Brent A. Maynard
Douglas S. McCracken
Diane L. McLeod
Andrew J. McSpiritt
Dennis A. Morrison
Kathleen F. Nassif
Kenneth M. Noonan
Anastasia Papadopoulos
Sandra C. Parris
Sharon T. Perry
Richard A. Piela
Richard A. Pineau
Janice E. Quigley
Richard E. Quinn Jr.
Robert W. Racicot
Timothy L. Regan
James D. Ringwood Jr.
Daniel L. Robertson
Laurie Sealund
Daniel Siu
Lori A. Sousa
Donna Chaff Specian
Melody C. Tarbox
Michael J. Taylor
Joanne M. Tedesco
Marilyn J. Thies
Andrew P. Timbie
Maureen J. Travis
Dennis G. Unger
Stephen Venuti
Maureen A. Willey
Gunars V. Zagars
Number of Class Donors: 137
Total Class Gift: $73,191.53
Associates
($250-$499)
Richard F. Brostowin
Paul V. Crimi
Matthew J. Doyle
Beth I. Graham
Estella L. Keefer
Martha F. Kuklinski
Leon A. Lafreniere Jr.
Ellen Michaud-Martins
Judith S. Post
Century
($100-$249)
Frank J. Cavaleri
Anthony G. Chory
Lynda L. Colson-Hendrick
Gary S. Connor, USAF
Richard E. Deubert
Kenneth J. Dooley
Paul J. Fortier
Louise G. Griffin
Gary T. Hammond
Gregory K. Haynes
Richard A. Jackson
Sharon Kimball
Norman R. Lombardi
William F. Moloney
Steven M. Morrissey
Allen S. Mowatt
Jean Mroszczyk
Richard L. Musacchio
Kevin J. Nohelty
John S. Panny
Anthony D. Pedi
Donald K. Plummer
Joseph M. Regan Jr.
Robert W. Ryan
Deborah L. Schneider
Robert M. Sullivan
William G. Sullivan Jr.
Paul W. Tuminowski
Friends
($1-$99)
Joan L. Aggott
Barbara Anagnostos
Ellen D. Andre
Thomas J. Antell
Paul P. Banacos
Christine Barbas
Kathleen H. Bell
Viola Berberian
Donna Berger
Cindy Bielawski
Sandra A. Bindas
Kenneth R. Boisvert
Marianne Bond
Richard H. Bostiga
Susan A. Bosworth
Gary J. Bowden
Joyce L. Bowker
Ronald E. Brennan
Frances W. Brooks, RN
William F. Burke Jr.
John C. Cassidy
Evangeline B. Cathcart
Ellen M. Chambers
Anthony J. Chaves Jr.
Karen H. Clements
Lorna E. Dimeo
Rita C. Donoghue
William J. Dooan
George J. Doyle
Sid T. Eng
Robert L. Evans
Elizabeth A. Fichera
Patricia A. Fisher
Marc V. Fournier
Brian D. Goguen
John M. Griffin
Scott P. Hansberry
Lynn C. Herron
John A. Hudson
Joan C. Hurton
10
U N I V E R S I T Y
Linda M. Corr
Leonard Ellis
Renee E. Gagne-LeClair
Deborah J. Geary
Marc P. Gendreau
Edward B. Hanfling
Nancy A. Hanratty, DMD
Paul J. Imbergamo
Barbara R. Jezak
Wayne P. Johnson
James A. Jonas
Richard R. Kew
William H. Kinner II
Janet P. Koza
Margaret Lombardi
Alan L. Maranian
Joan F. McGrath
Gary A. Melville
Thomas A. O'Connor
Timothy A. Paddock
Cinthia L. Rudasill
Susan P. Runowicz
Brian A. Scappaticci
Ronald L. Schneider
Diane E. Smith
David A. Turcotte
Nicholas M. Vadala
Fred J. Wergeles
Century
($100-$249)
Bradley M. Anderson
Barry Ashar
Richard J. Bahou
Francine Black
Nicholas J. Bonanno
Richard J. Cleary Jr.
Dennis W. Colbert
Anthony J. Colella
Lee Connor
Friends
($1-$99)
Paul D. Anderson
Ronald F. Aprile
Carol A. Archambault
Michele M. Bangma
William S. Bannister
David S. Barrett
Ronald T. Bator
Debby A. Biagiotti
Paul R. Bibeau
David C. Bisbee
Michelle H. Boie
William W. Brooke
Mark E. Bucci
Frederick S. Cabral
Brian C. Cahill
Pamela Capeless
Sharon A. Carlisle
Ellen L. Carter
Deborah J. Cassidy
Joseph S. Chiang
Michael J. Chory Jr.
Linn A. Chuck
Deborah A. Cole
Noreen J. Conlon
Jeffrey P. Connell
Maurizio Contini
Jean M. Cull
Conrad G. Dampolo
Russell T. Davis
Michael R. Ditroia
William F. Donaghey Jr.
George J. Ead
Francis P. Faticanti
Leonard A. Ficaro
John J. Fitzgerald
Frank J. Flemming
Allan P. Fournier
Richard V. Gagnon
Mark N. Gaulin
Kenneth L. Georgevits
Mary L. Golouski
James D. Gray
John D. Greene
Peter Gugliotta
Bonnie L. Haley
John A. Heald
Barbara A. Hogan
Robert M. Japp
George L. Jussaume
Richard F. Kaerwer Jr.
Nancy A. Kelly
Linda M. Kilbride
David J. Kricker
Mary R. LaMarca
Sandra J. Lakin
Donna M. Lamontagne
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
L O W E L L
1979
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Robert E. Boudreau Jr.
Robert W. Goodnow Jr.
Debbie I. Hauser
Kenneth W. Horton
Robert A. Malloy
Matthew P. McCafferty III
Steven L. Starkey
Jonathan J. Vitello
Partners
($500-$999)
Robert H. Giles
Ching-Tai Lue
Walter F. Miller
Stephen J. Sala
Associates
($250-$499)
David R. Constant
Susan Jean Gordon
David J. Martins
Stephen B. Scannell
Glenn W. Stewart
Alan T. Wang
Fred T. Willett Jr.
O F
donor listing by class
Chung Lee
Mary F. Levasseur
Stanley M. Liffmann
Jerry Loew
Jack Luskin
Daniel V. Lynch
Rosamond E. Malatesta
Eileen P. Malloy
Maria F. Maranto
Judith K. Martinoli
Evelyn M. McCann
Catherine M. McDonagh
Susan D. McLoughlin
Bonnie J. McSpiritt
George C. Michaels
Rita L. Mikaelian
Mary F. Miskell
Patricia L. Molan
Daniel E. Morgan
Maryanne D. Mungovan
Richard G. Nelson
Patricia A. Nickles
Eileen L. O'Donnell
Henry J. O'Donnell
Tavit K. O'Hanian
Anthony S. Orifice
John E. Pacini
Dean C. Poirier
Glen A. Pyburn
Peter E. Richards
Michael A. Roberts
Margaret C. Roeger
Jeffrey B. Rondeau
Kenneth R. Rousseau
Michael J. Ryan
Philip D. Scalvini Jr.
James M. Sheehan
Mary E. Skovholt
Maura A. Slattery
Kathleen A. Treleaven
Raymond J. Tremblay
Patricia A. Valente
Evanthea Vlahakis
John B. Wholey Jr.
Christopher L. Winslow
Roberta F. Woelfel
Joan B. Wood
Number of Class Donors: 159
Total Class Gift: $23,568.54
1980
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
James V. Dandeneau
Benefactors Circle
($50,000-$99,999)
Eamonn P. Hobbs
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Sheila A. Riley-Callahan
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Kevin F. St. Cyr
Mark A. Yates
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Prakash R. Ajmera
William C. Geary III
Ellen M. Malloy
James J. Nason
Richard J. Neal Jr., DMD
Robert F. Penfield
Francis A. Reed
Carol A. Royal
Kathryn T. Sullivan
Roger E. Temple
Partners
($500-$999)
Anthony G. Coelho
Patricia A. Giles
Mary E. Godwin
George I. Hanna
Steven J. Maggio
Timothy J. Pariseau
Steven F. Tello
Sheila M. Welch
Associates
($250-$499)
Marilyn J. Bowman
George G. Bryant
Christopher M. Byrnes
David G. Clancy
Gregory D. Eley
David V. Gorky
Michael C. Heath
Roy L. Humphreys
Alan P. Larson
Bruce R. Moore
Stephen F. Smith
Century
($100-$249)
Richard W. Allen
Gail D. Atherton
Robert Bassett
David E. Bertrand, USAF
Roland J. Blanchette
Arthur S. Digiovine
Dennis J. Doherty
Elizabeth A. Donato
Patricia A. Dorfman
Steven Falabella
Norman E. Fowler
Benjamin P. Gregson
William D. Hall
Karen J. James
John F. Koza
Stephen J. Krenitsky
Roger W. Kylberg
Laura J. Laflamme
Joseph D. Lafreniere, Esq.
Richard S. Leary
Andrew J. Light
Diane Mahoney
Richard P. McCoy
James A. Miraldi
Sean J. Moran
Stephen M. Mulvey
Margaret M. Musso, RN
Thomas B. Peeler
Carol L. Pietryk
Steven C. Roberto
Matthew J. Scannell
Steven M. Serabian
Robert G. Speirs III
Kathleen M. Sullivan
Richard A. Sweeney
James E. Tarpinian
Philip A. Tessier
Janet L. Veves
Shio-Chuan Wang
Richard E. Ware
Friends
($1-$99)
Dennis J. Ashe
Sylvia Barbas
Michael R. Baris
Robert F. Berlo
John G. Bernier
Roland E. Boucher Jr.
David R. Brecken
Deborah A. Bresnahan
Timothy J. Callahan
Glenn M. Cannavo
Wayne J. Currier
Susan A. Desa
Erin A. Descoteaux
Brian F. Doyle
Mary E. Doyle
Roger C. Duhamel
Paul A. Duncanson
Paul H. Eaton
Edward J. Ficarra
Mary A. Flavin
Scott M. Fraser
Elaine M. Fugere
Kimberly R. Geiger
Raymond P. Gendron Jr.
James M. Gregorich
Richard O. Griffin
Philip E. Harcourt
Renee L. Hembrough
Eugene Hendriks
Henry F. Kahnhauser
John Kubat
Robert G. Kurker
Philippe J. Lavallee
Barbara Stefani Levitt
Richard J. Lowe
Joseph R. Lyons Jr.
Steven E. Maguire
Mary L. Marcella
Jack J. McCaughey
Frances Medaglia
Gertrude M. Miller
Millard C. Mitchell Jr.
Joseph J. Monaco
Elin W. Neiterman
James R. Newcomb
Pamela S. O'Donnell
David W. O'Leary
Robert L. Paquin
Mark C. Parlee
Ellen J. Pendleton
Normand G. Plouffe Sr.
Patricia A. Pomerleau
Eileen Raymond-Casey
Robin M. Redmond
Diana M. Renison
John D. Reynolds
James J. Schommer
Peter D. Stark
Steven W. Symes
Anthony J. Tamis
David C. Tonry
David P. Travis
Judith G. Twiggs
Ana Maria Vas Concelos
Carol M. White
Sheryl L. Wright
Paul A. Yankowskas
Number of Class Donors: 141
Total Class Gift: $194,790.43
1981
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
Mark A. Saab
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Lawrence A. Acquarulo Jr.
Mary R. Bedell
Russell D. Bedell
Joseph M. Brice
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Chetan N. Patel
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
William T. Babcock
Suzanne Lane Conrad
David J. Laurello
Associates
($250-$499)
Eric B. Andersen
Mary M. Arnold
John C. Babicz
Brian M. Cardinal
Susan M. Clancy
David W. Heffernan
John W. Mavroides
Robert L. Miskell
Edward L. O'Neil
Steven W. Potter
Century
($100-$249)
Anonymous
Ronald L. Armstrong
Elizabeth M. Cannon
Mark F. Carbrey
Christopher M. Collins
Terry A. Faxon
Martin Grubner
Joseph F. Hogan Jr.
donor listing by class
Virginia C. Janeiro Lafreniere
Brenda M. Jong
Roxanne Karter
Henry R. King
Valerie Lynne King
Joan Koesterherm
Ruthann LaBay
Richard J. Laflamme
Thelma T. Laste
Norman P. Michaud Jr.
Susan R. Musacchio
Marc L. Nadeau
Thomas F. Nazzaro
Tinhtan V. Nguyen
Michael H. Ossing
Konstantinos I. Papathomas
Donna M. Pappalardo
Jeffrey V. Parks
Thomas C. Philbrook
John R. Ramsey
William A. Rewinski
Robert A. Scarpone
Michael F. Tubridy
Deborah A. Valley
Daniel L. Viens
David E. Wilson
Friends
($1-$99)
Roberta M. Abodeely
Steven J. Archambault
Leo E. Barron
Christopher J. Belanger
Richard W. Bernklow
Timothy J. Blackwell
Joanne V. Botos
Thomas J. Bradley
Erasmo J. Brenes
Susan M. Brigham
Mark P. Bryer, MD
John B. Coalter
Jeremiah J. Cole Jr.
Timothy J. Cremin
Mariann D'Amore-Gibson, RN
Daniel A. Danecki
Robert W. Demarco
David E. Dickelman
Diana Doucette
Paula C. Driscoll
De-Paula Eliopoulos Balich
Cynthia L. Fallon
Mark H. Farris
Marcy H. Ferretti
Thomas M. Fitzgibbons
Joan E. Gale
John P. Greelis
Karen I. Hager
John J. Hall
Michael J. Hanninen
Barbara Herbert
Patrick J. Horan
Thomas W. Kane
Roberta E. Keane
Joseph F. Knight III
Valerie J. L. Krulic
Karen A. Lackey
Georgiana Lafortune
David R. Lemoine
David T. Lynch Jr.
Craig W. MacPhee
Rita L. Matton
Michael V. McCoy
Robert D. McGrath Jr.
Annemarie McKee
Peter R. McManus
Douglas A. Miller
Stephen G. O'Brien
Martha A. Paulson
Raymond J. Pellerin
Lumania M. Pereira
John D. Pollock
James G. Popeo
Michael J. Quinn
Patricia M. Quinn
Judith M. Ringersen
Frank J. Saglime Jr.
Mary T. Silva
Sharon A. Silverman
Michael W. Sitar Jr.
Kathleen M. Stewart
Gregory T. Sydney
Leo B. Towle
John L. Vitali
Melanie M. Weeks
Christopher J. Wentworth
Eric D. Whitaker
Number of Class Donors: 120
Total Class Gift: $314,144.77
1982
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Bruce Z. Arakelian
William G. Rhodes III
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Ellen L. St. Cyr
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Louis B. Coiro
Jeffrey J. Gallant
Ann Marie Hurley
John D. Kattar
Roland R. Meijer
Michael F. Rubner
Partners
($500-$999)
Elaine Chabot
David A. Janeczek
Mark A. Zecco
Associates
($250-$499)
Frank T. Kos
Joanne M. Mavroides
Stephen Moses
William A. Robertson
Ronald J. Strauss
Julie L. Streeter
Penny M. Winter Nuttall
Century
($100-$249)
Stephen C. Anderson, MD
Thomas A. Belmonte
Vincent A. Bourgault
Richard Collopy Jr.
Thomas M. Cunneen
Kathleen R. Delaney
Steven G. Esposito
Barbara H. Fortier
George R. Havrilla
Kathleen M. Johnson
Jonathan D. Mast
Michael J. McGuire
Janet M. Mulligan
Thomas J. O'Rourke
Michael S. Papa
Andrew L. Pendleton
James A. Polcari
Gerardo Rocha Galicia
Jane L. Savignano
Stephen J. Savignano
Mariann Sayer
Beverly A. Schultz
Mark E. Shamon
Kerry R. Smith
Mark A. Stabile
Richard Velez
Leslie J. Whiting-Poitras
Friends
($1-$99)
John K. Amerkanian
Sandra J. Balkus
Alfred J. Baraby Jr.
Lydia Y. Barrett
Eleanor J. Benedix
Dorothy M. Boisvert
Dohn A. Bowden
James W. Brennan
Leonard R. Budd
William M. Carkin
David Charette
Elaine M. Consalvo
Tina Cummings
Henry A. Daneault
John James DeRosa
Steven J. Dellorusso
Cecile E. Demers
David A. Diamantopoulos
Nicholas V. Dileo Jr.
Michael J. Domenicucci
Elizabeth J. Donaghey
William J. Donovan
Constance M. Fleck
Cristina L. Gaines
Richard D. Galatas
Marshall B. Garrison
George Gauthier
Celeste M. Gobeille
Michael G. Guttadauro
Susan L. Herring
Mary O. Hudson
Phyllis Katz
Brenda L. Keating
Laurie M. Kennedy-Malone
Maureen A. Kenyon
George Lamonica
Joseph W. Landry
Scott R. Landry
Christopher Laterza
Denise B. Lavigne-Ryan
Joyce A. Leahy
Dana M. Littlefield
John Richard Lonks, MD
Paul Martakos
James A. McKay
Karen A. McManimon
Susan E. McNamara
Theodore A. Messier
Joanne M. Miele, RN
Maria A. Montesalvo
Sean K. Murray
Marcia M. Neumiller
Louise M. Noftle
Jule M. O'Donnell
Michael J. O'Neil
Cherian S. Oommen
James R. Patullo
David L. Peters
Julie A. Petersen
Brian G. Porter
Susan E. Porter
Patricia A. Powers
Donald B. Richardson Jr.
Norman E. Roberts
Patricia J. Roberts
Deborah M. Rosati
Douglas J. Ross
Stephen Samaras
Steven A. Schultz
Christopher V. Selvaggio
Kathleen M. Shea
Richard W. Silveria
David J. Stack
Mark A. Stephens
Richard J. Sullivan
Sara J. Tackson
Victoria L. Tidman
Dennis G. Tobin
Ruth E. Wierenga
Charles E. Woodin Jr.
Joann Wynkoop
Number of Class Donors: 127
Total Class Gift: $36,359.82
1983
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Richard A. Pierro Jr.
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Robert D. Lefort
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Daniel Durkin
Joseph V. Lacoste
Daniel J. McCormick
Andrew Routsis
Partners
($500-$999)
Steven R. Geyster
Robert P. Gregoire
Bruce C. Plummer
Ali Rafieymehr
Stevi A. Shapiro Wellington,
USAF
Donald G. Veino II
James F. Walsh
Associates
($250-$499)
Steven A. Arnold
Michael J. Barry
Richard H. Binder
Mark P. Braconnier
Meredith A. Larson
John B. Lavelle
Carol Ann Lee
David A. McLaughlin
Century
($100-$249)
Gail F. Beaudoin
Joseph R. Bernard Jr., USMC
John A. Bettano
Eileen A. Brady
Richard D. Breen Jr.
Peter W. Bretschneider
Russell A. Brierley
Douglas W. Burgess
Jane Cantillon
Raymond W. Carroll III
David J. Caterino
Ronald J. Chiappini
Wayne S. Clark
Charles R. Dicenzo
Joy Fogg-Reynolds
Paul N. Gianes
Gary R. Guillemette
Robert M. Hand
Darlene D. Jarvis
Douglas R. Knapp
John Konovalchick III
Paul J. Liesman
Michael P. Loranger
Edith L. Lordan
Leo A. Martin III
Ramzi B. Murad
Peter J. Rock
Christopher Sakorafos
Jeffrey O. Santer
Richard F. Schmidt Jr.
Robert E. Shaughnessy Jr.
Curt D. Smolinsky
Michael P. Sousa Jr.
William J. Squires Jr.
Richard E. St. Germain
Theresa L. Steele
William G. Vaillancourt
Martina Antoinette Witts
Gene V. Zylkuski
Friends
($1-$99)
George J. Alexandropoulos
Maureen B. Amigo
Thomas A. Bannister
Kim D. Bass
James C. Bean
Maurice J. Bechard
Judith b. Beeten
Paul M. Belonga
Robert J. Blacker Jr.
Patricia A. Blais
Michael S. Boguszewski
Charles Bolianites
Doreen Boyd
John F. Burke
Diane T. Casavant
Suzanne Cashman
Constance M. Catania
Bernard F. Clancy
Marion E. Clark
Everett N. Cole III
Kathleen H. Conway
Patricia M. Corkery
Margaret Cowburn
Stephen J. Cranney
Candace C. Crowell
Suzanne A. Curran
David W. Damron
Esther Davenport
Clifford S. Davis III
Lisa E. Demeo
Steven DiSalvo
Michael D. Dicicco
Stephen P. Dolan
Janet Doucet
Claude G. Dozois
Scott D. Entwistle
George C. Falcos
Carolyn R. Faria
Timothy P. Fitzgerald
John F. Fleming Jr.
Mary A. Foley
Cynthia A. Gatto
Sharon A. George
Clifford T. Gormley
Heidi A. Greenlaw
Sharam Hakimi
James L. Harrison
Bruce R. Hickox, RN
Michael T. Hogan
Susan E. Hogan
Linda A. Hottel
Charles L. Howe
Ronald M. Jay
Celia E. Joly Barselou
George H. Kopps
Kenneth R. Koziol
Richard L. Labbe
Dale M. Labossiere
Robert E. Lenehan Jr.
Claire N. Liston, RN
Fusco Luigi
David P. MacWilliams
Marina A. Mackie
Robert M. Manlick
Joseph Marcangelo
Marybeth E. Marcotte
Deborah McAdams
Dennis R. McBrine
Stephen B. McCarthy
Robert G. McInerney
Suzanne M. McLean
Robin L. Milinazzo
Martha E. Moore
Jeanne A. Morrison
Mary Ellen Nangle
Gay E. Neilson
Deborah K. O'Connor
Karen A. Parkins
Susan L. Patnaude, RN
Lisa Powis
Carl S. Prestia
John M. Quinn
Diane S. Ravanis
Maria B. Rosa
Peter J. Ryan
Linda Ryan-Nicklas
Maryann Sager
Arthur A. Salani Jr.
Catherine M. Saxon
Mary-Jane Smyth, RN
Charlotte M. Stewart
Paul D. Tatarka
David J. Taylor
Edward I. Tillinghast
Robin Ann Toof
Denise J. Torpey
Roger L. Tougas
Elaine F. Turano
Dwayne R. Turmelle, USAF
Linda L. Wiebold
David F. Willey
Joseph G. Willwerth
Arline M. Wood
Alison M. Yankowskas
Donald L. Yurt
Lynda R. Zarrow
Number of Class Donors: 166
Total Class Gift: $34,508.58
1984
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Robert J. Manning
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Diane C. O'Connor
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Elizabeth M. Brackett
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Anita M. Greenwood
Caroline M. McAndrews
Robert Peirent
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Steven M. Burke
James J. Goudouros
Partners
($500-$999)
John A. Paganetti
Marian G. Williams
Associates
($250-$499)
Norman R. Eisenmann Jr.
Elizabeth A. Forsley
Beth C. Haskell
Thomas P. Kirwin
Karen J. Longo
Mark A. Phaneuf
Jeanne E. Sisneros
James D. Skerry
Paul J. Slaney
Veronika I. Szabo
Century
($100-$249)
David J. Allard
Anthony F. Aluia
Andrea S. Batchelder, Esq.
Kenneth Robert Bate
Ann H. Bischoff
Paulo L. Botelho
Damian F. Brennan
Lisa A. Brothers
Nancy E. Burns
Lesley D. Byrne
Michael J. Densmore
Cheryl A. Drewes
Wraye P. Dugundji
Diane M. Elko
Michael R. Erickson
Katherine E. Fiamingo
Kenneth E. Fitzgerald
Ann Marie Giovino
Mario A. Godbout
John S. Hill
Ronald J. Jabba
Michael A. Jankowski
David A. Jarvis
Stephen S. Keaney
Steven H. Leitch
David R. Lessard
Steven T. Morais
George H. Popp
Helen H. Robbio
David J. Schultz
Paula M. Shwab
Suzanne I. Stuart
Michael D. Sullivan
Craig S. Traverso
Patricia A. Wheeler-Shea
Friends
($1-$99)
Richard W. Atkinson
Robert Gerald Atkinson Jr.
Patricia S. Baker
James P. Barrett
David R. Beati
Neil D. Becker
Gary S. Bell
Elizabeth A. Bellomo
Denise J. Brugnoli
11
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
David L. Cail
Gregg S. Cannavo
Susan M. Carney
Michael C. Casaceli
Marie A. Catalano
Maylee H. Chou
Janice Clarke
John J. Cleary III
Douglas J. Consentino
Robert F. Crawford
James M. Curran
Laura E. Daly
Brenda B. Dean
John R. Devereaux
Nancy T. Dow
Barbara M. Escott
Anthony J. Forgetta
Stephen A. Goulet
Judy D. Graham Esip
John E. Gregg
Beth E. Halaby
Diane C. Hodgson
Paula J. Hogan
Peter J. Howe
Gerald S. Jannetti
Brenda Anne Jennings
Robert Thomas Julian
Dennis S. Kallelis
Lee R. Kariger
John J. King
Mary Jane Lane
Mark A. Lanza
David W. Loehle
Mary K. Logan
Claire C. Lomme
Robert A. Lomme Jr.
Susan J. Lundin
Dale L. Macy
David J. Mansur
Michael A. McCormick Jr.
Kevin J. McElhinney
Patricia R. Melanson
Christina M. Middlebrook
Betty Millin
Robin J. Milotte, RN
Daniel J. O'Connor
Sandra J. O'Dea
Judith A. Omobono
Lisa Panagopoulos
Lee H. Panas
Kevin J. Pickett
R. Bradley Potts
Andrew P. Powell
Susan E. Quinn
Nancy A. Quintela, RN
Anthony T. Racca
K. Rajasekharan
Robert J. Romano
William E. Sager
Susan J. Smith
Jay G. Soucy
Edward J. Spang
Cheryl A. Stanton
Matthew E. Stanton
Joseph D. Stecchi
Lee E. Stefanik
Chris M. Sugar
Michael J. Taylor
Marianne E. Terlizzi
Phu P. Tran
James E. Trask
Kyle A. Turschman
Bonnie L. Ventullo
Tien-Chich Wang
Lauren Roche Wolf
Number of Class Donors: 139
Total Class Gift: $71,406.20
1985
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Donna M. Manning
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Mary Lou Hubbell
Karen L. Scammell
12
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
Partners
($500-$999)
Irene M. Haley
Joseph F. Hennessey Jr.
Kevin C. Mairs
Eric D. Peterson
Charles C. Poirier Jr.
Associates
($250-$499)
Katherine K. Gendron
Stephen J. Gendron
Scott A. Kaplan
Frederick M. Mellish
Philip J. Puglisi
Richard J. Quigley
Marilyn J. Ricciardi
Theresa M. Richards
Robert C. Richards Jr.
John J. Ryan, MD
Eric W. Schott
Christina L. Swider
Douglas P. Wilkins
Century
($100-$249)
Richard J. Alukonis
Glen P. Aukstikalnis
Robert P. Billet
Michelle Bitzer
Susan B. Cassidy
Vincent D. Chase
Kevin J. Coghlan
Erik P. Doherty
Robert A. Donnelly Jr.
Joseph P. Dufour Jr.
David L. Ferro
Robert A. Finn
John M. Fisher
Jeffery M. Fuller
Bartholomew J. Galvin
Susan M. Grassi
Joan M. Hildebrandt-Scionti
Edward B. Kizer
Sharon B. Lamb
Tara M. Lane
Susan M. Laroche
Steven R. Larochelle
John J. LeBlanc
Carl Maib
Deborah M. Mandel
John R. Mandel
Alexander J. McGovern
Ann Murphy
John F. Nelson
Elaine D. O'Malley
Michael J. O'Malley
Dennis M. Olsen
Michael L. Parody
Michael P. Piazza
Steven W. Pierro
Alicia A. Rawnsley
Linda J. Reilly
Dianne Lee Riehl
Paula J. Rygh
Debra M. Sanford
Neal E. Sanford
Lynne M. Sullivan
Dennisses Valdes
Jean H. Wernicki
Jane E. Williams
Elena T. Yee
Friends
($1-$99)
Frances M. Allen
Timothy J. Allen
Sandra J. Anderson-Ansara
Gayle E. Audy
Anne M. Barton
Judith A. Bessette
Patricia O. Bossi
Anthony C. Boucher
David M. Bruno
Noreen T. Cady-Heckler
Thomas S. Cameron Jr.
Michael L. Carbone
Patricia A. Cavanaugh
Robert A. Ciampa
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
donor listing by class
John D. Cicalis
Scott L. Cowburn
Laura M. Dauphinais
Robert C. Dean Jr.
Michele J. Dickerson
Mark J. Dickinson
Kathy H. Downey
Patricia A. Drooff
Linda A. Dulong
Peter N. Eldridge
Robert M. Ennis
Lynne Faust
Thomas J. Fedak
Mark E. Fitzgerald
Donald J. Frydryk
Rosemary C. Gelman
Michael G. Gibbons
Frances K. Gray
Francis X. Harrison
David E. Jarosz
Ann-Marie Jordan
Gregory F. Judge
Patricia K. Kelly
Paul R. Laferriere
Robin C. Lamoureaux
Thomas M. Lemire
Donald F. Little
Cheryl E. Livsey
Marie L. Looby
Lawrence J. MacDonald
Robert J. McArthur
Michael W. McNally
Cheryl L. Moran
James F. Murray
Mark A. Neslusan
Stephen J. O'Keefe
Joseph Ogonowski
Gregory S. Passler
Carolyn L. Pilanen
John D. Prohaska
Manohar K. Raheja
Elie E. Rahme
Peter A. Richardson
David R. Richburg
Scott F. Richmond
Mary Saunders
Linda J. Scalzi
Jill L. Schluter
Robert A. Silverman
Dennis N. Simpson
Maryanne B. Smith
Kevin D. Spicer
Mary R. Sudol
Marjorie Thibodeau
James F. Toohey
Carol D. Wallace
M. Scott Wells
Kevin D. Whiteside
Carolyn J. Willis
Rick J. Wilson
Number of Class Donors: 141
Total Class Gift: $51,950.00
1986
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
William J. Perciballi
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Amit N. Dharia
Partners
($500-$999)
George E. Chabot Jr.
Darla S. Hanley
Jeffrey A. Hanley
Associates
($250-$499)
Harry S. Bushe
Wesley S. Coombs
James A. Everett-Wilson
Paul M. Kendrigan
Glenn P. Morgan
James B. Powers
Denise H. Robichaud
Karla M. Sorenson
Vincent R. Titone
L O W E L L
Century
($100-$249)
Daniel J. Barrett Jr.
John J. Bechard
Peter F. Blottman
Steven J. Bowen
Morgan J. Brady III
Patrick J. Buckley
Margery E. Burgess
James J. Cassidy
Richard J. Coles
Daniel J. Craig
Elizabeth M. Cryan
James F. Cullen
Janet Doong
Duane D. Dunn
Christopher C. George
Stephen J. Hanley
Edward R. Harrington
Francesca A. Harrington
Diana F. Keaney
Edward Madigan
Leo D. Maguire
Barbara A. Mayer
Paul A. Morrison Jr.
Susan M. Mount
Terence D. O'Hagan
Kelly A. San George
Edward R. Sanchez Jr.
John J. Spinello
Lori J. Spinney
Sandra A. Sullivan
Fred W. Sunderland Jr.
Susan D. Varley
Eric A. Walters
John J. Waugh
Michael P. Whalen
Show-Mean S. Wu
Friends
($1-$99)
James H. Alton II
Anmarie E. Anderson
James V. Arsenault
Peter Arsenault
Sheila E. Battle
Michael D. Berube
Karen S. Bibeau
Jeffrey A. Blanchard
Joseph F. Boughan
Karen M. Brown
Harold C. Buckingham III
Kerri A. Bull
Mark P. Chandler
David J. Chandonnet
Sebastian Chiaramida
Martin D. Conley
Paul D. Conley Jr.
Sandra Creamer, RN
Adrian F. Crowe
Sarah G. Dagher
Carl S. Desalvo
Robert F. Driscoll
Darlene S. Fertitta
Marc G. Gagnon
Kathryn M. Gallucci
William F. Gately
Allen Gee
Stephen P. Gillis
Deborah Godinez
Kathleen Mary Grace
Judith M. Gramigna
Mark P. Griffin
Gregory P. Hamilton
Mark D. Hamilton
Steven N. Harrison
Ernest W. Henry
Kelly A. Horan-Fucci
Catherine A. Houston
Karen A. Keisling
Craig G. Kevghas
Theodore J. Kubacki
Chui-Han Lam
Diane E. Leveillee
Richard Liberace
Donna J. Liffers
Paul B. Linnehan
Diane M. Loehle
John W. Malachowski
Renata S. Manomaitis
William J. McCann
Gail M. McGowan
Susan E. McLellan
Timothy A. McManus
Gabriela M. McNally
Gary R. Meehan
Kathleen S. Millerick
Philip N. Montague
David B. Ninesling Jr.
Carol A. O'Leary, RN
April F. Pattavina
Katherine T. Pinard
Gregg J. Praetz
M. Mia Primeaux
Dorothy A. Quinn
Mary C. Quinn
John N. Rabias
Daniel J. Roche
Everett J. Roscoe
Collette C. Russell
Kathleen Schaeffer
Burkhard K. Schwillinski
Lauren M. Seeley
Carl Shapiro
Andrew J. Sheehan
John F. Shields Jr.
David F. Silva
Scott D. Spence
Linda A. Stuke
Paula A. Sullivan
Arthur V. Tonini
Anna R. Vergados
Anthony Vitale Jr.
Mary C. Whitney
Diana L. Willcutt
Brian W. Wirzbicki
Paul Yee
Linda M. Zani
Fotios G. Zotos
Number of Class Donors: 138
Total Class Gift: $15,951.86
1987
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Mark Bonifacio
Wei-Dong Wang
Victor J. Zelny
Partners
($500-$999)
Michelle A. Bucceri-Hawes
Kenneth F. Gys
Associates
($250-$499)
Joseph J. Carnese
Donna M. Millette
Steven A. Millette
Steven G. Richter
Joseph L. Robichaud
Chi-Cherng Tang
Mark A. Webb
Century
($100-$249)
Michelle J. Baker
David R. Bloom
Ronald P. Brochu
Stephen A. Brossi
Steven L. Cariglio
Guey-Rong K. Chen
Mark De Angelis
Tripty Dhar
Clark P. Donahue
Laura B. Dyer
Kathleen E. Erickson
David A. Garvin
Anthony Grande
Marta C. Gulezian
David J. Hickey Jr.
Gregg R. Hunter
Lucy M. Kimball
Patty Ann Krajewski
Uraiwan P. Labadini
Dianne C. MacDonald
Lisa J. Mauro
Hamid R. Monsef
Stephen J. Murphy
Eric B. Nemes
Lisa J. Nodwell
Jorma A. Peltola Sr.
Jean L. Phoenix
Mark A. Ratcliffe
Caroline Rider
Michael G. Rider
Saurin J. Shah
Noel J. Tessier
Eric J. Tobin
Edwin P. Valis Jr.
John L. White
Thomas A. Wilson
Friends
($1-$99)
John R. Allan
Joseph Aluia
Jane D. Anderson
Mark C. Bedrosian
Robert J. Bell Jr.
Julie Bezoet de Bie
John M. Bibeau
Stephen T. Butler
Gale A. Cahoon, RN
Jerome F. Carr
Dean P. Chaffe
Patricia A. Chaney
Brian A. Chipman
Timothy P. Collins
Robert W. Cooke
Patricia M. Covelle
Holly A. Cushing
Wendy Sue Dagle
Steven R. Danielson
Paul A. Davis
Richard DiSalvo
Sean C. Dolan
Michael E. Dowling
Steven J. Dungan
Jared P. Eaton
Wayne G. Fisher
Raymond L. Fournier
Martin W. Fraser
Satenig R. Ghazarian
Scott J. Giordano
Rosemary G. Goyette
Bruce G. Hall
Robert R. Hardesty
John F. Healey
Kenneth J. Hickey
Cole L. Howard
Robert A. Hudon
Peter J. Iannazzi
Brian C. Kenny
Mary Ann Kitrosser
Rita E. Kosmin
Joseph P. Lane
Linda E. Lawrence
Melissa Liakas
Carol J. Loftus
James J. Marcello
Michelle A. Marino
William J. Marshall
Marialena Maughan
Richard Clark McHugh Jr.
D. Scott Moore
Monroe Moore
Gregory James Morose
Robert C. Morse V
Daniel S. Noonan
Sandra L. Novak
Kara L. Papazian
Henry J. Parente
Bruce B. Pastorini
Charles R. Pelton
Stacey A. Peters
Thomas J. Pickett
Donald A. Ploof
Andrew G. Proulx
Paula J. Puglia
Nicolino S. Quinci
Daniel J. Raymond
Scott W. Relihan
donor listing by class
Ellen J. Roane
Gregory J. Sands
Andrew N. Scribner-MacLean
Michelle Scribner-MacLean,
EdD
Kathleen M. SelfridgeBythrow
Kerri L. Senzapaura
Harriet Shanzer
Mark S. Sivazlian
Susan M. St. Pierre
Eric V. Stanley
Debra J. Stanzione
Louis R. Steriti
Maria A. Stuart
Darcie Z. Sunnerberg
James E. Ternullo
Karen Marie Ternullo
Thea M. Tully
Marc A. Vachon
Christine M. Vasiliadis
Michael F. Ward
Douglas A. Yates
Number of Class Donors: 137
Total Class Gift: $14,627.99
1988
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Eric J. Helliwell
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Richard J. Musgrave, Esq.
Steven E. Weisfeldt
Yang Yang
Partners
($500-$999)
James J. Barry
David R. Clark
Robert W. Lavoie
Martin J. Schedlbauer
Associates
($250-$499)
Joongwoo Ahn
Donna M. Bibber
Carol Cahalane Coombs
Paul A. Nazzaro
MaryEllen Robert
George F. Sennott Jr.
Scott R. Slomba
Century
($100-$249)
Kimberley A. Brinkman
Kathleen A. Bush-Dutton
Gene Anthony Cardarelli
Gloria J. Cater
James G. Chopas
Michael W. Colafrancesco
Victoria M. Conley
Gavin S. Cummings
Shelagh Donohoe
Daniel D. Doolan Sr.
James F. Dunn
Matthew W. Eddy
Linda H. Elliott
Edward N. Ferguson
Erin M. Ferrick
Sally A. Flores
Christine C. Gravelle
Elizabeth Haartz
Amy J. Hoey
Suzette L. Jefferson
Gary R. Lacroix
Kin Wing Li
Robert C. Licare
Anonymous
Anthony E. Listro
Kathleen A. Lyons
Lisa Maib
Brian W. McInerney
Greg A. Natola
Stephen Peterson
James F. Regan
Mary F. Regan
Steven P. Reichard
Stephen W. Robertshaw
Louis A. Sacco
Mark A. Sampson
De Yang Song
Mary L. Springer
Robert F. Sullivan
Martha J. Sybert
Pamela A. Tranbarger
Friends
($1-$99)
Lynne G. Afrow
Doreen M. Alongi
Joanne M. Antonelli
Susan G. Badger
David V. Baker
George L. Blackwell
Leo M. Bobek
Martin R. Bodley
Carolyn Boisselle
Theresa L. Brassard
Rhonda Brassil
Susan E. Breen
Mark D. Charbonneau
Thomas D. Coe
Tammie M. Corbin
Gregory P. Croteau
John J. DeSantis
Scott M. Didonato
James P. Diluca Jr.
Laurie A. Eno
Jeannine M. Fanikos
Carole J. Fili
Gregory D. Freiter
Mark A. Fuller
Andrew J. Garber
James J. Hajj
William A. Herenda
Laurie Jane Heskett
John C. Higgins
Thomas A. Kilcoyne
Michael P. Lavallee
Catherine M. Lehan
Madeline M. Lyne
Leslie A. MacDonald
Brian J. Mahoney
Christopher G. Malcolm
Christopher J. Martino
Jack K. Maserejian
Lauria L. McCabe
Brian P. McDonald
Timothy J. McGaughey
Anita M. Moeller
Thomas P. Morahan
Chandrika Narayan
Jonathan M. Noone
Robert E. Normandy
Barbara A. Nyder
Peter V. O'Connell
Judith C. Oleks
Haniel Olivera
Lisa M. Ollenborger
Jeffrey O. Ouellet
Sheila M. Pariseau
Russell M. Peirce III
Anne M. Pendleton
Keith A. Pequeno
Joseph F. Petrie Jr.
Andrew I. Pinard
Martha L. Rapoza
Yadollah M. Rezaee
Michael J. Ryder
Robert J. Sacchiero
Paula B. Scotland
Robert W. Sharkey
Craig E. Smith
Evan A. Sparages
Mark A. Spinale
John M. Sullivan
James R. Sullivan Jr.
Bruce K. Wachtmann
Jeffrey M. Walsh
Meryl E. Widman
Wendy A. Wilton
Kimberly A. Yap
Number of Class Donors: 130
Total Class Gift: $23,663.30
1989
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Albelee Haque
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Linda C. Carpenter
Jeng-i Chen
Victor E. Johnson
Laura J. Pollard
Partners
($500-$999)
Robert M. O'Connell
Roger D. Pannell
Associates
($250-$499)
Andrew R. Boyce
Thomas V. Buonopane
Michael L. Fahey
Victor G. Gagnon
Robert Manning
Rebekah A. McKie
Robert D. McSweeney
Jeffery A. Parsons
Century
($100-$249)
Christopher Alibozek
Karen Allen
Rory G. Bens
Daniel B. Brosnan Jr.
Michael F. Brown
Barbara K. Bruno
Christine M. Byam
Mitchell A. Callahan
Jennifer S. Catizone
Tammy L. Concannon
Lawrence R. Cook
James C. Davis
John W. Gallagher
Brian D. Gustems
Vardhani S. Harpanahalli
William J. Hart
Lois G. Haslam
Mark A. Hastbacka
Scott R. Henion
Thomas J. Hoey
James A. Jolliffe
Bruce G. Joncas
Stephen H. Joyce
Dennis P. Keough
David A. Lane
Anthony A. Laurentano Jr.,
Esq.
Craig A. Mauch
Edward McCahill
Paul C. Michali
Thomas F. O'Connell
John J. Pelletier
John T. Piemontese
Mark D. Quinn
Anne T. Shepard
Susan C. Shields
Mary F. Sullivan
Friends
($1-$99)
Eric W. Abelquist
Ghassan A. Abou Ezzi
Richard J. Abraham
Caroline M. Barrett
Robert E. Bertolino Jr.
Robert Bicknell
Diane B. Carr
Stephen A. Clinard
Linda J. Coe
William J. Conway III
Donna M. Delehanty
Kathleen P. Didonato
Nancy Disalvo
Stephen M. Drescher
John P. Duffy
Michael A. Fantasia
Patrick J. Foley
Kerry A. Gagnon
Kevin F. Gallagher
Robert C. Gibbs
Lisa C. Gordon
Philip D. Greco
Terence M. Griffin
Mark S. Griffith
Tracy G. Haley
Antoinette T. Iacobo
Karen J. Jacques
Timothy John Jozokos
Laurie L. Kelley
Jill M. Keough
Ken Kleiner
William L. Knight Jr.
Barbara L. Kreaseck
Cynthia A. Ladino
Albert A. Lafleur Jr.
Larissa Lang
Patricia A. Langill
Paula J. Mahoney
Martin G. Manley
Anthony J. McCook
Susan M. McFarland
Vineet Mehta
Lynn M. Montisanti
Jennifer L. Morrell
Brian A. Movalli
Edward J. Murphy
Laura C. Myers
Paul J. Neenan
David E. Nichols
Patricia A. O'Donnell
Thomas Piccoli
Brian W. Pierro
Anne F. Polaski
Edward J. Powers
Jeffrey M. Raimondi
Patricia A. Reidy
Anthony J. Romano
Robert A. Seney
Kevin R. Soucy
Michael Thomas Spellman
Nikitas Splagounias
Lisa M. Sullivan
Kevin L. Swindon
John J. Thomsen
Kimberly A. Turner
Kenneth R. Wagner Jr.
William S. Wahlstrom
Graham J. Wells
Polly J. Wilson
William J. Wolfendale
Dorothy M. Woodbridge
Number of Class Donors: 122
Total Class Gift: $23,394.00
1990
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Gary M. Madison
Scott D. Waugh
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Patricia M. Bonifacio
Terrance P. McMahon
Edward W. Sheehan
Garrett S. Thurston
Joseph L. Vaillancourt
Partners
($500-$999)
George F. Mercuri
Lynne A. Samuelson
George F. Strom
Associates
($250-$499)
Michael G. Casale
Dianne G. Cazeca
Sophia C. Cigliano Leahey
Patricia C. Holdsworth
Century
($100-$249)
Lisa J. Arakelian
Eugene F. Balerna Jr.
Gregg E. Bonheur
Anthony J. Camoscio
Wayne E. Carlson
Ana M. Clark
Vipul B. Dave
Kenneth E. Dow
Terrie Lynn Enis
Elizabeth A. Faxon
Arthur A. Frost
Carol A. Gamble
Donna Hanson
John C. Kiezulas
Marton A. Kozma
Suzanne M. Lamoureaux
Michael P. Lisi
Karen E. Miedema
William H. Pultar Jr.
Christopher D. Ross
Michael J. Scott
Timothy P. Sipsey
Barbara S. Sundstrom
Vickie A. Turcotte
Edward G. Weingartner
Friends
($1-$99)
Paul A. Ansara
Anne Atherley
Diane R. Barrett
Danielle D. Bodley
Gina M. Boisvert
Joanne Bolianites
Paula F. Bradbard
Kevin F. Cafferty
David S. Call
John J. Callahan
Joyce V. Caras
David Tapley Carbonneau
Kathleen A. Chaffee
Anna Maria Chicoine
Bert E. Corey
Michael J. Coulombe
Leanna Coviello
Karen M. Daniels
Parashar B. Dave
Janice M. DeHart
Michele M. DeMartinis
Guy B. Demartinis
Michael A. DiPoto
Jack H. Duffy
Muriel L. Dyas-Sciotto
Stephen T. English
Pamela L. Fairbrother
Dianne Fasano
Richard D. Fellows Jr., USAF
Lynne M. Fish
Kurt R. Frampton
Lois E. Gentry
Melissa A. Gray
Steven A. Gray
Sandra C. Gulezian
Dianne H. Gustowski
Karen Harrington
Christopher W. Hastings
Mike R. Howard
Scott M. Jones
Merrill M. Kashiwabara
James L. Kirkpatrick
William J. Kozack
Paul E. Krueger
Pamela K. Kurkul
Martha L. Lafrance
Maurice P. Lefort
John E. Longan
Janet M. Matsubara
Lynne M. Mattedi-Regan
Deanna P. McCollum
Joyce T. McKenna
Choodamani Mohan
Kerri-Lynn M. Montgomery
Kim A. Mosley
Thomas G. Murphy
Joseph S. Nasuti
Michael P. O'Connell
Pamela Cote Pakey
Janine T. Parks
Christopher Pine
Bradford A. Quenneville
Timothee C. Rodrique
Nathaniel R. Schwartz
Stephen J. Sheehy
David E. Shipman
James M. Spinney Jr.
Jennifer A. Swindon
Rhonda M. Torcoletti
Jason Phu Tran
Elizabeth M. Travaglini
Katherine B. Valenziano
David F. Vatalaro
Robyn C. Vernick
Heidy L. Voigt
Gretchen S. Voit
David B. Weisberg
Nina E. Wolfendale
Ann M. Wollrath
Leslie A. Yauckoes
Number of Class Donors: 119
Total Class Gift: $26,777.00
1991
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Demetrius P. Rizos
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Pascal Miller
Partners
($500-$999)
Stacey T. Hubbard
Stephen F. Murphy
Vera M. Ossen
Deborah A. Riley
Lisa A. Rucks
William C. Stark
Associates
($250-$499)
Anthony A. Braga
Britta J. Dean
Heather C. Frye
Suzanne A. Gamache
Patricia M. Keefe
Century
($100-$249)
Richard A. Aggott Jr.
Deborah M. Aubrey
Kathylyn T. Barnhill
Nicole A. Caraviello
David F. Catania
Carol D. Delbridge
Michael J. Dickinson
Debra A. Dunham
Diane M. Elmer
Richard H. Ferrino
Laurie-Ann Flaherty
Paula M. Foley
Kevin J. Gauthier
Rene L. Gibson
Jason P. Gurney
Barbara Hemingway
Eileen Herlihy
John R. Hughes Jr.
Dulcey L. Lacroix
John R. Laferriere
Mary F. Maxwell
Ashish K. Mithal
Gregory A. Parke
Richard L. Prenoveau
James L. Salemme
Maria J. Spitzak
Paul J. Stephenson
Jane L. Sutton
Dean W. Turcotte
Eric K. Williams
Friends
($1-$99)
Kevin R. Adolph
John P. Au
Kathleen Aylward
Robert C. Beagan
David B. Belley
Wendy G. Bibeau
James M. Bing
Dorian Boardman
Deborah L. Booth
John Bumstead
13
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
donor listing by class
A Word of Thanks
Allison Fidler, a junior in
– Allison Fidler ’13, Plastics Engineering
major and Commonwealth Scholar
the Plastics Engineering
program, is president of
the local student chapter
of the Society of Women
Engineers. She represented
UMass Lowell last fall at
the first USA Science &
Engineering Festival in
Washington, D.C.
Emily P. Cambray
Paul J. Chanley
Mark A. Chaves
Marilyn R. Claise
Mary E. Cole
Luis A. Colon
Emily A. Cournoyer
Michael Cournoyer
Christopher Cramton
McCharles A. Craven
David A. Crockford
Robert A. Curtin
Lisa-Ann DeNeill
David N. DelVecchio
Judith Dickerman-Nelson
Dan E. Doherty
Harli M. Dollinger
Laurin M. Downing
Christine K. Drevitch
June E. Evans
Paul S. Faria
Kristin J. Fox
Robert M. Hall Jr.
James P. Herlihy
Stephanie A. Howard
Charles H. Kelley
Kenneth J. Kelly
Kathy L. Korman
Diane L. Laferriere
Jeffrey B. Lander
Jennifer M. Lane
William A. Ledder
Robert J. Letteri
Christopher Mark Lies
Jodie L. Lucci
Mark P. MacNeil
Thomas M. Maguire
Selina J. Makofsky
Timothy J. Malloy
Susan D. Markin
Dianne G. Marsden
Jeanne S. Masterman
Peter J. Mathisen
Carolynn B. McCarthy
Donald W. McClory
Christine M. McGrath
Dorothy J. McLeod
Scott A. Merrill
David J. Merullo
Heather M. Mihaich
14
U N I V E R S I T Y
“As a recipient of both University and family
endowed scholarships, I know first-hand
what it feels like to be awarded with a
scholarship, and it’s amazing how even a
little support goes a long way. The support
that donors provide, whether it be monetary
or simply their involvement with the
University, does not go unnoticed or
unappreciated.”
Recipient of:
John and Abigail Adams Scholarship
Carol Barry Endowed Scholarship
James Dandeneau Endowed Scholarship
Dean’s Scholarship
University Independent Alumni Association
Daniel S. Minehan
Vincent F. Moise Jr.
Brenda L. Monahan
Joann Moriarty-Baron
Tracy L. Mucher
Christopher J. Murphy
Stephen R. O'Malley
Michele D. Odryna
John G. Peznola
Scott A. Pizzo
Gerald H. Powers Jr.
Charles F. Ravagni
John E. Regan
James A. Ricoy Jr.
Rita M. Rouvalis
John P. Ryan
Marwan B. Sabbouh
Matthew A. Sepe
Kristen W. Shirley
Joseph S. Smith
James F. St. Pierre
Michael T. Staniec
James J. Sullivan
Cynthia Szabady
Ann M. Thibaud
Leo J. Tometich
Marc M. Torrisi, Esq.
John R. Tyson
George J. Vasiliades
Robert C. Walter
Fred T. Willett
Catherine L. Williams
Paul D. Wilson
Ross A. Wilson
Number of Class Donors: 137
Total Class Gift: $15,247.50
1992
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Michael J. Orroth
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Timothy A. Hutchison
Satchit B. Srinivasan
Partners
($500-$999)
Jeffrey T. Doyle
Ho-Seon Jin
O F
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
Jun-Young Lee
Martha Mayo
Associates
($250-$499)
Steven W. Fisk
David W. Kennedy III
Patricia Trela
Ramakrishnan Venugopal
Century
($100-$249)
Jeffrey F. Aronis
Teresa R. Barous
Ruth E. Barzyk
Steven L. Buckley
Gregory L. Carter
Sean M. Collins
Lisa Dana
Joanne Desmarais
George P. Elenbaas
Paul J. Enis
Michael A. Faria
Roseanne Foley
David M. Gatti
Robert A. Gonynor
Peter S. Haslam
RonnieAnn R. Hughes
James E. Kelsey
Xiaoming Lee
Jian Lou
Peter M. McGinn
Joseph K. Medici
Stephen M. Miu
Lisa A. O'Donnell
Richard C. Peck
Janis E. Raguin
Robert J. Raimondi
Millicent F. Rothman
Heather McLean Rozen
Elizabeth A. Sheehan
Alice M. Sogomonian
Adrienne St. John
Robert M. Welton
Thomas M. Wheeler
John R. Zappala Jr.
Friends
($1-$99)
Cynthia A. Arrasin
Patricia Atwell
Robert W. Aylward Sr.
L O W E L L
Jeanne L. Azarovitz
Pamela L. Bannister
Judith A. Barnes-Long
Kathleen J. Barrett
Brenda J. Bond
Sanjay H. Boolani
Neil E. Boudreau
Daniel R. Boudreault
John W. Boullie
Andrew A. Bragg
Brian D. Campbell
Christine E. Carignan
Michael Castriotta
Donna M. Clark
Lynn R. Cody
Maura J. Conley
Richard M. Conley
George M. Correia
Daniel W. Cronin
Stephen J. Curtis
Darrel A. Davidow
Tina M. Downey
Mary Ann Egan
Daniel J. Ferguson
Helen T. Fitzgerald
Margaret E. Fitzgerald
Michael G. Fokas
Edward J. Gardiner
Linda B. Gardiner
Jean E. Gramling
Christopher M. Green
Cathy A. Greenspan
Ray J. Greenup
Steven P. Griffin
Susan L. Grinblatas
Gregory C. Haggis
Clinton F. Hollis
Michelle Hooper
Wendy T. Hopkins
Fei Hu
Linda M. Hurley
John S. Johnson
Vivek S. Kakaria
Brian M. Kelleher
Andrew R. Kelley
Victoria S. Kinsman
Richard B. Knowles
Ruth M. Ladd
Laura Lamarre-Anderson
Marc L. Larochelle
Jerilyn M. Latini
Richard E. Latini
Karen E. Leonard
Charlene P. Levesque
William P. Lovely Jr.
Erika A. Lowrey
Anne M. Manning
Joan Matheny
Jodie A. McManmon
Lisa A. Mitchell
Deborah P. Moscoso
Brian B. Muise
Melissa C. O'Meara
Brian P. Parath
Karen S. Pearson
Denise P. Perrin
Andrea M. Pierce
Margaret E. Poverchuk
Minna A. Rannikko
Kevin J. Regan
Thomas M. Regan
Bob E. Rice Jr.
Thomas E. Richardson Jr.
Rajiv H. Saraiya
Lynn E. Scannell-Laursen
David J. Seltz
Mark A. Sheehan
Linda G. Smith
Carol A. Tatarinowicz
Steven C. Veilleux
Rose M. Veith
Elizabeth A. Weathers
Thurman B. Wenzl
Cheryl L. Zaino
Number of Class Donors: 132
Total Class Gift: $16,250.60
1993
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Robert A. Caruso
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Sutiyao Marturunkakul
Deepak H. Mehta
Partners
($500-$999)
Makam S. Chetan
Ru-jong Jeng
Margaret M. Quinn
Associates
($250-$499)
Richard G. Abbadessa
Robert M. Dankese Jr.
Scott A. Meehan
Kathleen J. Skinner
Century
($100-$249)
Paula E. Alexander
Mary L. Beaudry
Paul D. Brinkman
Alan R. Canova, USAF
Brian D. Carlson
Christopher D. Cotton
Karen L. Dawson
Patrick A. Diette
Diane D. Dubois
Scott E. Fiore
Fadi Abou Ghanem
Kimberly A. Halloran
Lee A. Hutchinson
Judith M. Jonk
Paul M. Joseph Jr.
John E. Kemnitzer II
Richard H. Labbe
James J. Mandile
Ray E. Martin Jr.
Paul F. Matthews
Robert J. Morelli Jr.
William J. Murphy Jr.
Michael Murray
Amberish A. Nagarkatti
Keith E. Neal
Esther M. Pearson
Robert S. Sheehan
Richard A. Sutton
Marianne E. Vail
Kerri G. Westburg
Gang Yue
Friends
($1-$99)
Cathy A. Abbot
Hooshmand S. Afshar
Jacquelyn M. Ayotte
Douglas A. Bajgot
Gerard A. Bergeron
John P. Boyea
Doreen E. Bray
Ferdinando Bruno
Mark J. Buliszak
Richard H. Burton Jr.
Anees H. Buxamusa
Brendan J. Cahill
Catherine M. Calder
Arthur A. Chabot
Gary Comins
Paul S. Couture
John C. Crawford
Timothy Cunningham
Alecia T. Cyprian
Christopher D. Cyr
Robert W. Dunakin Jr.
Charles D. Fleury
Lynn Hall
Duane A. Hanna
Paul J. Holland
Yuming Huang
Mary Ellen Iorio
Nicole Jambard
Orpha James
Mark L. Jarek
Gregory S. Lamarre Anderson
Donald A. Langlois
Steven M. Lapinskas
Mark E. Lindenfelzer
Michael W. Lombardi
John E. Macaluso
Nancy A. Mann
Rayna E. Merryfield
Michael G. Monahan
Joseph F. Morrissey
Susan E. Mullaney
Depankar Neogi
Mary P. Nolan
Shaun E. O'Brien
John R. O'Neil
Normand R. Paquette
Tristaan Petullo
Stella M. Pierce
Mark P. Pittella
William T. Ralston
Irene M. Reagan
Patricia A. Sarcione
William J. Serwatka
Dorothy J. Small
Lori E. Spooner-Porter
Carol A. St. Germain
John M. Sweeny
Hoang V. Thai
Kathleen C. Tiberii, RN
William Paul Tobey
Jonathan A. Toomey
Elizabeth A. Turner
Katherine Walsh
Mary E. West
Nancy L. Witherell
Suzanne E. Young
Susan A. Youngblood
Donna Zouzas
Number of Class Donors: 109
Total Class Gift: $15,269.95
1994
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Choon-Bo Choe
Alexandra S. Tayebi
Partners
($500-$999)
Jason D. Cronin
Woohong Kim
Edward Marootian Jr.
Lynn M. Winston
Associates
($250-$499)
Shyam Prakash Attavar
Martha K. Chapman
Christopher P. Geggis
Ngo Van Phan
Susan J. Veligor
Century
($100-$249)
Charles E. Arsenault
Todd M. Bazemore
Todd B. Boyle
David P. Cameron
Thomas A. Cardone
Christopher P. Carroll
William J. Casagrande
Eva-Maria U. Chase
Stanley D. Chin
Robert Cosmo Ciccariello
Linda M. Crochetiere
James C. Freed
Garrett P. Gardner
Jeri D. Gillin
Michael D. Hatfield
Brenda J. Hite
Catherine A. (Kate) Kelley
Augustin F. Lanteigne
Michael Laquidara
Michael G. McGrath
Dianne M. Ruggiero
Leo J. Ryan
Steven T. Swartz
Jeffrey A. Torone
donor listing by class
Arthur J. Veves
Ruixia Yue
1995
Friends
($1-$99)
Richard C. Anderson
Jyothi Arvind
Doris E. Barrett
Cheryl M. Becotte
Anne Marie Bourque
William J. Carey III
Beth A. Carney
Sandra M. Carriker
Berty J. Chennankara
William M. Chepolis
Daniel C. Clarkson
Anne-Marie Cromwick
Julie Beth Curran
David A. Curtis
Maureen A. Dalton
Mutasim Mahdi Elfahal
Leonard S. Emmons
Kathleen A. Fahey
Michael Patrick Fitzgerald
Anthony Florindi
Geoffrey R. Flynn
Elise A. Franklin
Ajay M. Gajria
Kevin H. Gibson
Jane R. Ginsburg
Keith A. Glasser
Betsy E. Goldenberg
John D. Hally
Diane M. Harihar
Marie Jean Harris
Leo J. Hart
Chad L. Hawkins
Jonathan Ayers Howard
Michael C. Kelly
John M. Lauria
Gerard B. Leary
Anastasia Leondis
Fangzhi Li
Eric J. Longo
Catherine Lospennato
Craig A. McAnaugh
Karen S. McCall
Shelly Cyr McGee
Mary C. McMackin
Thomas Mead
Robert G. Molinari Jr.
Keith S. Morgan
Marianne B. Moriarty
Richard A. Moynihan
Dana J. Munn
Paula A. Murphy
Peter M. Murphy
Barbara C. Muzykewicz
Denise Adams Olney
Anthony P. Pamelia
Dana Truitt Patek
Dean R. Pawlowski
Matthew N. Persing
David B. Pinkney
Henry M. Polan
Susan E. Powers
RoseMaria Redman
Sharon L. Remillard
Robert M. Riotto
Nancy A. Roberts
Gregory A. Rushton
Debra L. Shank
Daniel P. Shea
Jane B. Siebecker
Colin C. Spence
Matthew Mark Staffier
Louie L. Tonry
Mark E. Torre
Anne M. Trischitta
Maureen C. Walden
Nicholas D. Warren
Sandra E. Wellinghoff
Daniel J. Weygand
James E. Windheuser
Dariusz Bogdan Wisniewski
Number of Class Donors: 117
Total Class Gift: $16,588.00
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Kerry F. Donohoe
Partners
($500-$999)
Harry D. Crowther
Associates
($250-$499)
Richard J. Donahue
Richard M. Guenard
Panos Tokadjian
Century
($100-$249)
Brian W. Andriolo
Kerry D. Angus, JD
Gary P. Barbin
Ellen Barkhuff
James W. Beaudry
Mark R. Beauregard
Richard M. Braga
Paul L. Combs
Lisa Coto
Donald S. Delikat
Renee M. Duchemin
Brenda I. Evans
Stephen B. Halmkin
Eva G. Heifetz
Steven M. Kumiega
Jeanne M. McCoy
George M. Michalakis
Anthony R. Mineo
Jerry Charles Neistadt
David J. Pappalardo
Kouma Sinn
Joanne C. Talty
David R. Timberlake
Katherine Tyndall
Stacey B. Weston
Friends
($1-$99)
Leomary J. Bader
Christopher A. Baker
Glenn A. Berger
Andrew S. Blatus
Paula M. Borgasano
Christopher R. Bourque
Billie Jo Bowler
Jeffrey M. Cappiello
Patricia M. Clark-Nowoswiat
Robin A. Desmond
Kevin S. Eaton
Patricia E. Fallon
Andrew Farrell
Maren C. Forsyth
Michele K. Fox
Holly R. Gilbert
Karen J. Good
Edward L. Hajduk
Timothy N. Johnson
Richard A. Kealey
Dorothy N. Keyworth
Timothy P. Largy
Michael S. Lastrina
Carlton W. Lincoln III
Nicholas L. Linsky
Patricia J. Lipman
Dennis J. Lucia Jr.
Joseph March
John A. Matson
Arnaldo Mejias Jr.
David Mooshian
Michael G. Morgan
Faye K. Moyer
Peter W. Mullin
David W. Murphy
Vivek Amrutlal Naik
Suzana Nascimento
Daniel T. O'Grady
Janet A. Olowojoba
John Onyejekwe
Piyush N. Patel
David E. Patnaude
Bradley T. Reghitto
Michael H. Reinhardt
Thomas W. Rimmer
Joan S. Sackman
Carol A. Sarno
John W. Seale III
Judy W. Seidewand
Daphne L. Serwatka
Laurie A. Smith
Sherryl K. Stonebraker
Deborah Trachtenberg
Karl W. Wajda
Gregory R. Walsh
Mary J. Welch
James L. Zwynenburg
Number of Class Donors: 87
Total Class Gift: $7,855.00
1996
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Carol F. Barry
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Lillian A. Johnston
Richard Lemoine
Lisa M. Thurston
Associates
($250-$499)
Sheila S. Bushe
Dong W. Cheong
Patricia L. Fontaine
Mark M. Freeman
Victor J. Gangi
Charmaine P. Hickey
Century
($100-$249)
Raymond Bastarache
Adriel J. Edwards
Alexander G. Gee
Neil G. Goulding
Matthew W. Harris
Mary Ann E Hibino
Lisa Marchand-Ciriello
Marty J. Martinez
Timothy J. Mustone
Brent D. Oakleaf
Kathleen J. Olsen
Keh-Cherng Sheu
M. Jeannie Tremblay
Friends
($1-$99)
Jose G. Annunziato
Barbara A. Baker
Jennifer Benesh
Peter A. Benoit
Julie Nolet Berthiaume
Ravindra Prakash Bhalla
Sanjiv M. Bhatt
Virginia A. Boucher
M.Patricia Bullis
Maureen Burke
Brenda Busta
Patricia E. Caffrey
Christopher J. Carter
Kathy Ann Cellamare
Jennifer A. Clarke-Burke
Joan A. Conde-Bevers
Leslie Davis
Steven M. DeSimone
Alan W. Dewhirst Sr.
Bijal H. Doshi
Steven Eramo
William J. Gallant
Raymond P. Galloni
Linda M. Gilbreth
Robert P. Gillis
Lisa M. Gorrow
Denise M. Guignard
Jennifer M. Hale
Lela Boykins Hall
Jane E. Henebury
DeWayne E. Howell
Robert Huerta
Patricia M. Iannucci
Cynthia Wedekind Jacobs
Jason G. Knowles
Eileen M. LaBrecque, USAF
Richard V. Lates
Suzanne Liacos-Dix
Eric S. Lohrey
Shannon M. Lucia
Peter J. MacKinnon
Joan M. Marriott
Marybeth Mathson
Leslie A. Miller
Ronald Monsini
Jeffrey D. Nicoll
Eleanora M. Paciulan
Christopher J. Palmer
Gayl Pizzano
Shawn C. Reynolds
Douglas M. Schromm
Jeffrey S. Schwartz
Craig R. Schwarze
Prachuab Soonthornprapuet
David W. Stockbower
Steve K. Thibeault
James Williams
Number of Class Donors: 80
Total Class Gift: $14,315.36
1997
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
John D. Geraci
Partners
($500-$999)
Hoke V. Bullard III
Richard Hoffmann
Joyce McLaughlin
Associates
($250-$499)
XinLi Jiang
Brian C. MacLean
Chad C. Moore
Meredith M. Stephens
Century
($100-$249)
James S. Borodawka
David Thomas Burns
Daniel J. Callahan
Michael J. Corvino
Robert M. Costello
Dianne M. Deveau
Katherine G. Doulamis
James P. Francis
Mary C. Geary
Phillip W. Gibson
Monty C. Grob
Nathan J. Kutt
Joseph F. Lutkevich
Raghunath Othayoth Nambiar
N. Dana Nelson
Teresa T. O'Kane
Brian Scanlan
Michael Peter Sireci
Katherine R. Weeks
Jane E. Worthley
Michaela W. Wyman-Colombo
Friends
($1-$99)
Linas Alinskas
Dael Angelico-Hart
Karla R. Armenti
William M. Beard Jr.
Alicia W. Bunnell
Barbara Burri
Conway C. Campbell
Edward B. Campbell
Monica D. Campbell
Patricia L. Coffey
George E. Coulouras
David C. Coviello
Karen Deterra
Jeremy R. Dziadosz
Albert L. Ericsson
Christine L. Finney
Michael B. Fligg
David C. Flynn
Umesh C. Gandhi
Alexandra GonzalezAnnunziato
Joan Z. Graham
Margaret A. Howard
Ying Jiang
Prasad V. Joshi
James B. Kingsbury
Christian T. Langlois
David M. Letizio
Nicole G. Little
Jean P. MacDougall-Tattan
Ryan J. McDonough
Donna J. McDougall
Edward R. Michaud
Caroline Mojica
Joseph John Monahan Jr.
Michael L. Mudge
Yany Nhean
Arthur H. O'Brien
Suvita Gajanan Prabhu
Gary O. Quebbeman
Bradley O. Rambarran
Jeremy D. Rosson
Carolyn Schwartz
Jagdish P. Shah
Candace T. Stone
Christine A. Suratt
Heather M. Taskovics
Angela K. Vermette
Christine L. Weeks
Bartlett Wetherbee
Mary B. Wittenhagen
Hongwen Zhang
Number of Class Donors: 80
Total Class Gift: $9,198.00
1998
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Ramaswamy Nagarajan
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
David P. McGrath Jr.
Partners
($500-$999)
Eric R. Correnti
Associates
($250-$499)
Samuel R. Divine
Arthur T. Wallace
Century
($100-$249)
Chulsung Bae
Albert S. Iarossi
Ryan J. Kearney
Kaori S. Kelts
Andrei A. Kostousov
Matthew R. Lashmit
Shubhang Mishra
Dawn L. Mushkin
Ted M. Nunes
Anthony J. Skliutas Jr.
Christian D. Smialek
Hung-Ming J. Wu
Friends
($1-$99)
Ryan T. Beal
Brion H. Berghaus
Dorothy M. Burke
Vincenzo Casasanta
John L. Daniels
Joanna M. DelMonaco
Kristy A. Dickinson
Kerry L. Dudley
John Dunlevy
Leonard G. Evans
Heather M. Farrand
Sarah E. Fligg
Gretchen M. Fodor
Anne Marie P. Gallant
Siva R. Ghatti
Andrew Griffin
Stephen R. Hemman
Monsy M. Jacob
Jay S. Jankauskas
David E. Jillson
Lynda A. Kaylor, RN
Joan M. Kelly
John P. Lahoud
Katherine Lee Lewis
James M. Lubsen
Karen Y. Manherz
Karen M. Martin
Ryan D. McNeal
Jeffrey M. Miller
Roberta C. Morris
Ivan G. Most
Jennifer C. Mueller
John M. Nicholson
Kathleen Paone
Christopher P. Richard
Peter M. Richards
Michael J. Rodgers
Erin Ryan
Cosmo V. Sabatino
Louis R. Saccocea
Donald P. Saletnik
Kenneth J. Sayler
David Spengler
Christopher J. Sullivan
David A. Williamson
Randi L. Wineinger
Lea S. Woodward
Susan M. de Mari
Number of Class Donors: 65
Total Class Gift: $10,716.00
1999
Partners
($500-$999)
Wiera T. Malozemoff
Travis A. Tucker
Associates
($250-$499)
Thomas E. Janzen
Century
($100-$249)
Stephen R. Aste
Constantinos D. Doulamis
Marybeth McGinn
Maureen A. McNamara
Anne K. McWilliams
Mark A. Miller
Hang Thi My Nguyen
Friends
($1-$99)
Clinton J. Anderson
Kevin D. Ankiewicz
Robert L. Antonellis
Suzanne Bakhos
James K. Booker
Christopher J. Brodeur
Linda S. Bryant
Elaine S. Bukowiecki
Terry W. Burton
John C. Cadotte Jr.
Clynton L. Caines
Jay F. Celona
Susan F. Clarke
Allison C. Cunha
Andrea E. Daniels
Vicki J. Delle Donne
John R. Dunn
Michael T. Eaton
Susan Ann Egan
Amr Medhat El-Basiony
Heidi L. Elsinger
Patience Fiattor
Juanita K. Fischer
Gregory Fulgione
Bethany L. Gentleman
Susanne M. Harris
Robert K. Hawkes
Maureen K. Hilfinger
Philip Lewis Janes
Nicholas P. Julian
Philip Todd Jurgeleit
Joseph M. Karasha
Rebecca Lee
15
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
Casey Lerner
Maria-Dawn R. Linsley
Gregg Amos Matthew
John T. McCann
Sharon McCarthy
Kerin McLoughlin
John W. McNamara
David George Miles
Sophy Mueller
Kevin M. Redman
Stephen J. Richard
George Sousa
Henry Sullivan
Jo Anne Thorlin
Nancy H. Wile
Scott J. Young
Number of Class Donors: 59
Total Class Gift: $4,150.00
Dennis A. Villanueva
Edward F. Vo
Christopher J. White
Francis A. Wilson
Peter Martin Ziegler
Number of Class Donors: 60
Total Class Gift: $6,578.00
2001
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Patrick Scollin
Partners
($500-$999)
Mital Madhusudan Parikh
Associates
($250-$499)
Patricia A. Sheridan
2000
Century
($100-$249)
Prudence B. Ardito
Pamela A. Barry
Mark A. Elgart
Stephen C. Kapantais
Eyal Leib
Aaron R. Osowiecki
Richard K. Peterson
Michael J. Poirier
Francis James Raymond
Heidi Schreuder-Gibson
Wei Tang
Hsien-Jen Tien
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Craig S. Brown
Partners
($500-$999)
Matthew J. Ciampaglia
Christopher P. Rennix
Associates
($250-$499)
Craig M. Gava
Hsiao-Hsing Lo
David C. May
Deirdra Murphy
Jiewen Wang
Century
($100-$249)
Kevin P. Burke
Christine E. Collins
John Cully
Pamela P. DiNapoli
Anthony A. Gasbarro
Philip J. O'Neil
Stephen Pazdziorko
Friends
($1-$99)
Donald Ackerman
Olawale A. Akinwale
Christine J. Anderson
Steven E. Arnold
Andrew J. Bazinet
Nina F. Benkley
Kenneth R. Berard
Michell Bosch
Michael P. Broderick
Susan M. Bujnowski
Matthew Saverio Carlone
Dennis Coffey
Manuela Cooperman
Carlos Eddy Coral-Gomez
William Alexander De Marco
Patrick J. Drane
Usha Dwarakanath
Anthony E. Eadie
Michael Patrick Fitzmaurice
Carla M. Giordano
Nicki Suzanne Girouard
William D. Goodhue
Patrick E. Hoffman
Juqi Huo
Vinh-Loc T. Huynh
Surbhi Kaushik
Brian C. LaBrec
David Harry Lence
Patricia M. McNamara
Shannon A. Meehan
Loretta S. Montgomery
Michelle Sybil Morgan
Kevin B. O'Malley
Paula Pelletier (Riggan)
Theresa M. Reich
Martha Shelton
Jeffrey S. Skowronek
Gail P. Sprangers
Paul F. Stone
Hima Bindu Tummala
16
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
Friends
($1-$99)
Deborah A. Adler
Irma Betty Allen
Virginia Simonds Barry
Kerri L. Brooks
Nicholas Carso
Jennifer L. Conroy
Amit K. Dani
Scott Dickinson
Amy Lynn Everitt
Tara N. Fay
Olga S. Forrest
Cheryl A. Hatch
Karen E. Hokanson, EdD
Jaime A. Hussey
Rafal Jablonka
Leanne E. Lavoie
John M. Lyons
Virginia Mangolds
Erin A. McLaughlin
Sherry L. Milnes
Susan M. Minott
Ahmed H. Nur
John O'Brien
Jennifer Ossen
Marla E. Perez
Luan C. Pham
Sandra Alexandrin Quintal
Raidu S. Rayasam
William C. Rideout
Denise Roach
Andrew K. Roberts
Susan A. Rubel
Eileen Marie Sousa
Thomas D. Stammberger
Eugene Tikh
Jennifer L. York
Christopher M. Zullo
Number of Class Donors: 52
Total Class Gift: $5,115.01
2002
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Emily D. Byrne
Linda E. Fox
Chang-Shu Linus Kuo
Partners
($500-$999)
Jennifer A. Desa
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
donor listing by class
Associates
($250-$499)
Kerri L. Johnston
David C. Vincent
Century
($100-$249)
Mary M. Aruda
Geetha Datari
Daniel L. Fontas
Carol J. Hodapp
Patricia M. Kelsey
Kevin W. Kotyluk
Lois A. Noonan
Annette M. Parsons
Thomas R. Rouleau
Judith L. Tuori
Constance Vanne
Friends
($1-$99)
Kareem S. Abu-Zahra
Ali Ashter
Matthew D. Bartos
Soumyaroop Bhattacharya
Ann Bratton
Dale E. Brown
Linda Sue Bruenjes
Margaret Burke
Lisa M. Chandonnet
Catherine M. Cooper
Mary C. Coppinger-Fraser
Aarti D'Souza
Kathleen V. DeFillippo
Donna M. Demaria
Jill L. Drury
Alisa G. Druzba
James P. Elliott
William A. Fyfe
Paulette M. Ghassibi
Neil C. Holt
John B. Hoskins
Robert S. Isaacs
Saritkumar Kommineni
Ming Lee
Don R. Leonard
Joseph E. Lisi
Christine Megan Lord
Thomas J. McAtamney
Marc Philip Menovich
Eileen Mills
Brian T. Nelson
Tuyen T. Nguyen
Richard J. Nihan
Priyanka Pillai
Christos Protonotarios
David H. Reed
Brian Paul Roy
Mary Q. Seaver
Briana M. Sullivan
Jaimee Lyn Swiderski
Ian Anthony Underwood
Rui Wang
Gunther R. Wellenstein
Paul T. Zacharia
Number of Class Donors: 61
Total Class Gift: $7,231.09
2003
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Anonymous
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Deborah Ellen Finch
Alex Moschella
Partners
($500-$999)
Robert Backofen
Robert W. Montgomery III
Associates
($250-$499)
Mark J. Concannon Jr.
Patrick A. Nsumei
L O W E L L
Century
($100-$249)
Andre P. Gorgenyi
Darryl K. Green
Colleen Janeiro
Kathryn Lee
Stephen Little
Tammy B. Millette
Rahul S. Patel
Stephen W. Slonina
Daniel M. Smith
Bernard A. Woesten
Friends
($1-$99)
Kwangseog Ahn
Robert E. Armata
Richard A. Bickford
Jessica Bouchard
Gregory A. Boyne
Niamh Brady
Danielle C. Callahan
Christopher P. Capano
Linda Clarke-Pounder
Linda Clower
Jessica A. Cogswell
David Bigelow Cohen
Eugenie Collins
Mary T. Corsetto
Michael Joseph Deasy
Kathryn M. Delaney
Mary Desimone
Melissa Jane Egan
Cristina Carmela Emphasis
Nathan T. Eng
Karen S. Fung
Regina G. Galat-skey
Scott E. Greeb
Garrett D. Greenwood
Robert W. Hanlon
Jeffrey Ryan Hodgkins
Michael H. Irving
Rachael R. Kenney
Donald A. Kilgour
William Andrew Kolbe
Elizabeth Faith Kotyla
Chris Nicholas Kuncho
Craig M. LaBrecque
Christopher D. Lane
Julie Ann Lawlor
Antoinette F. Ledger
Hao Q. Liang
Dawn M. Marchand (Ames)
Sean P. McGuigan
Eliates Mercedat
Joydeep Mukherjee
Michael Musgnug
Chetan P. Nirkhe
Debra O'Connor
Ritvaliisa Ojanen
Jamie Ellen Pouliot
Evangelos Poulopoulos
Joshua J. Reed
Julie Simon
Michael J. Stuer
Lisa V. Suglia
Daniel Sweet
Tuyen A. Truong
Jeffrey Richard Turpel
Denise M. Walsh
Melissa A. Wilkinson
Number of Class Donors: 73
Total Class Gift: $11,883.85
2004
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Linda A. Barrington
Associates
($250-$499)
Rashana N. Bennett
Heath D. Mckay
John R. Ouellette
Century
($100-$249)
Jason J. Beaudet
Laura E. Bresnahan
Sean R. Daudelin
Michael S. Donelan
Daniel D. Fariello
Laura H. Frye
Dan Lausten
Margarita Zapata-Turcotte
John F. Zrembski
Friends
($1-$99)
Pamela Ames
Brendan M. BaranekOlmstead
Daniel J. Barrett
Joseph Basto
Patrick J. Brannon
Frank T. Buono
Juan C. Cardona
Paulino M. Carteiro
Robert Joseph Casey
Anuja Chaudhary
Christopher John Collins
Donald Eugene Crim
Nancy A. Daigle
Keith Phillip DeAmbrose
Daniel Ferry
Barbara Foley
David Girouard
Kristen E. Gleason
Jillian R. Gorman
John W. Harmon
Deborah Kasabian
William P. Kotsifas
Brian Lankiewicz
Francis Liang
Kimberly A. Loiselle
Sivhour Ly
Martha J. Marsden
Enkeleda Nakuci
Glenn A. Nardini
Vinay K. Ningala
Laurence John O'Brien
Allison Elaine O'Neill
Santo J. Pirri
Jason M. Poor
Alycia Y. Ravenscroft
Seth Rosenberger
Jason N. Sackos
William Harold Simon
Suzette Danielle Spitzer
Shaun P. Sullivan
Malida Suong
Michael Antony Testa
Michelle Dubois Todd
Jon D. Victorine
Joseph Zahka
Number of Class Donors: 58
Total Class Gift: $4,530.50
2005
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Sandhya Balasubramanian
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Patrese Obrien Pierson
Partners
($500-$999)
Bon-cheol Ku
Associates
($250-$499)
Martin E. Lorrey
Christopher L. Paige
Nancy Pitkin
Century
($100-$249)
Steven M. Chaves
Emily Irene Davis
Geraldine Deyermond
James S. Gleason
James Lemieux
Mary-Jane T. Mastrovich
Sean Patrick McKenna
Linda S. Noss
John J. Porell
Andrea Beth Reed
Pawan Kumar Roy
Flaubert Tchantchou
Shivashankar R. Vangala
Friends
($1-$99)
Mohammad A. Aleem
Janine Baldi
Daniel S. Berube
Jessica Z. Bielawski
Adam R. Boudreau
Charlotte Ann Cardullo
Vincent A. Carter
Karrie Pui-King Chan-Lam
John Crocker
Stephanie Phyllis Dubay
Philippa C. Dunn
Ann Bromberg Ewalt
John C. Gachuki
Gladys Graciela Gomez
Sushma Gottumukkala
Scott D. Gould
Margaret F. Hansberry
Kristen E. Horndahl
Stephen P. Johnston
Gary M. Judd
Kimberly A. Knesek
Naomie Laime
Phillipe Andres Loher
Richard Loomis
Roger H. Luce
Tracy Anne Luther
Patrick M. MacDonald
Evelyn Martinez
John McPartlan
Adele Miller
Peter John Murphy
Robin L. Murray
Katherine Nardoni
Pamela R. Nedbalek
Sean Ryan O'Melia
Curtis A. Page
Raymond M. Pendleton
Robert M. Ricci Jr.
Johnny Roche
Steven E. Sharky
Jason Ronald Stamp
Michael Stepchinski
Mark Sullivan
Tam T. Tran
William Francis Trelegan
Craig Trumm
Bobby G. Tugbiyele
Maria Christine Twyon
Jason M. Vallee
Brenda C. Van der Beek
Marie J. Voltaire
Ming Wei
Sharen E. Wheatley Majors
Derek S. Winchester
Kevin Michael Yonge
Number of Class Donors: 74
Total Class Gift: $11,996.80
2006
Associates
($250-$499)
Seongcheol Kim
Heather A. Kirwin
Century
($100-$249)
Amit Asthana
Kim Brandvold
Charles E. Gobron
Tracey Klein
Cara Lambert
Heather Madeleine Makrez
Kleanthes Maloutas
Michael T. McAuliffe
Kevin John Noa
Amy C. Osenar
Mark J. Pandolfo
Friends
($1-$99)
Gregory John Anderson
Yovani Baez
donor listing by class
Susan Baker
Elise Bennett
Paul W. Berthiaume
Darren R. Brown
Andrew Livingston Chanler
Joseph R. Charlebois
Domenico Ciccone
Bradford J. Cote
Jason John Davis
Leonard Doherty
Vickie L. Duguay
Georges Enow
William Fennell
Anupam Gohel
Howie C. Goodell
Chad E. Gosselin
Bradley W. Hansen
Sarah E. Hodgdon
Shu-Feng Hsieh
Eika Hunt
Hevelt Jacques
Leah Kennedy
Shanna D. Kornachuk
Vijay Jawahar Kudchadkar
Sarah C. LaLiberte
M. Kim Lindley-Soucy
Wen Lu
Matthew W. MacDonald
Craig Joseph MacKenzie
Joel P. Marchand
Tina A. McCarthy
Michael Whitfield Moretti
Paul Nutter
Jennifer Oquendo
Michelle M. Orloff
Robert D. Parr
Igor Pavlov
James Clarence Payne
Stephen George Pernaw
William M. Phelan
Jeanne G. Ralls
David J. Rapisarda
Gail A. Richards
Tara Sherman
Harsha Sheshanna
Sallyann Shumilla
Elizabeth A. Smith
Lisa J. Thornhill
Frank Tiano
Buntha Un
Heather Ann Valley
Robyn Wright
Sung-hwan Yoon
Catherine Ann Yu
Number of Class Donors: 69
Total Class Gift: $3,722.00
2007
Associates
($250-$499)
Frank Edward Andrews
Century
($100-$249)
Candace Balbo
Victoria Rose Denoon
Sharyn H. Hardy - Gallagher
Roxane J. Howe
Ryan Johnson
Anthony Laudadio
Brian C. Legg
Joan C. Lehoullier
Oved B. Lourie
Janelle Parechanian
Dianna L. Petrusky
Scott William Slabaugh
Friends
($1-$99)
Daniel R. Allen
Kristi Lynn Andrews
Conor M. Baldwin
Karen K. Barcal
Anthony B. Beatrice
Thomas Edward Boyle
Tory Antawn Bunn
Mark T. Carson
Carol Ellen Chisolm
Sharon Marie Connolly
Clint Cooper
Melissa E. Crow
Luis Cubillos
Matthew J. Cullen
Joanna L. DaLuze
Munjal M. Desai
Sean P. Garballey
Charles Golub
Robert Graziano
Melissa Hatanaka
Daniel Robert Hazen
Shilpa Hegde
Cynthia A. Kahrman
Mary E. Kazanjian
Megan Elizabeth Keating
Sharon Lynn Lawrence
Ryan Y. Leger
Catherine C. Leonard
Megan E. Lewis
Shanshan Lin
Manuel A. Madera
Emily M. Makrez
Matthew Marchand Mannarino
Ana Maria Marin
Casey A Maxwell
Grace A. Megna
Yahayra Y. Michel
Josselyn P. Mroz
Nina Nazarian
Irene M. Nikonchuk
Nicole M. Orlando
Matthew Pagos
Rex Keola Chen Parker
Stephen E. Parsons
Hiren R. Patel
Daniel N. Paton
Orlando M. Pena
Stacy L. Penna
James Richard Pierce
Diego Pinheiro
Michelle Yvonne Powers
Julianne M. Rowan
Walter J. Sacco
Stephen Saia
Leo V. Sciarappa
Jennifer Lynn Sheppard
Joan M. Short
Nelson Jonathan Sosa
Laurie Stanton
Gerard Tannetta
Anitha Vallamsetla
Cindy Yaping Wang
Yanping Wang
Christopher R. Wiggin
Number of Class Donors: 77
Total Class Gift: $4,214.00
2008
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Subhalakshmi Nagarajan
Associates
($250-$499)
Anita J. Chieh
Meridith MacKnight
Century
($100-$249)
Michael R. Asebrook
Robert L. Breckenridge
Joel Matthew Clabeaux
Cynthia Davies Cunha
Robert E. Dion
Roger Howard Ellis
Michael N. Gagnon
Jennifer Ellen GonzalezZugasti
Michael R. Gore
Jason M. Gustin
Randy Kulik
Terry Wahl Robertson
Friends
($1-$99)
Martha Ashe
Rebecca Ruth Audette
Damon A. Berry
Daniel Kingsley Blizard
Ashley Elizabeth Boltrushek
Megan Brady
Stephen Carrozza
James Pang Chan
Hee Sung Choi
Jennifer M. Cole
Leslie Cyle Conway
John R. Coppola
Corin D'Allessandro
David R. Daniel
William Robert DiBuono
Erin M. Doherty
Ryan Donovan
Michelle Rose Dryden
Joseph Patrick Durning
Sharon L. Ellis
Jacqueline A. Fallon
Karen E. Frenn
Judith Gabriel
David Bryan Green
Raul E. Guerra
Steven D. Hachey
Darius R. Hazard
Stephen L. Holstrom
Jeffrey John Howlett
Evan Robert Huff
Meghan B. Ierardi
Moiz Shamsuddin Jafferji
Xiaolu Jing
Kejal Vimal Kaji
Bhuvana S. Kaushik
James Gregory Lamoureux
Joseph A. Lattke
Joseph Charles Lemp
Eleni Liakakis
Niyom Lue
Larry Lumbreras
Kadie M. Migliarese
John Randall Morgan
Michelle Mucciaccio
Lauren Murray
Susan J. Noyes
Shawn O'Brien
Ciaran Nomi O'Donovan
Brian John Putnam
Martha Ann Quigley
Sherlyn Gbellay Roberts
Anthony Sinopoli
Richard Andrew Smith
Robert James Smith
Shannon C. Smith
Julie St Onge
Nicholas Joseph Stotik
Sreelatha Subramanian
Matthew Christopher Topalian
Douglas J. Tranghese
Colleen Ann Tully
Linda Jean Vice-Hisey
Sarah Elizabeth Westerdale
Therese Anne Willette
Frederick C. Williams
Patrick Wilson
Thomas Yahoub
Zhijun Yu
Number of Class Donors: 83
Total Class Gift: $8,399.00
2009
Associates
($250-$499)
Ruth Chandler GilbertWhitner
Marco Tambini
Century
($100-$249)
Kyle Mark Anderson
Philip J. Caruso
Kevin Charles Donnelly
Erik R. Gitschier
Tara Hughes
Matthew Robert Killam
Sharon Kosteva
Chris K. Murugami
Timothy L. Richardson Jr.
Sergio H. Sanchez
Yingrui Shang
Timothy D. Sullivan
Friends
($1-$99)
John P. Allen
Juli A. Burger
Patricia A. Burke
Sean M. Carmody
Lily Chung
Michael B. Cooke
Christina Ann Da Lomba
Amanda L. Dalton
Abbey Elizabeth Denaro
Angelia Rose Dodge
Matthew R. Dubois
Timothy Joseph Duffy
Robert J. Fernandez
Kimberly Q. Foley
Michael A. Frye
Deniz Semih Gifford
Matthew William Glick
Sastry Jonnalagadda
Mithun N. Kamath
Jessica Kathleen Karl
John Kelliher
Michael A. Leo
Rosa M. Lococo
Troy Lundstrom
Diane Patrick Lyon
Daniel J. Macgilvray
Recairdo Demetrius Mangrum
Glenn Martin
Sunil Kumar Marwaha
David G. McCarthy
Krystal Marie McPhillips
Norman Phillip Morin
Amy Elizabeth Musgrave
Adam Raj Nelson
Son Hong Nguyen
Michele Pagliarulo
Tara M. Pannese
Paul Stephen Petrucci
Chunhak Phay
Colleen Patricia Phelan
Rithea Pheng
Elizabeth Marie Plantz
Maxo Rene
Jenelle Aidan Ries
Kyle Schermerhorn
Amy Schweighardt
Anuj Atul Shah
Ronald Shannon
Andrew Richard Sheehan
Thomas M. Sniezek
Henry Yiu Yon So
Michele Allison Sperry
Patrizia Boschetti Stadler
Michael Tabakoulias
Craig R. Thomas
Jeannine Mary Velazquez
Donna Vieweg
Stephanie M. Walker
Michael P. Walsh
Bruce William Weeks
William Edward West
Joshua Lee Wiczer
Robert David Williams
Kevin C. Yang
Number of Class Donors: 78
Total Class Gift: $3,892.00
2010
Partners
($500-$999)
Mary Cotter-Lemoine
Maria A. Millett
Century
($100-$249)
Jeremy R. Badessa
Christopher Joseph Cirone
Andrea Marie Collins
Christopher Forgione
Amanda Hall
Benjamin Scott Holmstrom
Carter John Hutton
Ryan P. McCluskey
Stephen G. O'Brien
J. Michael O'Connor
Nhut Minh Phan
Jody Elizabeth Roper
Glenn Arthur Rowe
Samuel S. San
Nicholas Charles Schaus
Emery Brook Sears
Cynthia Lynn Wagner
David Karl Waltz
Paul Matthew Worthington
Friends
($1-$99)
Scott E. Albrecht
Isac Bafti
Patrick J. Bean
Saro Bedian
Samar A. Belgacem
Erich Andrew Benedix
Amy J. Bergeron
Gregory James Brown
Jennifer Lynn Campbell
Stephanie B. Carroll
Paola Sybille Claude
Tracy Conneely
James Ashley Daigle
Jason Christopher DeDonato
Laura Dickerson
Michael Charles Dolan
Robert P. Donald
Jacob Edmund-Acquah
Nicholas Eng
Chayenne Espinal
Valerie J. Fernald
Oliver Jean Fernandes
Malcolm Forsman
Andrew Warren Galeucia
Patrick James Garrity
Cynthia A. Geldart
Elizabeth Kathryn Gilmore
Guthrie W. Gordon
Dana E. Grant
Aniket Nandkumar Gurav
Catherine Dean Hamilton
Zebunnesa A. Hassan
Nancy J. Hausherr
Shaun Paul Hentchel
Kylie K. Hirl
Sarah Kizer Hobson
Ana S. Huffstetler
Nancy E. Imbriano
Humza S. Jafferji
Carlos Juan
Seung Wook Kim
Vattha Thanh Kim
Andrew J. Knox
Kevin A. Kordis
Steve M. Koutalakis
Collen E. Krueree
Kyle J. Langlois
Vivian Sophine Lasnier
Sean Lemieux
Rebecca Jane Lord
Kenny Ly
Edward T. Martel
John Marzec
Joseph R. McGrath
Thomas Scott Medeiros
Partha P. Mishra
Sayed M. Mizan
Thomas Francis Mullins
Maureen S. Murray
Michael Brian Neagle
Priscilla S. Nelson
Bao Tran Nguyen
Aura Nocivelli
Justin Dominic Oliver
Dixit A. Patel
Brian A. Pena
Michael Robert Pietrantonio
Jeremiah Frederick Pyle
Dawn Joyce Reidy
Jillian Claire Reilly
Benjamin William Salley
Nicole Danielle Sambursky
Sara Jean Schloth
Brian P. Scott
Thomas Joseph Screnci
Christopher Brendon Seferlis
Sahir Shakir
Arthur Albert Sherman
Edward P. Simmonds
Daniel Szarejko
Christopher Ray Tate
Jonathan A. Taylor
Charlie D. Thoren
Joseph J. Tolland
Le T. Truong
Micah John Twombly
Nestor Vazquez-deJesus
Rajesh Pudukkoodi Velandy
Kristen Walsh
Number of Class Donors: 110
Total Class Gift: $6,012.00
2011
Associates
($250-$499)
Ethan Handwerker
Century
($100-$249)
Ryan Michael Bouldin
Nicholas J. Bouras
Brendan Tulman Livingston
Jean L. Robinson
Matthew Eric Schneider
Friends
($1-$99)
Anna A. Aguilar
Lenin R. Alberto
Elizabeth Grace Ales
Marie Ann Almodovar
Joshua G. Anthony
Jared Adam Arnofsky
Angelee Marie Banda
James Berger
Melissa L. Bernier
Jahmaal Ahmed Box
Megan Elizabeth Burdt
Sean D. Burns
Sean M. Burns
Anna Kin Chan
Naomi Joyce Christianson
Katelyn M. Collins
Christopher James Compton
Debra M. Conlon
Scott A. Craven
Carl Joseph D'Agostino
John D’Amico
Joshua E. Dallal
Michael Joseph Dellogono
Sophia Isabel Deno
Juliana L. DiMarzio
Thomas Henry Dowdle III
Liam Timothy Driscoll
Adam John Dunbar
Samuel J. Dyas
Samuel Robert Erickson
Laura Elisabeth Fickenwirth
Thomas Walter Fitzsimmons
Rebecca Elizabeth Flynn
Cassidy Violet Ford
Timothy A. French
Mark Timothy Garcia
Njeri Gathura
Stephen A. Giardini
Deepankar Goyal
Michael J. Greaney
Jaime Hadley
Jason A. Hebert
Timothy John Hire
Andrew John Hudson
Gregory Jankuj
James K. Jean
Conchetta Jenifer
Brittany Kadra
Sarann Kong
Wen Long Kuang
Lianna Sachiyo Kushi
Sean M. Landers
Jenna Marie Lapachinski
Phillip Dinh Le
17
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
David P. LeBlanc
Steven Joseph Leblanc
John Lippiello
Kayleigh Elizabeth MacLean
Samantha Nicole Macy
Geoffrey Goodworth Magee
Kevin C. Maigatter
Benjamin Hayes Martin
Katherine Louise Massey
Heather M. McAtamney
Eric J. McCann
Daniel Joseph McNamara
Gabrielle Ann Medeiros
Ella Marie Merullo
James Michaels
Morgan L. Milardo
Charles W. Miller
Michael Mizzoni
Sindhura Mogulla
Amanda G. Murray
Kila Consilia Ngambong
John W. Noble
Rutwik Mineshbhai Patel
Stephen Edward Pereira
Catherine Rose Petrone
Michael Keith Pruett
Thavalong Prum
Maryann Pulliam
Donathan Emmanuel Edgard
Raymond
Michael R. Reid
Jessica Hiette Saad
Constance Morgan Sophie
Schere
Amy Schweighardt
Joseph Timothy Sheahan
Kristen Marie Tabacco
Dumrongpow Tabtippawon
Dan X. Tang
Kyle J. Thompson
Daniel Mark Titus
Jaclyn Roberta Toner
Jonathan Samuel Treibick
Brian Michael Trischitta
Joshua Turner
Le M. Van
Tuan D. Vu
Heidi Marie Wright-Singer
Number of Class Donors: 107
Total Class Gift: $2,634.42
*In the spirit of philanthropy, the class of 2011 and
the Student Government
Association made an additional donation to UMass
Lowell on behalf of each
member of the graduating
class.
FACULTY AND
STAFF
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
Aldo Crugnola
Gary M. Mucica
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Anonymous
Clairmont P. Carter
Kathryn M. Carter
Thomas M. Costello
May Futrell
Joey L. Mead
Martin T. Meehan
Jacqueline F. Moloney
Kary Robertson
Bernard Shapiro
Diana Shapiro
Aruna Vedula
Krishna M. Vedula
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Anonymous
18
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
Ahmed T. Abdelal
Carol F. Barry
Jayant Kumar
Ashwin Mehta
Johanna Bohan Riley
Sheila A. Riley-Callahan
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Anonymous
Sandhya Balasubramanian
Julie Chen
Edward Chiu
Stephen B. Driscoll
Anita M. Greenwood
Charlotte Mandell
Melisenda McDonald
Ramaswamy Nagarajan
Daniel J. Sandman
Amad Tayebi
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Linda A. Barrington
Dean J. Bergeron
Sara M. Bogosian
Meg Bond
Emily D. Byrne
James T. Canning
John J. Catallozzi
George P. Cheney
Nina M. Coppens
Paul C. Coppens
John C. Davis
Joyce G. Denning
Kerry F. Donohoe
Deborah Ellen Finch
H. W. Flood
Robert Forrant
Susan A. Goodwin
Steven Grossman
Greg Herenda
S. Braxton Hinchey
Jan Chan Huang
Mary Lou Hubbell
Ann Marie Hurley
Russell Karl
David O. Kazmer
Catherine A. Kendrick
Robert G. Kunzendorf
Fang Lai
Richard Lemoine
Robert A. Malloy
Patricia A. McCafferty
Stephen P. McCarthy
Jeffrey E. Mead
Patricia Noreau
Stephen A. Orroth
Melissa M. Pennell
Stephen A. Pennell
Geoffry Phillips-McEnany
Donald E. Pierson
Nick R. Schott
Patrick Scollin
Laurence Siegel
Dana K. Skinner
Robert H. Tamarin
John Ting
Michele L. Vercellin
Deborah Anne White
Joanne L. Yestramski
faculty and staff
Fred Martin
Martha Mayo
Joyce McLaughlin
Karen Devereaux Melillo
Vera M. Ossen
Kay Roberts
Steven N. Rogers
Walter Schier
Richard Siegel
Matthew V. Smith
Anthony E. Szczesiul
Stacy Agee Szczesiul
Francis T. Talty
Patricia A. Sullivan Talty
Steven F. Tello
Marian G. Williams
Richard S. Zera
Associates
($250-$499)
Frank Edward Andrews
F. Susan Bennett
Moiz Bhindarwala
Randolph Brashears
Alease S. Bruce
Ginger P. Burke
George E. Chabot, Jr.
Long Y. Chiang
Anita J. Chieh
James W. Coates Jr.
Britta J. Dean
Ellen C. Duggan
Patricia L. Fontaine
Robert R. Gamache
Suzanne A. Gamache
Jehanne-Marie Gavarini
Robert H. Giles
Gena R. Greher
Demetra Gys
David Hadley
Charmaine P. Hickey
Kerri L. Johnston
Ralph Jordan
Rita V. Kelleher
David Kriebel
Lila A. Lorrey
Martin E. Lorrey
Stephen Moses
Anne Mulvey
Deirdra Murphy
Patrick A. Nsumei
John R. Ouellette
Nancy Pitkin
Jean L. Pyle
Margaret M. Quinn
Paula M. Rayman
Susan M. Reece
Kathleen F. Shannon
Thomas B. Shea
Jay W. Simmons
James A. Sullivan
Thomas Taylor
Anh Tran
Patricia Trela
Lauren A. Turner
Holly A. Yanco
Patricia A. Yates
Xiaoqi Zhang
Partners
($500-$999)
Robert B. Barnett
Charles Byrne
Elaine A. Dalton
Kathleen M. Doyle
John J. Giarusso
Robert R. Gower
James F. Hall Jr.
Stacey T. Hubbard
Jeannie Sargent Judge
Richard A. Kenney
Sarah Kuhn
Donald Lampron
Stuart L. Mandell
Paul F. Marion
Century
($100-$249)
Lisa M. Abdallah
Craig Armiento
William W. Bannister
Pamela A. Barry
Gail F. Beaudoin
Mary L. Beaudry
Oneida Blagg
Ryan Michael Bouldin
Daniel B. Brosnan Jr.
Christopher Carlsmith
Pauline A. Carroll
Michael J. Carter
Peter J. Casey
Liana Cheney
Sean M. Collins
Mary M. Connelly
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
L O W E L L
Victoria Rose Denoon
James Drew
Ruth Dubey Jr.
Patricia A. Duff
Raymond F. Dunn
Diane H. Earl
Brenda I. Evans
Susan Faraji
James Forest
Stuart Freedman
Laura H. Frye
Monica Galizzi
Gary D. Gardner
Christine Gillette
Pauline M. Golec
Jennifer Gonzalez-Zugasti
Matthew W. Gordon
Darryl K. Green
Louise G. Griffin
Claire Hoffman Hall
Sharyn H. Hardy-Gallagher
Richard Harvey
Jesse M. Heines
Diane K. Hewitt
Jacqueline Hodgdon
Susan Houde
George I. Kachen
Minjeong Kim
Valerie Lynne King
Linda H. Kistler
Rachel M. Laquidara
Jason S. Lawrence
Joan C. Lehoullier
Donald G. Leitch
Athena G. Letsou
Lian Li
Loren Lidsky
Heather Madeleine Makrez
Lisa Marchand-Ciriello
David J. Martins
Ellen Michaud-Martins
Mary-Jane T. Mastrovich
Terrence J. McCarthy Jr.
Sean Patrick McKenna
Shortie McKinney
Katherine C. Merrill
Tammy B. Millette
Arno R. Minkkinen
Avalon Nick Minton
Mark H. Mortensen
Philip Moss
William Moylan
J. Michael O’Connor
Steven H. O'Riordan
Nese Orbey
Giampiero Pecelli
Claudine Perreault
Kanti Prasad
Laura M. Prudden
Sharon Quigley
James Mark Reimer
Bodo W. Reinisch
Mary E. Robbins
Jean L. Robinson
Eugene J. Rogers
David Rondeau
Beth Rubenstein
Carol Salter
Daniel Schmidt
Yingrui Shang
Gail Sheehy
Susan A. Spellissy
Ursula Steele
Joanne C. Talty
Flaubert Tchantchou
M. Jeannie Tremblay
David A. Turcotte
Katherine Tyndall
Shivashankar R. Vangala
Joseph Walsh
Arthur C. Watterson Jr.
Eugene F. Welch Jr.
Joyce White
Thomas A. Wilson
Martina Antoinette Witts
Lynn Wong
Jane E. Worthley
Michaela W. Wyman-Colombo
Eunsang Yoon
Margarita Zapata-Turcotte
Friends
($1-$99)
Deina Abdelkader
Kareem S. Abu-Zahra
Benjamin Adoo
Gregory Aftandilian
Elizabeth B. Ambe
Tosun Aricanli
Lenore Azaroff
Judith A. Barnes-Long
Diane M. Barrus
Lisa Barry
Kimberly Bilawchuk
Ann Marie Bird
Leo M. Bobek
Judith Boccia
Kenneth R. Boisvert
Patricia O. Bossi
Dohn A. Bowden
Ann Bratton
Doreen E. Bray
Carol Brown
Gilbert J. Brown
Janet Burke
Danielle C. Callahan
Charles F. Caroll
Paulino M. Carteiro
Lindsay Casavant
Robert Joseph Casey
Claire Chamberlain
Cindy Chen
Ashok L. Cholli
Kyungseok Choo
Patricia L. Coffey
Maria M. Conley
Richard M. Conley
Peter F. Cornetta
Michael J. Coulombe
Karen M. Daniels
Judith Davidson
Guy B. Demartinis
Lucille DeRoeck
Nancy A. Desjardins
Robin A. Desmond
Khanh Dinh
Elizabeth J. Donaghey
Elaine Kathleen Donnelly
Erin Doyon
Claude G. Dozois
Patrick J. Drane
Stephen M. Drescher
Steven M. Driscoll
Jill L. Drury
William Dubie
Kerry L. Dudley
Mary N. Duell
Philippa C. Dunn
Raymond F. Dunn
James J. Egan
Melissa Jane Egan
Sheila Eppolito
Steven Eramo
Daniel Ferry
John J. Fitzgerald
Michele K. Fox
Xinwen Fu
Patricia J. Gallagher
Mahdi Garelnabi
Bethany L. Gentleman
Kristen E. Gleason
Mary E. Gleason
Betsy E. Goldenberg
Robert Grantham
Jose L. Guerrero
Ronald G. Guilmette
Edward L. Hajduk
Beth E. Halaby
Catherine Dean Hamilton
Catherine A. Hanley
Elizabeth Harriman
Jacqueline A. Hawk
Ronald L. Heckman
Mark E. Hines
Jerome L. Hojnacki
Shu-Feng Hsieh
Samantha June Hudson
Cheryl Hugus
Karen A. Humphrey-Johnson
Eika Hunt
Anna Isaak-Ross
Seth Izen
Cynthia Wedekind Jacobs
David E. Jillson
Brenda Jochums Slez
Stephen P. Johnston
George Joseph
Ekaterini Karipidis
Erin Keene-Crouse
Elaine Keough
Alexander Kheifets
Byungki Kim
Sheila Lynn Kirschbaum
Ken Kleiner
Kimberly A. Knesek
Margaret Knight
Elizabeth Faith Kotyla
Lianna Sachiyo Kushi
Pauline Ladebauche
Diane Laderoute
John P. Lahoud
Robert J. Lechner
Jacqueline Ledoux
William E. Lekas
Mary F. Levasseur
Haim Levkowitz
Frederick Lewis
Jonathan Liebowitz
Benyuan Liu
Jill Lohmeier
Xuejun Lu
Jack Luskin
Daniel P. Lutz
Patricia Lyon
John Barry Mahoney
Elaine Major
Virginia Maki
Joel P. Marchand
Bridget M. Marshall
Theresa M. McDonald
Lily Mendez-Morgan
Wallace Millner
Karin Tusinski E. Miofsky
Elizabeth Adrienne Mohan
William F. Moloney Jr.
Ravi Montenegro
Maria A. Montesalvo
James Moran
Joann Moriarty-Baron
Karen Morin
Gregory James Morose
Martin Moser
Karen Mullins
Kathleen A. Mulvihill
Lois A. Nangle
Chandrika Narayan
Julie L. Nash
James H. Nehring
Gerard P. Nelson
Tuyen T. Nguyen
Paul R. Niemi
Suzanne Nobrega
Paul Nutter
Arnold L. O'Brien
Caitlin J. O’Brien
Alexander A. Olsen
John Ormonde
Michele Pagliarulo
Maria Panagakis
Lisa Panagopoulos
Janet Paton
April F. Pattavina
Miki M. Patterson
Stephen P. Petrie
James Richard Pierce
Janet M. Pohl
Phyllis A. Procter
Christos Protonotarios
friends
Cynthia Puleo
Susan Ralls
Thomas M. Regan
Vickie M. Reyes
Bonnie Anderson Rising
Struan R. Robertson
Gregory A. Rushton
Vanntha Sann
Janet M. Sawyer
Michelle Scribner-MacLean,
EdD
Sandra Seitz
Nancy G. Selleck
Harriet Shanzer
Mengyan Shen
Shellie R. Simons
Nancy Sireen
Stuart Smith
Linda Southworth
Colin C. Spence
Bruce D. Stacy
Imogene A. Stulken
Joyce A. Sullivan
Shaun P. Sullivan
Gail C. Tangard
Paula J. Telesco
Michael Antony Testa
Karen Thomas
Robin Ann Toof
Colin L. Trelegan
Rhoda R. Trietsch
David A. Turcotte
Susan P. Turcotte Gavriel
Katherine Tyndall
Phitsamay Uy
Audrey A. Veiga
Jon D. Victorine
Donna Vieweg
Evanthea Vlahakis
Karen Volis
John W. Walkinshaw
Kristen Walsh
Jie Wang
Yanping Wang
Susan C. Wartman
Arthur C. Watterson Jr.
Ming Wei
Danielle White
James E. Whitten
Jenifer Whitten-Woodring
Eileen M. Williamson
Susan B. Winning
John C. Wooding
Robyn Wright
Sung-hwan Yoon
Javier Edgardo Zapanta
Total Donors: 403
Total Support: $326,814.43
FRIENDS OF THE
UNIVERSITY
Francis Cabot Lowell Circle
($100,000+)
Howard R. Berke
Gururaj Deshpande
Josephine Hoff
Irene Liporto
Arthur S. Zamanakos
Principals Circle
($5,000-$9,999)
Carole Barrett
Fleurette L. Boutin
John Chemaly
George L. Duncan
Swanee Hunt
Mitchell E. Kertzman
Shalin Liu
Edward J. Moloney, Esq.
Keith J. Motley
Joan Sparrow
Kendall Wallace
Kristen E. Williams
Patrons Circle
($2,500-$4,999)
Francis C. Corcoran
Michael Costello
Aloke Jain
Amaresh Mahapatra
Jack D. O'Connor
Therese M. O'Connor
John H. Pearson Jr
Susan P. Rizos
Carmen Joseph Scarpa
Robert K. Sheridan
Susan Tripathy
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Jason Allen
James E. Barrett
Robin H. Begley
Rob Budd
Debra Darby
Mary Elizabeth DeMallie
Ann Shanahan Delfuoco
Joyce G. Denning
Donald F. Doyle
Timothy Goodell
Bill Heffron
Joseph J. Kekejian
George B. Leahey
William Lemos
Arnold S. Lerner
Maureen A. Lerner
Donny McCoy
Thomas P. Nerney
Rosemary E. Noon
Marianne Paley Nadel
Scott Pierce
Anthony L. Sagona
Nicholas Sannella
Judith Sizer
Nancy F. Sizer
Theresa M. Starkey
John C. Thibault
Shirley G. Thomson
Deborah Anne White
Martin Wolf
Innovators Circle
($10,000-$24,999)
Cynthia Chamberas
Arthur T. Demoulas
Mary Jane Nehring
Marie C. Profio
Associates
($250-$499)
Peter G. Arnold
F. Susan Bennett
Roger Breslin
Elizabeth M. Cavicchi
Ann Marie Clark
David Comeau
Jeffrey W. Cowles
Bradley Davis
Don DiPietro
William J. Dowe Jr.
Susan Garratta
Maureen R. Gervais
Rashid Kadir
Robert S. Karam
Rita V. Kelleher
James F. Kistler
Leonard L. Lopes
Meridith MacKnight
Janet L. Moore
John F. Moynihan
Paulette L. Mulligan
Laurie S. Nehring
Stephen Nicoloro
Bradley J. Orchard
John J. Post
Barbara Powell
Larry Price
Louis Stylos, DMD
Terry Sullivan
Donna Sutherland
Peggy Sutherland
Elise Wolf
Century
($100-$249)
Cathy Accomando
Debbie Aleksa
Glenn B. Anderson
Ben Anthony
Francis R. Ardita
Margaret Arrigo
David W. Avison
Douglas Barrington
Sheila Rose Barter
Martha P. Bean
Patricia A. Bean
Silvia Strong Bennet
Eleanor Beshears
John Beshears
John Beshears
Pankaj Bhatia
Eleanor A. Bissell
Peggy Bouchard
Ryan Michael Bouldin
Margaret Burhoe
Paul D. Calvert
Gary G. Campbell
Amy Cannon
Edward F. Capraro
Lucille A. Capraro
Theodore Carey
Daniel Chambers
Dennis Chenette
Flavia Cigliano
Donald C. Clark
Laura Clay
Walter Cochran-Bond
J. Stephen Collins
Michaela Colombo
Dyanne Connelly Tosi
Lorene Connolly
Steve Coravos
Charles J. Cristello
Jonathan Crockett
Suzzanne Cromwell
Gabrielle Crueger
James P. Cullen
Edgar Cyrus
Dean Dartey
Ramana Dhara
Kerry Donohue
Carol Dwyer
Debra D. Easton
Irene M. Egan
Robert A. Enos
Scott Fankhouser
Nancy Ferrer
Tonya Fisher
Christopher Forgione
Gil Frechette
Ellen Freeman
Lisa Gauthier
James V. Gerraughty
Vassilios Giavis
Robert Goodhue
Mary Frances Gorman
Deb Grossman
Jason M. Gustin
Thomas Haas
Claire Hoffman Hall
Robert L. Hampel
Charles F. Henderson
Arthur Hennessey
Leslie Morin Hennessey
John Hobbs
Richard P. Howe
Glen Hoyle
Gerald D. Iandoli
Martha L. Iarrapino
Judith E. Izen
Mico Kaufman
Priscilla G. Kelley
William Kelly
Christopher Keys
Miriam Klein
Virginia LaFreniere
James C. Lane
Earle R. Laste (Deceased)
Stephen F. Lavoie
Steve Lavoie
William Lavoie
Louis K. Leung
Marie Antoinette Lewis
Ralph Loosigian
Thalia Loosigian
Jeremiah C. Lynch III
George D. MacDougall
Bonnie J. MacWhinneyCramer
Christopher Magay
Gay B. Mahder
Michael R. Malo
Caroline W. Marvin
Mary T. Mazza
Paul McCarthy
Terrence J. McCarthy Jr.
Carolyn McCreary
Lori & Brian McDermott
Thomas P. McGuill
Adrian Mendoza
Carol M. Mento
Saumil N. Merchant
Larry Michaud
Lisa Mooney
Robert T. Morse Jr.
Paul W. Mucica
Michael Murray
Lisa Nehring
Pamela Nehring
Steven Neri
Michael C. Nickerson
Eugene M. Novak Jr.
Ann M. O'Connell
Ann M. O'Donnell
Karen M. Pacheco
Budhinath Padhy
Corliss M. Paolino
Dan Parkhurst
Cathy Pearlman
Joan M. Petros
David E. Pinsky
J. Arthur Poitras
Sashi Dhar Poudel
Kathleen Boshar Reynolds
Peter Q. Rich
Gerry Riley
Avery Rimer
Neville Rivet
James Robertson
Suzanne H. Rodgers
Joel Ross
Mark Rouleau
Martha Rounds
Marc F. Salsman
Professor Dominick Sama
Albert P. Scheiner
Carl W. Schmidt
The Silva Family
Hal Sizer
Daryl Stanko
Edward B. Stevens
Katharine Suchmann
Charles J. Sullivan
Jane Sullivan
Joyce A. Sullivan
Caprice Tarbox
Margot C. Thomas
Luanne E. Thorndyke
R.J. Tolan
Mary Trahn
Patricia A. Tyra
David P. Valley
Mary D. Vassel
Robert M. Waitt
Victoria Therese Wall
Michael Wallin
Joseph Walsh
Arthur C. Watterson Jr.
Drew Weber
Terase Weisinger
Renee Welch
Pedal Power Makes Miles of Difference
Benefactors Circle
($50,000-$99,999)
Harry F. Bean (Deceased)
Nancy L. Donahue
Richard K. Donahue, Esq.
Mark Ian Gelfand
Arjun Malhotra
Fellows Circle
($25,000-$49,999)
John Alden
Anonymous Individuals
Alexander Ogonowski
Partners
($500-$999)
Patricia Almon
Kim Barkyoumb
Kelly Blair
Alexandre Blumstein
Rita Blumstein
Jake Carr
John H. Costello Jr.
Robert R. Gower
Barbara Hazen Glidden
Charles Hendricks
Richard P. Herman
Kevin Holmstrom
Michelle M. Holmstrom
Young-Gi Kim
Brian W. Leahey
Taek Seung Lee
Ada Mandell (Deceased)
Mary H.B. McCarthy
Joyce McDaniel
Susan Mitchell
Michael J. Opre
John Owen
Carole Pearce
Mary Jane Powell
Robin Ruhwedel
David J. Sebeny
Diane M. Shanahan
Lura Smith
Dorothy F. Sullivan
Bernard Swartz
Mildred Swartz
Stacy Agee Szczesiul
Elaine Zouzas Thibault
Christopher Warren
Sandra A. Wilson
Grace E. Wolf
James Nehring,
Assistant professor,
Graduate School of
Education
Inspired by the love and sacrifice of three
very important women in his life, each of
whom provided long-term care for loved
ones, Prof. James Nehring of the Graduate
School of Education bicycled across the
United States to help establish the Mary,
Joan and Nancy Scholarship for Courage and
Compassion. In the name of Mary, his mother;
Joan, his mother-in-law; and Nancy, his
good friend, Nehring completed the last part
of his 4,000-mile bike ride this past summer
to endow a scholarship for first-generation
UMass Lowell students who aspire to become
teachers. Along the way, he checked in with
faculty, family and friends. His greetings
from Glasgow, Mont., read: “All is well at the
end of day seven on the road. I had a tailwind all the way through North Dakota and
averaged over 100 miles a day. Headwind first
two days in Montana and I’m averaging 60!”
Thanks to the contributions of so many
donors—the power of one making a tremendous collective difference—Nehring surpassed
his $25,000 fundraising goal. Please visit the
UMass Lowell website if you wish to see this
vital scholarship grow for aspiring teachers:
www.uml.edu/advancement/maryjoannancy.
19
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
John L. Wernicki
Pam White
Jane F. Wilson
Mary Winants
Paul Matthew Worthington
Kenneth Wynne
Margarita Zapata-Turcotte
Friends
($1-$99)
Nurradin H. Abdo
Mary C. Albert
Eunice Alberts
Baptiste Amar
Jeffrey D. Anderson
Leeann Atkinson
Janet Axelrod
Dorothy C. Ayer
Robert Arthur Belanger
Janet Benn
Cecile L. Berube
Rod Berube
Laura Beshears
Lydia H. Blanchard
James Blatchford
John R. Bohannon
Mario Lennon Boiardi
Marylou Bolduc
Sandra Boulay
Linda Bracco
Mary V. Brady
Margaret Britton
Deborah J. Brossi
Carol Brown
Janet Burke
David Butz
Philip A. Cahill
Dick Cameron
James J. Capua
Erica Carbone
Danielle Marie Carkin
Julie Carr
Lindsay Casavant
Michael F. Cassandra
Harry Chan
A. Chase
Ashok L. Cholli
Roberta Churchill
Steven R. Cloutier
Dennis Coffey
Mary Coffey
Merrill Cohen
Judith D. Coletta
Daphne A. Cooke
Sarah Cornwell
Shawn Cortes
Barbara J. Courchaine
Lynn V. Courtney
Adele Cukor
Jeff M. Cukor
Barbara Curtin
John T. Daggett Jr.
Daniel Dalton
Deborah Dandeneau
Frances Daneault
Dorothy M. Dash
Vipal B. Dave
Kimberly S. Davis
Betty-Jane Day
Joseph De Renzis
Jennifer De Zutter
Jerry De Zutter
John M. DeAngelis
Matthew Dean
Michael Joseph Deasy
John Anthony Enrico Del
Ponte
Debra J. Demartino
Christine Deschene
Pradeep Dhal
Elisa Di Bari
John Dion
Karen G. Dirocco
Destiny L. Dumont
Philippa C. Dunn
Rabeh Elleithy
Elizabeth A. Enaire
Sheila Eppolito
20
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
friends
Peter N. Ersland
Anna Fadden
Araya Anita Fast
Brenda Finch
Pam Forsythe
Dana W. Fox
Kathleen Franzese
William Frawley
Russell Gaudiana
Rosalind Gendreau
Barbara M. Gibbons
Aubrey L. Gikas
Rihana Teresa Glavin
Susan M. Golini
Gladys Graciela Gomez
Bernice Gonzalez
Cathi Gosine
Bryan Gosselin
Anne Grallert
Dorcas C. Grigg-Saito
Jaime Hadley
Kit Harbison
Barbara J. Hardesty
Brian Harris
Marjorie D. Harvey
Sharon Hatch
Thelma L. Hayward
Darius R. Hazard
Kerry Heelon
Darlene R. Hemstreet
Caroline B. Henriques
Lorin Hill
Sally Le Ho
Declan Hobbs
Lillian C. Jacobs
Michael Jarvis
Joseph F. Jelson
Brenda Jochums Slez
Derek M. Jones
Dawn C. Jubinville
Ann P. Kazer
Brian Keating
Maureen Kelley
Ellen Kemp
Diane A. Kemsley
Arnold M. Kerzner
Claire Knox
Chris F. Koenig
Jonathan Kozol
Adam Kramschuster
Karen A. Kravchuk
Judith Kurland
Allison Lamey
Julie Lankiewicz
Maryann V. Lavallee
Jeffrey LeClair
Mary Val Leahy
Denise I. Legault
Sharon Levy
Jason Lewis
Anita Rose Lipsett
Natalie Loaiza
Mary Macy
Meryl Mandell
Marshall P. Marice
M.C. Martel
Paula S. McCarron
Claire E. McCarthy
William J. McCarthy
JoAnne McClendon
Eileen McDonald
Richard J. McDonald
Lori McKiel
Robert J. McMahon II
Maxine McMartin
Edward J. McNeil
Rhonda Meisel
Joseph J. Micalizzi
Shari Elizabeth Miles
Andrew S. Miller
Wallace Millner
Richard C. Minesinger
Ellen Mintzner
Gloria Miranda
Colleen Montemarano
Lorinda Morimoto
Jen Morse
Mabel N. Morse
Margaret A. Murray
Mal Murthy
Charles Muwonge
Amanda Nehring
Katherine Nehring
Nicole Nickerson
Deborah G. Niles
Mary Jo Nispel
Pam Nourse
David E. Nowoswiat
Ellen J. O'Brien
John J. O'Brien
John S. O'Brien
James F. O'Donnell Jr.
Jamie O'Hearn
Susan Okuhara
Deborah Osofsky
Ann M. Page
Cynthia Wilson Paolillo
Linda D. Paquette
Mary H. Paquette
Jennifer Abbott Park
Andrew K. Parke
Vicky Parks
Edward Perreault
Janice L. Perry
David C. Petersen
William T. Phelan
Joanne Pijoan
Monica Pilman
Roberta L. Pinta
Jennifer Plourde
Terri Poirier
Mark D. Pudvelis
Jennifer Pujo
Peter D. Quigley
Chad Rabinovitz
Sumana Ramachandrappa
Natti Rao
Tamara Record
Paulette M. RenaultCaragianes
Arthur J. Richard
Clare Ringwall
Ana M. Rodriguez
Ann Roellke
Davor Roglic
Sheila M. Rourke
Heather L. Rousseau
Rebecca Rudeen
Nick Russo
Alex Ruthmann
Anne M. Ruthmann
Melinda A. Ryan
Amy Elizabeth Saba-Farmer
Laurie Sabol
Elizabeth Santagati
Teresa Santomango
Danielle L. Savoie
Loretta E. Scalfani
Kendall Schieding
Linda Schymik
Corey Sciuto
Chris Augusta Scott
Kristin Seed
Carolyn A. Sellars
Shailesh P. Shah
Linda Shea
Raymond Siegelman
Darlene M. Silva
Judith E. Smith
Matthew B. Smith
Stuart Smith
Stephen Smulski
Meg Sobkowicz Kline
Roger Somers
Gertrude G. Soucy
Robyn Souza
Kylie Speirs
Susan Hicks Spurlock
Margaret St. Peter
Robert Michael Stack
Janice M. Stecchi
Imogene A. Stulken
Maura Sullivan
Terrence Sullivan
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
L O W E L L
parents
Heidi Taber
Hagos Teffera
Phyllis V. Terrey
Jamie A. Tessler
Craig R. Thomas
Shanna Rose Thompson
Melvin Scott Thomson
Mary Tiseo
Elizabeth Traubert
Mary I. Travers
Robert Travis
Linda J. Twohig
Kenneth Udas
Stephen G. Vaitones
Klara Vajda
Jairo Vargas
Hugh Vartanian
Domonique Andre Walcott
George D. Walsh
Donna A. Warren
Emily M. Welch
Barbara A. Whitcomb
Lezli A. Whitehouse
Samantha Whitney
Mike Whitten
Stanley W. Wisnioski Jr.
Gary Wnek
Paul Wolf
Sarah Wolf
Janet Woodward
Norm MJ Zarella
Joan L. Zink
Kevin Richard Zipps
Tomasina Zirpolo
Patrick van Rooyen
Total Donors: 606
Total Support: $1,903,498.07
PARENTS
Sponsors Circle
($1,000-$2,499)
Rosie Budd
Joseph J. Kekejian
Patricia Koczera
Peter Laursen, MD
Partners
($500-$999)
Kelly Blair
Cathy Corbacio
Julie Ferreira
Robert H. Giles
Associates
($250-$499)
Arthur M. Ales
Melissa Barnes
Anita J. Chieh
Mary Clark
Linda Hampton
Suzanne Hughes
Sheryl Jendrock
William J. Lewis
Lorraine Stone
Century
($100-$249)
Al Abraham
Kevin Albrecht
Margery Anderson
Corinne Andrade
Terry Andrews
James Auld
Charles R. Bruderer
Marilyn Bruderer
Lyda Budrys
Debbie Burke
Randy Burke
Paul Burstein
Steven M. Chaves
Donna Cook
Henry Cook
Lise Corriveau
Kevin Crowley
Kelly Curry
Helenita S. Hamer
Joe DaSilva
Eric Darling
Margaret B. Darling
Robert A. Dickson
Louis Divers
Rebecca Douglass
Kathleen Lewis Dresser
Bruce Dyas
David C. Eklund
John Emanouil
Anne Enaire
David M. Fischer
Arnold Fonseca
Anne Ford
Richard Forgione
Ellen Furlong
Desiree Fyler
Jack Geissert
David S. Gillies
Susan J. Grant
Shelley Grove
David T. Hansbury
Janice Healy
Mary Herring
Lisa Hines
Linda Howse
Lynn Huff
Sophann Im
Rebecca Jani
Robert Jess
Susan Jones
Monica Joyce
Thomas E. Kane
William F. Kent
Donna Killam
Steve King
Michael LaBonte
Denise LaPlante
Phyllis Lanciani
David Lavoie
Xiu Lee
Nancy Lobdell
Theresa Losanno
Ted Lovett
James Martin
Anita Mashiter
Ian Mashiter
Linda McCann
Linda McGrath
Tricia McIntire
Sylvie Moriarty
Colleen Morris
Allan Morrissey
Robin Mosgrove
Anne Mulhern
Jim Muntz
Jacqueline Murphy
Theresa Nearhos
Peggy Nicoloro
Stephen O'Brien
Maria O'Halloran
Jennifer O'Neil
Paul Painten
Susan Parviainen
Sharon Pitts
Virgilio Ramos Gonzalez
Joseph Regan
Stephen Riley
Christopher Ring Sr.
Judy Robinson
Susan Rogers
Gale Rossie
Richard Russo
Rajiv Sharma
Douglas L. Sheadel
Mary Sheehan
Sandra Shreve
Carolyn Sniezek
Bala Sridhar
Margart Stein
Andrea Sullivan
Brian Summers
Gary Sutherland
Patricia M. Sylvestre
Charles E. Sylvestre Jr.
Kon Tan
Patricia Tawa
Hagos Tesfera
Kathy Tighe
Maryann Trask
Merrilyn Trubiano
Bill Tuttle
Cheri Valentine
Rammohan Vangapalli
Edward Viera
Ernest Von Holten
Michelle Walker
Debra L. Walsh
Kevin Walther
Catherine Walton
Bill White
Victoria Wilcox
Maryanne Wilson
Michael Zlotnik
Friends
($1-$99)
Michael Abruzzese
Russell Ackroyd
Paula Acquaviva
Tomasz Adach
Greg Adamian
OLawale Adeyemi
William Aiken
Kathy Airoldi
Bonnie Akerley
Rodah Al-Taweel
Mikell Ales
Kathleen Ali
David R. Allen
Diane Allen
Jeff Allen
Andrea Almquist
Erin Altobello
Miguel Alvarez
Gail Amabile
Joanna Amado
Barbara G. Anderson
Mark Anderson
Michele Anderson
Russell Anderson
Mary Annicchiarico
Bryan Aponte
Marie Araujo
Dave Armstrong
Richard Armstrong
Scott Arn
Bob Arnold
Sherry Arnold
Cindy Arsenault
Terri Arsenault
Karen Askins
Akuvi Ayeh
Robin Babcock
Tudor Babiuc
Ida Babroudi
Radjinder Badhan
Dawn Baez
Sally Bailey-Gates
Patricia Bailin
Elaine Balas
Joseph Balchunas
Kathy Barniak
Wendy Baron
Colleen Barrett
Barbara Barrington
Mike Barrington
James Barton
Colleen E. Basch
Nancy Bass
Linda A. Bassett
Debbie Bastian
Peggy Batchelder
Robert W. Beauchamp
Nikki Beauvais
Diana Bechara
Richard Bedard
Orsonne Begon
Andrea Beland
Amy Bellinghieri
Thomas Bennett
John Berardi
Timothy Berger
Jayne Bernier
Robert Betts
Laurie J. Bibby
Stella Billiri
parents
Bonnie Biocchi
Ellen J. Bissaillon
Calvin Bivins
Jeanne Blackstone
Patricia A. Blais
Reginald Blanchard
J. Mark Boeing
Kelly Bohaker
Jeffrey Boisvert
Yola Boland
Jacquelyn Bonarrigo
Jennifer Bongiorno
Donna Bonkowski
Jerrold Bonn
Judy Booman
Jane Boris
Barbara Boudreau
Frederique Boulanger
Sandra Boulay
Cynthia Boundy
Deborah Boutiette
Lisa G. Bozzella
Lynne Brady
Walter Braunschweiger
Leon Breckenridge
Mike Brennan
Timothy Bresnahan
Marsha Bretton
Christina Brooks
William Brooks
Cynthia Brown
Frances Brown
Brendalyn V. Browne
Bob Bruce
Linda M. Bryant
Barbara Bryer
Regina Buckley
Paul J. Budra
Vitale Bulgakova
Kerri A. Bull
Debra A. Burbank
Susan Burke
Lynne Burns
Rosemarie Buxton
Rhea Mae Cabrera
Jane Cahill
Debbie Caisse
Carol Calabro
Kevin Calver
James Camasso
Christine Campaniello
Edward J. Campbell
Leila Candelario
Robert Canova
Anthony Caprio
Ellen Capua
Mark Caramanica
Andrea Carey
Gail Carey
Gino Carlucci
Karen Caron
Jane Carpenito
Linda Carrabino
Cheryl Carrigan
Lois Carroll
Maureen Carroll
Vincent Carusi
Francine Caruso
Dan Cash
Beth Cebula
Nancy Center
John Chaber
Dawn M. Chabot
Kathleen Chalmers
Monica Chamberlain
Deborah Champagne
Anna Kin Chan
Kin Chan
Synodia Chapeta
Joann Chausee
Priscilla Chaves
Ly Chen
Cathi Cherry-Liston
Sanghamitra Chowdhury
Arthur Chung
Susan Churchill
Donna Ciancetta
Robin Ciccone
Sal Citta
Sharon Clabeaux
Karen Clapper
Audrey Clark
Dawn Clark
Donna Clark
Pamela Clark
Wendy Clark
Michael Clay
Linda Cobleigh
Joao Coelho
Michelle Coffey
Deborah A. Cole
Gina Cole
Nancy Cole
Susan Cole
Philomena M. Comeau
Grace Conklin
Mary Connell
Nancy Connolly
Angie Connors
Arlene Connors
Gary Conrad
Frank Convertino
Karen L. Conway
Leona Cook
Michelle Cook
Ellen Corfield
Andre Coriolan
Sue Cormier
MaryAnn Cornwell
Catherine Coronella
Sarah Correia
Mary Jean Costa
Maureen Costantino
Mary Costanzo
Kathy Costello
George Albert Cote
Nancy A. Cote
Jeannie Coushaine
Susan S. Craven
Michelle Crawford
Daniel Crocker
Lillian Cronin
John Cunniff
Andrew Currie
Lauren Curry
Wieslawa Cwieka
Judy D'Olympia
Jim Daly
Vivian Dano
Afua Danso
Jeanne Danton
Christopher P. David
Maureen Davis
Marcio Ramos De Melo
Ronald DeFoe
Elizabeth DeMarco
Diane DePari
Karen DeSantis
John Deady
Chris Decker
Kristine M. Decker
Nancy Decker
Janice M. Deiorio
Barbara Delaney
Sheri R. Dellogono
Joyce Demande
Maurizio Demari
Kathy Denehy
Brian Denis
Judy Derobertis
Kathleen Descoteaux
Asma Desravines
Deanna Devine
BJ Devlin
Lynn Dewhirst
Doreen DiBari
Sal DiBlasi
Anthony DiGiovanni
Carol DiMaio
Rich DiMare
Karen J. DiNardi
Denise DiTonno
Anette Dimeco
Thieu Dinh
Carmen Dinulescu
Michelle Divoll
Ann Doherty
Kevin Doherty
Terry Doherty
Michael Donnelly
Daniel Joseph Donoghue
Robin Donoghue
Maria Donohue
Kathleen Donovan
Nancy Donovan
Dawn Dooley
Robert C. Dooley
Marsha Dorris
Sompong Johnsmith
Douangchith
Jim Doucette
Belinda D. Dowdle
Margaret Downes
Kevin Downing
Barbara A. Downs
Debbie Driscoll
Linda Duchak
Joanne Duffy
Frances Dukich
Francis Dukich
Ellen Dupuis
Priscilla Durand
Samantha Durant
Donna Duva
Steven F. Duva
Susan Dwyer
William Dwyer
Linda Early
Joseph Ebiware
Diane Eliopoulous
Bill Elwell
Scott Entwistle
Joel Erickson
Nancy Espinola
Kathy Evans
Mary Ellen Evans
Cheryll Evers
David Eycleshymer
Alan FInch
Sheila M. Fabiano
Francesco Facendola
Liz Fahey
William Fallon
Susan Farrell
William F. Farrell
Terry Favulli
Elaine Fecteau
Janet Fedyk
Robert V. Feeley
Bill Ferguson
Marc Fidler
Michael P. Fineberg
John J. Fionda
Joe Fiorante
Anthony Fiore
Joanne Fish
Luanne Flood
Karen Flynn
Muire Flynn
Douglas W. Fogerty
Michael Foley
Walter Foley
Robin Follansbee
Claire Forand
Beth Foster
Vicki Fotis
Diane Fournier
Carl Fowler
Donna J. Franey
Tracy Frechette
Timothy A. French
Ellen Fresh
Kathy Frey
Jan Fulton
Mahesh Gadgil
Helga Galanos
Kim Gamble
Hong Gao
Arlene Gardino
Christopher Garrahan
Kathryn Gavin
Cathy Gavriel
Donna Gay
Marc Gendron
Sandra L. George
San Giampapa
Karen Gibbons
Eileen Giddings
Mary Gilbride
Michael Gillespie
Katherine Gillis
Richard A. Gilstrap
Michael B. Gleason
Melvin Glover
Lois A. Goldstein
Josefina Gonzalez
Steven Gordon
Mark J. Gorham
Donna C. Goulet
Kevin G. Graham
Stephanie Granville
Pandora Gray
Laurie Green
Michiko Greeno
Joseph Gresci
Jeff Griffin
Patricia Griffin
Christine Griggs
Susan Guidi
Nancy Guptill
Linda Guruge
Joseph Gyasi
Steven Hadder
Roy E. Haight Jr.
Valerie Hajj
Tammy Hamilton
Kim Hampson
Jennifer Hancock
Heather J. Hanley
Lorraine G. Hanley
Patricia Harrington
Rita Harrington
Shawn Harrington
Nancy Hart
Tricia Hartigan
AnnMarie Hartmann
Anis Hassan
Helen Hayes
Thomas R. Haynes
Venture Hazard
Brian Heglin
Lisa Hickey
Joe Higgins
Anne High
Douglas W. Hillman
Thay Hoac
Carla J. Hoctor
Gardner Hodson
Christine Hoffman
Laura Hoffman
Richard Hogaboom
Linda Hollis
Ross Holmstrom
Julie Hopkins
Henry Houde
Joan Houghton
Lynn Houskeeper
Mik Hun
Catherine Hunt
Trisha Huntley
Denise J. Hurt
Donald Hurt
Rudolph Hypolite
Deborah Iannuzzo
Patricia Illsley
Sal Imbornone
Chovy C. In
Kyoji Inashima
Toshiko Inashima
Sharifun Islam
Jane Isokungas
George Iszlai
Karen Iszlai
Fatumete Jaiteh
Michelle Jelley
Kevin Johnson
Melissa Johnson
Robert Johnson
Benjamin Jones
Kathleen Jones
Debbie Jordan
Joyce Josephson
Dawn C. Jubinville
Allison Juers
Karen Kane
Donna Karapatsas
Marion Kaskiewicz
Donna Katsoudas
Barbara Kellegrew
Carole Kemper
James Kennedy
Nano Kenneway
John Keogh
Lisa Keough
Lynette Khirallah
Rebecca Kibett
Patricia Kiefner
Carol Kilbride
Paul Kilduff
Kathy Kinnon
Susan Kirk
Sheila Lynn Kirschbaum
Josef Kish
Sheila Kish
Christopher A. Knowles
Mary Knowles
Kendall Victoria Knox
Sandra L. Knox
Michele Koch
Bill Kolbe
Julie Kondon
Jukka Konola
Tanya Kopec
Lynda Koplove
Viviane Korbani
Phyllis Kordas
Karoline Korslund
Theodore M. Kostandin
Pamela Kostka
Franceen M. Kotzur
Ann Kourmanopoulos
Barbara Koziol
Sheldon Kramer
Heather Kundzicz
Joshua Kwapong
Yzonne Kwende
Debbie Lacouciere
Marcy Lajiness
Kathleen Lalli
Cathy Lally
Cheuk Lam
Brandt Lambert
Rita Lambracht
Ann Lampes-Kourmanopoulos
Samuel Lamptey
Leo Landry
Barbara S. Langathianos
Jessica Langdale
Nancy Lange
William F. Langen
Carmela Langford
Susan Langlin
Paula Lanson
John Laraia
Martha Larson
Deborah A. Lash
Pam Lavoie
Charles Lawrence
Dorothy LeBlanc
Mary LeBlanc
Roberta LeBlanc
Terry LeBrun
Stephanie Leber
Lisa Leblanc
Arthur Lee
Eileen Lee
Dawn Lefrancois
Judy Lehane
Mike Lemay
Kathy Lemire
Debra J. Letendre
Marcia Levine
Ronald Lewis
Johanna D. Liander
Cindi Limerick
Baldassare Liuzza
Robert LoPreste
Antonetta Lococo
Kim Loder
Patty Logue
Daniel Lopez
Jean Lucas
Kevin Luke
Donna M. Lussier
Jennifer Lussier
Patricia J. Lynch
Richard Lynch
Janet MacDonald
Sharon MacEachern
Michelle MacInnis
Susan Macchia
Karen Mackey
Tom Mackey
Michelle Macneil
Joanne Magee
Kristine Maginnis
Cynthia Maguire
Jane Maher
Maria Maillet
Lucille Maitland
Sam Malignaggi
Kathleen Malo
Gertrud Malsbury
Catherine M. Mandel
Ann Marie Manning
Karen F. Manning
Laurian Marchand
Allan Marcus
Daniel Marinone
Loraine Marinone
Julie Marlowe
Lisa Marquis
Monte F. Marrocco
John Marsh
Debra D. Martell
Gary Martin
Lynn Martin
Roger W. Martin
Joe Mathers
Michael Mathews
Antonio D. Matias
Sandra Matranga
Kathleen McArthur
Sharon McBride
Colleen McCall
Christopher McCarthy
Denise McCarthy
Doreen McCarthy
Linda McCarthy
Catherine McClenahen
Mary McColgan
Mary McColgan
Michelle McDermott
Carole McDonough
Doreen McElroy
Sandra McFeeters
Robert P. McGann
TJ McGill
Denise McGinley
Donna McGinnity
Alan McGlew
Jean M. McGonagle
Bob McGowan
Michelle McGrath
Marshall McGuerty
Susan McGuire
Martha A. McGurl
Kevin McInerney
Vicki McIsaac
Karen McLaughlin
Terese McLaughlin
Joanne McNamara
Albert McNeill
Pam McPherson
Paula McPhillips
Judith Medeiros
Patrick Melly
Sandra Melville
Ellen Mendes
Eva Mendola
Charlotte Menninger
John G. Mensah
21
2011
|
REPORT of GIFTS
parents
Field Hockey Team Celebration
The University’s national champion field hockey team
celebrated its victory this summer at the first Sunset
Social at the Bellegarde Boathouse on the Merrimack
River. The celebration raised $10,000, a total matched
by an anonymous donor, for scholarships and support
of the field hockey program. The Sunset Social will be
Susan Merhi
Marc Meunier
Elizabeth Michaud
Walter Michaud
Joanne Migliarese
Ted Migliarese
Thomas Miller
Laurel Miranda
Scott Mitchell
Dante Mitrano
Tiffany Modeste
Donna J. Mofford
Diane Mohler
Maureen Moisson
Janet Monaghan
Alan J. Monico
Sandra Montanze
Doris Montoya
Sheri Moore
Diane Moran
Stephanie A. Moran
John Morrissey
Lisa Moscone Ardini
Siavash Mostafavi
Gail Moulton
Ryszard Mudrewicz
Jaria Mugalu
Elizabeth Murphy
Timothy Murphy
William Murray
Nancy Muñoz
Veronica Nagle
Said Naili
Sharon Nappi
Anh Nguyen
Judith Nicholson
Ann Nickerson
Joanne M. Nickerson
Phil Niddrie
Claire Niles
Raymond Noel
Robert Noel
Elizabeth Nonis
Nancy Norris
Barbara Northam
Janet T. Norton
Bridget O'Brien
Carol O'Connell
Cheryl O'Connell
Kim O'Connell
22
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
an annual event, with a different River Hawks team
benefiting each year. Following the team’s victory,
Coach Shannon Hlebichuk was named DII National
Coach of the Year for the fourth time in nine years
at UMass Lowell.
Kimberly O'Connell
Doreen O'Connor
Kenneth O'Donnell
Lindsay O'Donovan
Cindy O'Grady
Tracy O'Neil
Elaine O'Toole
Louise M. OConnell
Susan Ober
Regina Odryna
Donna Ogonowski
Marcia Olson
Renee Olson
Susan Orr
Elizabeth Otto
Magaly Pagan
Dawn Paige
Soo Paik
Kruti Pandya
Racheal Pantely
Paul Paone
Valerie Paonessa
Phyllis Papa
Diane Paquette
Dale Parechanian
John Parent
Linda M. Parker-Tuxbury
Alka Parwani
Edward Pasco
Kathy Patacchiola
Jyoti Patel
Jeanne Patterson
John Pedranti
Suzanne Pelich
Valerie Pennington
Elizabeth Pepicelli
Mercene Perry
Robert Perry
Wendy Perry
Edward Peter
Lynn Peters
Donna Peterson
Allison Pfosi
Giup Pham
Bette Phillos
Jacklyn Phipps
Sherwin L. Piedad
Carol Pietravalle
John Pigeon
Joanna Pijoan
Cindy Pilla
Donna Pimentel
Joan Plummer
Sharon Polleck
Jennifer Poore
Marie Porteus
John Powell
Karen Power
Roberta Pozniak
Amelia Prestigiovanni
Valerie Previte
Jean Star Prieto
Elaine Pugliese
Cheryl J. Quimby
Linda Quinn
Noreen Rackauskas
Gail Radville
Barbara Rafuse
Nancy Rahilly
Paul Raison
Janet Ramani
Sivasubra Ranjit
Agnes Rawski
Kenneth Rea
Judith Read
Robert Reagan
Don Rebello
Debra Recka
Maureen Reddington
Karen Reed
Michael Reed
Emily Rees
Eva Regan
Sarah Regan
Lois Reible
Sharon Renstrom
Brenda Resse
Cynthia Ressijac
Cathy Rheaume
Stephen Rice
Arthur J. Richard
Elaine Richard
Margeret Richard
Tracy Riley
Janette Rioux
Roberta Rivera
Sandra Rivetts
Dorothy Robbins
Jeannine Robbins
Karen Robichaud
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
L O W E L L
Laura Roche
Ana-Marie Rodriguez
Caroline Rogers
Steve Roller
Judy Romano
Reyna Rosario
Lois Rosenthal
Toni P. Ross
Evelyn Rossin
Saide Rouhana
Glenn Rouleau
Deborah Rousseaux
Julie Roux
Roger Royer
Adrian Ruch
Vincent Rucinski
Donna Ruddock
Susan Russell
Angelo Joseph Russo
Margaret Russo
Debbie Ryan
Heidrun Ryan
Anne Rydjeski
Elaine Saad
Patti Sabatino
Judy Salois
Beth Salsman
Yasmine Salvador
Karen Salvato
Lisa Salvucci
Wayne Samuels
Dana Samuelson
Joel Sanderson
Natalie Sandore
Samuel Sandoval
Lisa Sapier
Lynda Saracusa
Sandra Savage
Wayne Sawlivich
Kurt Schaefer
Mary Ellen Schaefer
Jacqueline Schartner
Daniele Schere
Lawrence Schmitt
Sherri Schneider
Kathleen Schofield
Gerlinda Schottenhamel
Brad Schuerman
Mary Schwartz
Jeff Scott
Julia Scott
Debra Scrocca
Paula Seaburg
Lauren Seaver
John Sech
Carol Seco
Charlene Senechal
Laurie Serafin
Zigmas Sermuksnis
Carolyn Serra
Susan Sexton
Leyla Sezen
Akhtar Shafiq
Janet Shea
Linda Sheahan
Donald E. Sheak
Marie Sheehan
Terry A. Shepherd
Karen J. Sherry
Carol Shrader
Richard Shulik
Fareed Siddiqui
Rose Sidhom
Jean Silk
Joseph Silva
Susan Silva
Cathy Silvestrone
Laurie J. Simko
Karen S. Simmons
Valeri Sinclair
Mike Sirois
Dorothy Skelley
Joan Skowronek
Deborah Smith
Pamela Snow
Patricia Soares
Terry Soares
Lisa A. Soldi
Debra J. Soly
Gerald Sorge
Renee Soucy
June Soundara
Diane Souza
Susan Souza
Deborah Sprague
Mabel Sridhar
Linda Stanley
Bonnie Stanton
Charlene M. Stark
Robert Stark
Denise Stec
Jean Stevenson
Maryann Stickney
Joanne Stiglich
Patrick William Stoney
Diane Stubeda-Kingman
Paula Sullivan
Anita H. Sung
Alena Surowiec
Carol Sutton
Amirehsan Tabrizi
Donna Tarantino
Kerry Tea
Patricia Teehan
Suneeta Tembulkar
Gwenn Terrill
David Donald Theisen
Debra Thibodeau
Tatiana Thomas
Cynthia Thompson
Lauren Thompson
Sheila Thurman
Renee Ann Tiches
Victoria L. Tidman
Patricia Tilley
Cynthia Tipton
Gayle Tisei
Gary Tishue
Ling Tiv
Lucia Tobierre
Patricia Tolan
Patricia Toner
Elaine Tonks
Diane Toolin
Kirsten Torossian
Katherine Tourtellot
Gabrielle Tovar
Thuong Tran
Linda Tsinidis
Emmanuela I. Udokwu
Therese Vallario
Mark Vallon
Olivio Vallorani
Susan VanWormer
Francisca Vasquez
Geraldine Vatan
Cynthia Vatter
Judy Velleca
Brenda Vermette
Donna Verolla
Deborah Vespo
Lucia Vidal
Donna Vigneau
Eugene A. Villare
Jeanne R. Villare
Diane Vlatas
Steven Vogt
Kathy Wagner
Robert M. Wakelin
Heather Walker
Gerri Walkley
David Wall
Laura Wall
Kathleen Walsh
Lisa Walsh
Michael P. Walsh
Alice Walters
Carol B. Wang
Loise Wangoe
Linda Wareham
Henry Warren
Debbie Waybright
Carolyn L. Weaver
Deborah Webster
Roy E. Webster
Maria Welsh
Anne Werbicki
Robert Werner
Jerry Wernicki
Sandy West
Sharon West
Verne Westgate
Marianne S. Wharram
Nancy Whilton
Ellen White
students
Kerry White
Nancy White
Won-suk O. White
Michael Whittaker
Sharon Wholey
Cathy Wilkinson
Christine Wilkinson
Mary Williams
Maynard Williams
Robert Willis
Joyce Willson
Jean M. Wilson
Joanne Wilson
Fran Witham
Stacey Wonson
Siyuan Yang
Donna Yates
Wajih Yazbeck
Ann Yeo
Rosemarie Yorston
Wayne Zanchi
Maya Zapata
Lise Zapatka
Total Donors: 1089
Total Support: $55,125.21
STUDENTS
Partners
($500-$999)
Abhishek Kumar
Maria A. Millett
Associates
($250-$499)
Steven Kinney
Century
($100-$249)
Nicholas J. Bouras
Brendan Tulman Livingston
Kayla Anne MacDonald
Craig Patrick Reid
Jody Elizabeth Roper
Matthew Eric Schneider
Friends
($1-$99)
Wondimu Yenealem Abeje
Tanya M. Abourizk
Jesse Anthony Ackah
Anna A. Aguilar
Nana O. Agyeman
Lenin R. Alberto
Nicholas Alexandropoulos
Marie Ann Almodovar
Wanessa Reis Alvares
Maghda Amrani
Ursula J. Anderson
Joshua G. Anthony
Jared Adam Arnofsky
Priscilla Asencio
Amanda Tommie Baldwin
Angelee Marie Banda
Nicholas Barrett
Benjamin Eric Beermann
James Berger
Margarida Bernardo
Melissa L. Bernier
Joshua Marcel Bodah
Michael Bombardi
Danielle R. Bourgeois
Jahmaal Ahmed Box
Anthony Albert Brossi
Thomas Edward Buckley
Amy Elizabeth Budge
Megan Elizabeth Burdt
Sean D. Burns
Sean M. Burns
Juan Bustamante
Bonnie Butterworth
Julie Buzzotta
Andrew Scott Canata
Nicholas Charles Cannata
Carlos R. Cardenas
Timothy J. Casaletto
Anne Marie Catalfamo
Datda D. Chanthavysouk
corporations
Christopher Chao
Jasiela E. Chaves
Sokmeas Chea
Sochet Chhen
Naomi Joyce Christianson
Alexander James Codyer
Jacqueline Coleman
Katelyn M. Collins
Christopher James Compton
Debra M. Conlon
Thomas Murphy Conlon
Laura B. Coral
Christopher Francis Corcoran
Ryan Edward Costantino
Scott A. Craven
Anthony Joseph Cucinotta
Samantha Cziria
Carl Joseph D'Agostino
John D'Amico
Joshua E. Dallal
Elizabeth Jean Day
Derek Michael DeVito
Michael Joseph Dellogono
Sophia Isabel Deno
Birhanu Yilma Dererei
Nicholas Stephen DiBlasi
Juliana L. DiMarzio
Laura Dickerson
Robert P. Donald
Ryan Kevin Dooley
Ben John Doucette
Thomas Henry Dowdle III
Liam Timothy Driscoll
Darwin Noe Dubon
Jessica Megan Dumais
Sara Dunaj
Adam John Dunbar
Samuel J. Dyas
Nikolaos George Eleftheriadis
Samuel Robert Erickson
Meghan Elizabeth Esposito
Joseph D. Fanning
Caitlyn M. Farren
Michael Christopher Feole
Breanna Jeanne Ferguson
Laura Elisabeth Fickenwirth
Ann Fitzgerald
Rebecca Elizabeth Flynn
Cassidy Violet Ford
Benjamin Albert Franzese
Megan Rebecca Freeman
Leia B. Friedman
Susan R. Frish
Ryan Taylor Gallagher
Jacob H. Galloway
Mark Timothy Garcia
Njeri Gathura
Marshall C. Gaye
Michael Gee
Victor Giacobbe
Stephen A. Giardini
Andrew James Goderre
Matthew Martin Godfrey
Alex Goldstein
William D. Gonzalez
Guthrie W. Gordon
Julie Ann Gowdy
Deepankar Goyal
Brendon Thomas Grabowski
Michael J. Greaney
Erica L. Groleau
Brian Richard Hall
Jonathan Steven Harvey
Lauren Catherine Healy
Jason A. Hebert
Andrew William Heffernan
Amelia Jane Hersee
Timothy John Hire
Kate Elizabeth Hoffman
Ianna Hondros-McCarthy
Andrew John Hudson
Charlotte M. Hyland
Idelsy Johanna Infante
Kimberly Marie Jade
Gregory Jankuj
James K. Jean
Pascale Jean-Jacques
Conchetta Jenifer
Derek Robert Johnson
Kate Johnson
Sara Jane Jones
Alourdes F. Joseph
George Kabia
Brittany Kadra
Khalid Kanane
Trinayan Kashyap
Joseph C. Kelley
Meghan B. Kilcommons
Kyung-Hoon Kim
William P. Kirk
Timothy James Koehn
Sarann Kong
Paula Korng
Brad Krivelow
Wen Long Kuang
Joshua D. LaPlante
Leon Deepak Lackiram
Sean M. Landers
Jenna Marie Lapachinski
Tinuviel Marie Lathrop
Phillip Dinh Le
David P. LeBlanc
Steven Joseph Leblanc
Rich Lee
Stephen Tony Lefebvre
Emily Dianne Legere
Anthony M. Leo-Mayes
Michael Isaac Levine
Eleni Liakakis
Jessica M. Lindroth
Jennifer Lindsay
Michael O. Linehan
John Lippiello
Brittni Leigh Liyanage
Hansel D. Lopez
Itzel Lopez-Pantoja
Robert E. Lowe
Anthony Luciano
Colleen Nicole Lynch
William J. Ma
Kayleigh Elizabeth MacLean
Geoffrey Goodworth Magee
Charles Sharif Mahdy
Kevin C. Maigatter
Mario Peter Marchesi
Margaret Deanna Maron
Amanda J. Marquis
Benjamin Hayes Martin
Janielle L. Martin
Felix L. Martinez
Katherine Louise Massey
Heather M. McAtamney
Eric J. McCann
Joseph Francis McCarthy
Sean McCarthy
Jeffrey Michael McGrath
Michael Dallas McLaughlin
Daniel Joseph McNamara
Gabrielle Ann Medeiros
Ankit Nikhil Mehta
Andrew J. Mendonca
Ella Marie Merullo
Bridget Higgins Mettler
James Michaels
Jessica Ann Michaud
Morgan L. Milardo
Amanda Jane Milinazzo
Charles W. Miller
Michael Mizzoni
Sindhura Mogulla
Elizabeth Adrienne Mohan
Leslie-Ann Montano
Katharine Louise Moran
Zachary S. Morris
Tyler Damon Morrow
Michael J. Mosher
Amanda G. Murray
Cory R. Murray
Kila Consilia Ngambong
Adam P. Nichols
John W. Noble
Christopher George Nonis
Suleiman H. Nuseibeh
Kristina Marie Oakland
Christopher B. Odryna
Christopher Chinedu Ojatabu
Ivan Dario Osorio
Monica S. Parks
Rutwik Mineshbhai Patel
Stephen Edward Pereira
Jessica Christine Perry
Catherine Rose Petrone
Aaron Petruccelli
Ethan Narin Phung
Jessica Marie Plante
Thomas J. Plasse
Michael Keith Pruett
Thavalong Prum
Maryann Pulliam
Leandro Jose Quezada
Heather Quigley
Ezekiel Edward Radik
Lauren Ann Raimondi
Paul Bezjak Ratner
Lucie E. Rawlins
Donathan Emmanuel Edgard
Raymond
Michael R. Reid
Jillian Claire Reilly
Melissa Valerie Rigueur
Leonardo R. Rodriguez
Tiffanie Amanda Roper
Tyler Zachary Ross
Daniel John Rossin
David Rousseaux
Jessica Hiette Saad
Stephen John Sanborn
Rajan Santhamoorthy
Alexandra Rose Schechter
Constance Morgan Sophie
Schere
Patrick Davis Schwartz
Thomas Joseph Screnci
Althea May Sellars
Nicholas Daniel Sermuksnis
Theodore Heustis Serozynsky
Joseph Timothy Sheahan
Jason Adam Skeldon
Christopher R. Slater
Charlene Powers Smith
Shaun Tyler Smith
Ben L. Smyrlian
Brian Pen Sok
Tola Nthonie Sok
Sasha Michelle Sosa
Erica P. Spada
Erik S. Spracklin
Kerri Delaney Staruk
Daniel Robert Sullivan
Donald J. Sutton
Heather S. Sweeney
Alyssa C. Swett
Kristen Marie Tabacco
Dumrongpow Tabtippawon
Dan X. Tang
Taylor Matthew Terrio
Kyle J. Thompson
Charlie D. Thoren
Alexsandra M. Thorne
Brian James Timmons
Daniel Mark Titus
Jaclyn Roberta Toner
Ryan Joseph Toolin
William Bradford Torrey
Nhut Tran
Thu Kim Tran
Jonathan Samuel Treibick
Brian Michael Trischitta
Joshua Turner
Jessica L. Underwood
Samnang Uth
Jhony Alexander Valencia
Le M. Van
Gregory Arthur Vellante
Tuan D. Vu
Katrina L. Walther
Brad M. Warren
Tia Elizabeth Warren
Alumnus Norm Bazin returned to the ice this
year at UMass Lowell to take the helm of the
River Hawks as the sixth head coach in the
hockey program’s history.
Cailey Sara Watson
Michael Migwi Waweru
Annie Lin Weng
Lauren Marie Wetzonis
Emily Rose Wiseheart
Heidi Marie Wright-Singer
Samuel Jacob Zeigler
Xiangwei Zhuo
Total Donors: 313
Total Support: $4,622.09
CORPORATIONS
A Vintage Rose
A. Routsis Associates, Inc.
API
ARAMARK Corporation
AREVA NP Inc.
AT&T INC.
Advanced Polymers Inc.
Aetna Foundation,
Incorporated
Akzo Nobel Inc.
Ambit Research
American Institute of Steel
Construction
American Leistritz Extruder
Corporation
Analog Devices, Incorporated
Anita's Design, Inc.
AptarGroup Charitable
Foundation
Arburg, Inc.
Associated Polymer Labs, Inc.
AstraZeneca
Autodesk Inc.
Automatic Data Processing
Foundation
Automation Plus
Avery Dennison Corporation
BAE Systems
BASF Corporation
BP America
BSC Companies, Inc.
Bank of America
Bank of America
Baxter International Inc.
Bay State Driving Academy
Benjamin Moore & Company
Blanchard Law Office, P.C.
Boeing Company
Boott Hydropower, Inc.
Boston Scientific Corporation
Boston Sim Inc.
Brier & Brier
Bristol-Myers Squibb
Foundation Incorporated
Bushong Industrials,
Incorporated
C. R. Bard Foundation,
Incorporated
C. R. Bard, Incorporated
CBS Technology Group, LLC
Carris Plastics
Chevron Phillips Chemical
Company
Church & Dwight Co., Inc.
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Citizens Financial Group, Inc.
Comcast Corp.
Commencement Photos Inc.
Commodore Builders, Inc.
Community Counselling
Service Co., LLC
Computer Associates
International, Inc.
Constellation Energy Group
Foundation, Inc.
Cooper Surgical
Covidien
DCP Midstream Partners, LP
DMRL, Inc.
DMSE, Inc.
Datacolor Inc.
David A. Beckerman
Foundation Inc.
Davol Incorporated
Day Pitney LLP.
Dell Inc.
Delta Sales of Amherst, Inc.
Demoulas Foundation
Douglas Russell, Inc.
Dow Chemical Company
Foundation
DuPont (E.I. DuPont de
Nemours & Co.)
Dynisco Inc.
Eastern Salt Company Inc.
Eli Lilly and Company
Embroidery Loft
Emerson Electric Company
Encirca Inc.
Energy Consumers Alliance of
New England
Entec Polymers, LLC
Entergy Corporation
Enterprise Bank and Trust
Company
Equifax
23
2011
24
|
REPORT of GIFTS
Everett Mills Real Estate
Exponent, Inc.
Extreme Networks Corp.
Farrell Design
Communications LLC
Fay, Spofford & Thorndike,
LLC
Federal Carpet
Ferrini Productions, Inc.
Fidelity Foundation
Finch & Sons
Flor Del Monte Day Care
Forbo Solutions LLC
Foster Corporation
Frontier Capital Management
Company
Funding Factory
GEI Consultants, Inc.
Gale Associates
Gallagher & Cavanaugh, LLP
General Dynamics Corporation
General Electric Foundation
Gleason Insurance Agency
Gloucester Engineering
Goodrich Corporation
Great State Beverages Inc.
Green Technology Associates
Inc.
Gregor Electric Inc.
Grossman, Tucker, Perreault &
Pfleger, PLLC
Haartz Corporation
Hamilton, Brook, Smith &
Reynolds, P.C.
Hansberry CPA & Consulting,
Incorporated
Hanser Gardner Publications
Harbor Electrical Contractors,
Inc.
Harte-Hanks
Communications, Inc.
Hearthstone Homes, LLC
Hoch Superstar Productions
Hoffman Concrete
Construction LLC
Honey Tree, Inc.
Iceberg Seafood Co. Inc.
Illinois Tool Works
Foundation
Illinois Tool Works, Inc.
In The Batter's Box Northeast
Baseball
Injectronics
Insurance Services Office, Inc
International Business
Machines International
Foundation
International Medical
Industries Inc.
Invensys
Ipsos Operations US, Inc.
Ivas Environmental
JC Lane & Assoc. Security
Specialist
Jajuga Associates Inc.
Jeanne D'Arc Credit Union
John Deere Foundation
John Hancock Financial
Services, Inc.
Johnson & Johnson Family of
Companies Contribution
Johnson String Instrument,
Inc
Joseph P. Donahue Charitable
Foundation Trust
Juniper Networks
KC Prescision Machining, Inc.
Kilkenny Pub, Inc.
Kimball Farm, Inc.
Kistler Instrumental Corp.
Konarka Technologies
Kronos Inc.
L.L. Bean Inc.
LIRA, Inc.
LaFortune & LaFortune
Law Office of Richard P.
Howe
LeMaitre Vascular, Inc.
Leahy Painting
Lenovo
Linden Photonics, Inc.
Lockheed Martin Corporation
Foundation
Lowell Bank
Lowell Five Cent Savings
Bank
Lowell Fruit Co. Inc.
Lowell Spinners
Lowell Sun Charities, Inc.
MFS Investment Management
Matrix Technologies Corp.
Merck Company Foundation
Merrimack Valley Distributing
Co.
Metabolix Inc.
Microsoft
Microsoft Corporation
Microtest Properties, LLC
Millipore Corporation
Morgan-Worcester, Inc.
Motorola Foundation
Music Arts Alive
NSTAR Foundation
Nathan Sallop Insurance
Agency, Inc.
National Grid
New England Arts Group
New England Rubber and
Plastic Group Inc.
Newell Rubbermaid Inc.
Next Specialty Resins, Inc.
Northeast Clinics, Inc.
Northeast Utilities
Northeast Utilities Service
Company
Northeastern Section A.N.S.,
Inc.
Nypro Inc.
OLYMPUS NDT
Oracle Corporation
PPD Tech, LLC
Parker-Hannifin Corporation
Parker-Hannifin Foundation
Philips Medical Systems
Pirozzi & Associates, Inc.
Plasma and Polymer Science
Playground Partnership Northeast, Inc.
Pro AV Systems
Pro Clean Service, Co.
Procter & Gamble Fund
Proton Marketing Group, LLC
Publix Super Markets
Charities, Inc.
Putnam Investments, Inc.
QinetiQ North America Inc.
RF Walsh Collaborative
Partners
RI Consultants, LLC
RTP Company
Raytheon Company
Red Hat
Red Mill Graphics
Reebok Human Rights
Foundation
Reebok International
Renaissance Administration
LLC
Roberto Landscaping,
Incorporated
Rubber Division American
Chemical Society
SMC, Ltd.
Savings Bank Life Insurance
Company of Massachusetts
Sax and Associates, Inc.
School Clinical & Consulting
Services
Seaboard Products Co.
Silva Associates Inc.
Solectria Renewables
U N I V E R S I T Y
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
O F
in memory of
in honor of
Summer Star Foundation for
Nature, Art, and Humanity
Swanee Hunt Family
Foundation
Teleflex Foundation
The Boston Foundation
The Gendler Family
Foundation
The Thibault Foundation
Theodore Edson Parker
Foundation
Verizon Foundation
In Memory Of
Bob Callary
Matthew W. Harris
IN HONOR OF
OTHER
ORGANIZATIONS
In Memory Of
Douglas A. Ravenelle
Priscilla G. Kelley
Gertrude G. Soucy
foundations and organizations
Source Production &
Equipment Co. Inc.
Specialty Extrusion Inc.
Specialty Materials, Inc.
Sports Zone Inc.
Stafford Engineering, Inc.
State Street Foundation
Stephen E. Slomski
Associates
Subaru of Milford
SunDrum Solar, LLC
Superior Controls, Inc.
TESco Associates, Inc.
Taj Engineering
Talty and Talty, P.C.
Telesolv Consulting LLC
Texas Instruments Foundation
The Durkin Company
Tigar Refrigeraton Co
Total Package Professional
Coaching
Transystems Corporation
Trinity E.M.S., Incorporated
Tyco Electronics Foundation
Tyler Munroe Landscape
Contractor, Inc.
U.S. Charitable Gift Trust
USAA Property and Casualty
Insurance
Unilever United States, Inc.
United Technologies
Corporation
Uptime Services
Vanasse Hangen Brustlin,
Inc.
Warnaco Foundation
Watermark Environmental,
Inc.
Waters Corporation
Wellington Management
Company
Wells Fargo
Woburn Electrical School
Wolverine World Wide
Foundation
YPS, LLC
Zero-D Products, Inc.
FOUNDATIONS
Alden Family Foundation,
Inc.
Battles Foundation
Behrakis Foundation
Community Foundation of
North Central Massachusetts
D'Youville Foundation
Deshpande Family Foundation
Dominion Foundation
Eastern Bank Foundation
ExxonMobil Foundation
FM Global Foundation
Fidelity Investments
Charitable Gift Fund
Jamesco Development Inc.
Kennedy Family Foundation
Klarman Family Foundation
Lubrizol Foundation
Lutheran Church of the
Redeemer Foundation
Marty Meehan Educational
Foundation, Inc.
MetLife Foundation
Middlesex Community College
Massachusetts
Millipore Foundation
Minnesota Mining &
Manufacturing Foundation
Novartis US Foundation
Pfizer Foundation Volunteer
Program
Plymouth Rock Foundation
Prudential Foundation
Richard K. & Nancy L.
Donahue
Saint-Gobain Corporation
Foundation
L O W E L L
Andover Police Patrolmen's
Union
Bonifacio Consulting Services
Delegation du Quebec a
Boston
Edison International
First Church Unitarian
Friends of Pat Haddad
Graduate Student Association
Granite State Basketball
Association
IUCEE Consortium
Independent University
Alumni Association at
Lowell
International Wire and Cable
Symposium
Karen Kennedy Insurance
Agency Inc.
Loddy Weisberg Estate
Loder Mechanical Services
Lowell Community Health
Center
Lowell General Hospital
Lowell Police Superior
Officers Association
Lucy Gregory Henderson Trust
Massachusetts International
Academy
National String Project
Consortium
New Balance Boston
Newton Beijing Jingshan
School
Over-Thirty Baseball, Inc.
PTG Silicones, Inc.
Peeler Plastics Consultants
LLC
South Shore Cardiology, P.C.
Tewksbury Congregational
Church
The Murphy Committee
Thomas Chamberas Runners'
Memorial Scholarship Fund
United Way of Greater Nashua
University of Massachusetts
Boston
VFW Post 662
IN MEMORY OF
In Memory Of
Albert Lefebvre
Priscilla G. Kelley
In Memory Of
Alexandria Zamanakos
Arthur S. Zamanakos
In Memory Of
Kathryn J. Bernard '81
Suzanne Lane Conrad
In Memory Of
Bernice Scott
Claire E. McCarthy
In Memory Of
Betty DeMallie
Mary Elizabeth DeMallie
In Memory Of
Bob Boehme
Mary Elizabeth DeMallie
In Memory Of
Alanson W. Bowden Jr. '50
Judith D. Coletta
In Memory Of
Stephen P. DeMallie '49
Mary Elizabeth DeMallie
In Memory Of
Richard H. Donovan '88
Jean Star Prieto
In Memory Of
Jacqueline Hayes Dowe
'56
William J. Dowe Jr.
In Memory Of
Juliette Menard
Gertrude G. Soucy
In Memory Of
Germaine Landry
Priscilla G. Kelley
In Memory Of
Albert C. Lefebvre
Gertrude G. Soucy
In Memory Of
Mary Anne Alexander
Suzanne Lane Conrad
In Memory Of
Mary Frances McCarthy
Claire E. McCarthy
In Memory Of
Frank W. Miller Jr. '67
Marjorie R. Miller
In Memory Of
Mary Jane Nehring
Gay B. Mahder
In Memory Of
Evelyn L. Rich '36
Peter Q. Rich
In Memory Of
Allie Scruggs
Karen Walton
In Memory Of
Sr. Marie Lefebvre, P.M.
Priscilla G. Kelley
In Memory Of
Susan Hoffman
Martha P. Bean
Eleanor A. Bissell
Ann Bratton
Janet Burke
Betsy E. Goldenberg
Diane A. Kemsley
JoAnne McClendon
Sheila M. Rourke
Suzanne M. Trudel
Katherine Tyndall
Jane E. Worthley
In Memory Of
Randall W. Swartz
Mildred Swartz
In Memory Of
Francesca Tillona
Marianne B. Moriarty
In Memory Of
Lori A. Weeden '00
Mary Winants
In Honor Of
Dean of Students Office
Adam John Dunbar
In Honor Of
Dr. Mark Hines
Sara Jean Schloth
In Honor Of
Dr. Michael Graves
Sara Jean Schloth
In Honor Of
Dr. Susan O'Sullivan
Barbara A. Baker
Kathylyn T. Barnhill
Marylou Bolduc
Kathleen M. Doyle
Susan M. Laroche
Joann Moriarty-Baron
Deirdra Murphy
Janet Paton
Raymond Siegelman
Janice M. Stecchi
Joyce White
In Honor Of
Robert E. Innis
Leslie-Ann Montano
In Honor Of
Stuart L. Mandell
Toby Hodes
In Honor Of
Cornelius W. Martin '82
Benjamin Hayes Martin
In Honor Of
Sandra E. Martin '83
Benjamin Hayes Martin
In Honor Of
Juliette N. Rooney-Varga
Sara Dunaj
In Honor Of
Jonathan Silverman
Nicholas Alexandropoulos
Amy Elizabeth Budge
Gregory Arthur Vellante
In Honor Of
Stephen J. Collins
Katelyn M. Collins
In Honor Of
Celeste Therese Tremblay
'72
Melissa L. Bernier
Naomi Joyce Christianson
Jason A. Hebert
Kayleigh Elizabeth MacLean
Ella Marie Merullo
Catherine Rose Petrone
SUN, JAN 22 @ 6 PM
GET YOUR RIVER HAWKS HOCKEY
ALUMNI SEASON TICKETS FOR ONLY $155!
SUN, JAN 29 @ 6:30 PM
WED, FEB 1 @ 7 PM
UPCOMING RIVER HAWKS HOCKEY SCHEDULE:
THU, JAN 5 @ 7 PM
FRI, MAR 2 @ 7:30 PM
FRI, JAN 20 @ 7 PM
SAT, MAR 17 @ 2 PM & 8 PM
SAT, JAN 28 @ 7 PM
FRI, FEB 3 @ 7 PM
FRI, MAR 30 @ 8 PM
FOR INDIVIDUAL TICKETS, GO TO TSONGAS CENTER BOX OFFICE,
CHARGE BY PHONE AT (866) 722-8780, OR ONLINE AT TSONGASCENTER.COM
NONPROFIT ORG
US POSTAGE
PAID
PERMIT 69
LOWELL, MA 01854
Office of Alumni Relations
Southwick Hall 250
One University Ave.
Lowell, MA 01854-2882
Change Service Requested
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