MAGAZINE Volume 13, Issue 2 | Spring/Summer 2019
Creating a campus of inclusion
From the President M A G A Z I N E Vo l u m e 1 3 , I s s u e 2
Bison Pride We’ve all heard, or used, the expression Bison Pride when referring to Nichols College. Perhaps it stems from a spiritual connection with our namesake, the American bison, which has become a national symbol for its remarkable endurance over tens of thousands of years. Nichols has been around for a mere 200 years, but the comparison of survival in the face of environmental challenges, whether in nature or education, should not be lost. With respect to those wonderful woolly wanderers, I think Bison Pride is something more, and I believe we had it even before we adopted the Bison mascot in 1938. It is that collective sense of pride in who we are as an institution and in what we have achieved. The sum of character-defining moments that show the world what it means to be a Bison, today and forever. It is an attitude that is difficult to explain and far easier to recognize. When the first Nichols Academy building burned to the ground in 1816, Amasa Nichols promptly built another one. He was determined to be a part of an educational movement designed to train students for life or prepare them for college. The academy he started on this Dudley hilltop attracted the support of industrial pioneers Samuel Slater and Hezekiah Conant and gave rural students the opportunity to plow new paths. That’s Bison Pride. Bison Pride is strongly associated with athletic spirit and success. We celebrate the skilled players and inspiring coaches who achieve greatness in the name of Nichols. But champions aren’t the only ones with Bison Pride. It lives in all student-athletes who represent the values of the green, black, and white on (and off) the courts and fields. We saw an example of this earlier in the school year when a member of our men’s basketball team was intentionally knocked down by a player on the opposing team. The incident captured the attention of the social and news media, who focused not just on the flagrant
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foul, but on the response of the Nichols team who let the officials handle the situation, rather than escalate it. That’s Bison Pride.
EDITOR Susan Veshi
Alumni from the ’40s, ’50s, and ’60s often speak of Bison Pride, infused with a deep respect for Nichols founding president Colonel James Conrad, whose dream to educate business leaders transformed the college. These same alumni — and thousands of others — credit Nichols for giving them the opportunity to succeed. In turn, they faithfully support opportunities for today’s students. Dozens return each year to share their expertise in the classroom and on volunteer boards, and they recruit their fellow Bison for jobs and internships. That’s Bison Pride.
VICE PRESIDENT FOR ADVANCEMENT Bill Pieczynski CONTRIBUTORS Brent Broszeit, Eileen Deary, Pete DiVito, Jim Douglas, Rae Glispin, Lorraine Martinelle, Jillian Riches, Ron Schachter, Molly Thienel DESIGN Studio K Design, Dudley, MA PRINTING
Bison Pride is in our DNA and can manifest in surprising ways. In February, a few students — momentarily lacking Bison Pride — damaged (and ultimately took responsibility for) the beloved Bison statue on the corner of Healy and Center roads. The student body rallied around their wounded icon with an outpouring of photos taken with or on “Thunder” and calls for justice. That’s Bison Pride. Bison Pride sparked a financial turnaround of the college in the early 2000s and has been the driving force in the ensuing years of record-breaking enrollment, climbing retention and graduation rates, and increased donations. It is behind our efforts to make Nichols a more inclusive campus and close the gender gaps in corporate leadership. It swells in our recognition in national rankings, impressive student outcomes, the prominence of our alumni, and our beautiful campus.
Puritan Capital, Hollis, NH COVER/FEATURE PHOTOS Dan Vaillancourt Patrick O’Connor Photography Shrewsbury, MA
Nichols College PO Box 5000 123 Center Road Dudley, MA 01571-5000 508-213-1560 8:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m., M–F www.nichols.edu
Periodicals postage paid at Webster, MA, and additional mailing offices.
Nichols College MAGAZINE (UPSP 390480) is published
Like the American bison, Nichols continues to battle environmental conditions. In higher education, demographic shifts, increased competition, cost pressures, closures/mergers, and potential regulatory hurdles make for unprecedented times. We are standing tall, however, with a spirit of resilience and Bison Pride in our notable past, thriving present, and promising future.
Susan West Engelkemeyer, Ph.D. President
twice a year by Nichols College, Dudley, MA. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Office of Advancement Nichols College PO Box 5000 Dudley, MA 01571-5000
CONTENTS
ON CAMPUS
2–3
Webster Five continues decades-long support of community partnership
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Niles awarded President’s Medal
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President Engelkemeyer goes to Washington
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Lombard Dining Hall raises the roof
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Rankings roll in
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From the Archives
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AT H L E T I C S
Nichols College is strengthening an institutional commitment to promote an inclusive campus that values diversity and gives underrepresented students a voice.
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The record-breaking run of Marcos Echevarria
CLASS NOTES
4-6 A seat at the table
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15–23
Working hard, playing hard: Paul Blasewitz ’87
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Driving his own path: Andrew Frydryk ’10
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A digital space odyssey: Alex Cifone ’13
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NICHOLS REMEMBERS Charlie Howe ’62: Bison Pride
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Armed for the digital age of accounting Today’s students are sharpening their IT and data skills to get ahead in a rapidly changing and complex world of accounting.
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10-11 Lessons learned Cover photo: Nichols College strives to create an environment where all students have a voice and a seat at the table. Back row, from left, Lynn Thibault, Judeson Orvil, Karen Velasco, Noah Ingersoll; front row, from left, Millena Flor, Marshalee Johnson, Kaylin Goncalves.
Professors Jack Armstrong, Jeff Halprin, and Libba Moore reflect on their decades of service at Nichols College and preview what’s next in retirement.
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ON CAMPUS
Webster Five continues decades-long support of community partnership by Lorraine U. Martinelle
“We are proud to work with both organizations and contribute to this program that is making a difference in the lives of youth in our community," said Webster Five President and CEO Donald F. Doyle.
The Webster Five Foundation has donated $7,500 to Nichols College to support the college's program with the Boys & Girls Club of Webster-Dudley. This 22-year-old community partnership helps the Boys & Girls Club provide a safe, caring environment for children after school. The Boys & Girls Club of WebsterDudley offers a variety of recreational, educational, and cultural activities for its more than 1,400 members to help them build self-esteem and grow into responsible and caring adults.
Sam Bitar, far left, executive director of the Webster Five Foundation, and Donald Doyle, far right, Webster Five president and CEO, present the big check to President Susan Engelkemeyer and Lamel Moore, executive director of the Boys & Girls Club.
“We enjoy partnering with the Boys & Girls Club of Webster-Dudley to provide a mutually beneficial opportunity to youth and young adults," said President Susan West Engelkemeyer. "And we’re grateful for Webster Five’s donation that allows us to continue offering this program.”
The partnership between the college and the Boys & Girls Club ensures that club members in the after-school and teen programs can play and learn in a safe and stimulating environment, while providing an enriching experience for Nichols student-mentors to work with area youth.
Lamel Moore, executive director of the Boys & Girls Club of Webster-Dudley, said: “We are very thankful to have partners like Nichols College and Webster Five, allowing us to provide additional services to our members.”
President Engelkemeyer goes to Washington
Niles awarded President’s Medal At the Board of Trustees dinner on January 24, Tom Niles ’63 received the President’s Medal for Distinguished Business Leadership, which recognizes lifetime achievement with a focus on sustained success, innovation, and leadership. Niles is only the fourth recipient of the award since its inception in 2007. Niles was president and CEO of the family business, the Niles Co., which grew to be one of the largest real estate companies in Boston, with over 5,000 units under management at one point. He later formed the T.H. Niles Co. Throughout his career, Niles has had a reputation for having a nuts-and-bolts appreciation for running a building and running it well. His thoroughness and attention to detail became the hallmark of the Niles family. Niles joined the Nichols Board of Advisors in 2007 and became a trustee in 2010. He has been a valuable resource and advisor to major building projects on campus and a generous donor, including two $1 million commitments in support of capital projects, leadership development and scholarships.
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Photo: Lorraine U. Martinelle
In August 2018, President Susan West Engelkemeyer, PhD, visited the newsrooms of the Chronicle of Higher Education and Inside Higher Ed in Washington, D.C., to raise awareness of the Nichols College brand. She met with the publications’ editors — Liz McMillen and Scott Jaschick (pictured), respectively — and spoke with them about Nichols academic programs and initiatives, and various issues related to the current climate of higher education. The meetings resulted in interviews during the fall 2018 semester of President Engelkemeyer and Institute for Women’s Leadership Director Rachel Ferreira and Professor Jean Beaupré, by Chronicle reporters.
Lombard Dining Hall raises the roof
Rankings roll in Nichols College is ranked as the leader among central Massachusetts-based schools in U.S. News & World Report’s national “2019 Best Online Bachelor’s Programs” and “Best Online Graduate Business Programs” ratings, which were released Jan. 15, 2019. Nichols is also the only central Massachusetts-based college — and in the top six among all Massachusetts private colleges — on the “Best Online Business Programs” rankings, which rate non-MBA graduate business programs. In addition to offering an online (and on-campus) MBA — which U.S. News & World Report also included in its “Best Online MBA Programs” rankings — Nichols features degree programs in accounting, counterterrorism studies, and organizational leadership.
Just in time for the start of the spring 2019 semester, the new street-facing addition of Lombard Dining Hall opened. Students, faculty, and staff are loving it, with some posting photos of it to social media. The new addition features big windows that let in bright light against white walls and a cathedral-style ceiling that can’t be missed. A similar ceiling is under construction on the older part of Lombard. In December 2017, Nichols launched the multi-phase project to renovate the 44-year-old Lombard Dining Hall at 119 Center Road. Construction is expected to be complete by the fall 2021 semester. Much more is on the way for Bison diners: a brick oven for gourmet pizza; expanded deli, soup-and-salad areas; independent service stations; and enhanced décor. Already completed: relocated and easily accessible entrance and exit doors and bathrooms. Built in 1974, the 24,860-square foot dining hall last saw minor renovations in 2005, when it was dedicated as Lombard Dining Hall in honor of David Lombard ’65, trustee emeritus, and his wife, Susan. This new project will add 1,500 square feet to the building. Its current capacity is 350 diners; the renovation project will increase it to approximately 450. The project builds on the successful design and construction of the academic building and Fels Student Center, which opened in 2015 and 2012, respectively.
The Nichols Sport Management Program was among the Top 25 Best Value Sports Management Degrees 2019, based on the rankings website Value Colleges, which features accredited colleges and universities that have proven their value across the board by combining affordability and quality for a real return on investment. Readers of the central Massachusetts region’s definitive source for business news, Worcester Business Journal, have again chosen Nichols College as the “Best College for Business Education” in the newspaper’s sixth annual Best of Business Awards. Nichols has captured this honor for five out of the last six years. Nichols is the only school in Massachusetts to achieve the Gold Military Friendly® distinction by publisher VIQTORY Media. Schools with this distinction “are setting the example with their programs and initiatives” toward the educational pursuits of active military service members, veterans, spouses, and their children as students. Nichols College is an official Bloomberg Experiential Learning Partner, joining an exclusive group of 35 educational institutions from around the world. In June 2018, Nichols established its Bloomberg Finance Lab, and is already in the top 5 percent of that group in terms of the number of students earning Bloomberg Market Concepts certification.
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A seat at the table Creating a campus of inclusion
by Ron Schachter
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he Nichols campus does not look like it did 10 years ago. That’s not just because of the Fels Student Center and the new academic building fronting Center Road, or the massive renovation underway at the Lombard Dining Hall. Nor is it because several new academic majors, graduate programs, and athletic teams have sprung up over the past decade. What might be the most significant change over that time is the increase in the diversity of students — racially, ethnically, internationally, and even nationally — and the concerted effort to include such students more fully in the larger community. Along the way, Nichols students, faculty, and administrators are recognizing their differences and concerns and aiming to
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continue the movement that has brought the percentage of students of color to almost a quarter of the school population. The mandate to increase diversity and inclusion at Nichols has made it into the school’s latest strategic plan, published last fall, and the recent opening of the Nichols Office of Diversity and Inclusion has provided a powerful vehicle. “Being an inclusive campus means that people who bring any measure of diversity to campus are not only physically present, but they can be themselves and feel that they belong here in the first place,” explains Dean of Students P.J. Boggio, who points out that a greater emphasis on inclusion has become a key part of that mission. “We want to be more intentional in
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measuring what we do to make that happen and actively improve on it.” That approach already has begun to gain momentum, according to Karol Gil-Vazquez, assistant professor of economics. “I’ve not only seen the transition of more of these students coming into the college, but they are secure enough to voice their opinions,” she observes. “This semester for the first time, I have 10 students considered minority in one class, and I sense them super engaged. They have a lot to share and teach us. “It’s important that these students be heard and supported. These students need a family,” she continues, adding that a number of them seek out her classes, and frequently come to her office just to chat.
Senior Richard Vazquez, Jr., who is Puerto Rican, also has noticed the changes since he arrived less than four years ago. “I’ve seen [the number of fellow minority students] grow steeply,” he says. “It’s more comfortable. I’m seeing more familiar faces who probably had the same life as me growing up. I speak Spanish here. It’s okay to be who I am.” Ensuring an inclusive outcome takes multiple approaches, Boggio insists, from providing support for individual students to addressing the mindset of the larger Nichols community. Her office’s one-on-one efforts have ranged from dealing with the negative experiences of LGBTQ students over the way they dress to issues of acceptance for students with physical disabilities to the financial hardships that can accompany incoming freshmen. “We’re also trying to make sure that when one campus office or department recognizes a need, it’s communicated to other parts of the school,” Boggio offers. For instance, if a coach recruits a minority athlete or one from another country, the dean’s office wants to hear about any extra needs early on with an eye to helping that athlete fit in and feel prepared from the get-go. Retaining minority students also has become a priority. The college dedicated aid — starting with an extra $120,000 in 2011 and growing every year since — to minority students in need, a key to letting qualified applicants enroll. Together with steadily increasing its admission standards, Nichols has been able to attract minority students better able to stay the course. In less than ten years, the retention rate for this cohort has nearly quadrupled. Inclusion is a different matter and a step in a steeper process, which aims to
make academic, employment, and social opportunities more available and more representative of the student population. “We have to try to be more intentional in everything we do, from hiring student workers and making sure that more students have leadership opportunities around campus,” Boggio emphasizes, admitting that “intentional” has to become more prominent in the vocabulary of herself and others if the college is going to continue to move from a more diverse campus to an inclusive one. The new inclusion initiative also means engaging the larger community of students and faculty and staff alike. This past fall, the Nichols Office of Diversity and Inclusion (ODI) opened its doors with the mission of advocating for students from underserved populations. Among the responsibilities of ODI Director and admissions counselor Tahkeya Blake ’15 is creating events and other initiatives “that promote awareness as well as the celebration of diversity and overall inclusion.” Blake offers another definition: “Everybody has a seat at the table, their voices are heard, and their concerns have been met.” As the larger student body learns more about the identities and of peers from other races, ethnicities, and countries, they will be able to validate those peers, administrators like Boggio and Blake emphasize. They will also better prepare themselves for an increasingly diverse society and a still growing global economy. To that end, the 4th Annual Leadership Summit this March focused on increasing awareness around issues of diversity, and better understanding the perceptions of different students and faculty around
these issues. The gathering featured interactive exercises, and even a game that allowed participants to examine their thoughts and ideas, as well as their unconscious biases. The efforts over the past decade of making Nichols more inclusive to its female population can serve as a road map to the current inclusion process, Boggio says. Six years ago, Nichols launched its Institute for Women’s Leadership, which provides everything from counseling to support services to role models. “The IWL is a visible commitment that’s shown the community that we value women,” Boggio insists. “It’s helped create strong female leadership on campus.”
“Everybody has a seat at the table, their voices are heard, and their concerns have been met.” –
Tahkeya Blake ’15 Director, Office of Diversity and Inclusion
Not all of the school’s efforts to increase retention and inclusion has come from the top down. After his freshman year playing for the Nichols football team, senior James Singletary saw that most of his fellow black teammates did not return for sophomore year. “It left me asking, ‘Why are they leaving? And why are they more successful at other institutions?’” he recalls. The answers that Singletary discovered prompted him to organize the largely African American support group Men of Distinction, which is now in its third year
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Men of Distinction
“It’s not just ethnic and racial,” he reasons, “It’s geographical.”
One notable program supporting diversity at Nichols has grown from the grass roots. Senior James Singletary from Marlborough, Mass., moved there from Boston. “I’ve always been kind of a city kid used to a lot of diversity around me, and I knew that going to Nichols was going to be a little bit different,” he admits.
For years, Brower has seen even that geographical influence close up on the men’s and women’s tennis teams he coaches. Usually those squads count players from a dozen different countries. “You look at the wealth of cultures represented,” he explains. “They just bring a different perspective that gives them the opportunity to enhance the experience of other students.”
Although the football team featured a number of black athletes during Singletary’s freshman year, most of them did not return for sophomore year. “I’d hear about diversity issues in colleges, but this was the first time I had seen it happen,” recalls Singletary, who witnessed more than changes to the football roster. “A lot of the minority population here were not motivated to achieve academically. They had a fire for other things — the creative arts, music, sports. When it came to academics, there was a huge gap.” “There was not a central office my sophomore year, where students of color could come and talk openly,” Singletary continues. The void prompted him to found the organization Men of Distinction, which started with three members three years ago, grew to seven in the first week, and nowadays claims better than 50 mostly African American and Hispanic Nichols students. The group has even established its own board of advisors.“The idea was to focus on issues of diversity and come up with our own initiatives,” Singletary says, from expecting the group’s members to develop a more committed attitude towards their studies; to having juniors tutor first-year students; to practicing etiquette that projects success. Every Monday, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., the Men of Distinction wear business attire to class and around campus. “Mondays set the tone for the rest of the week,” Singletary explains. “They’re fired up because they are holding themselves to a higher standard. And they’ll be lifelong members.” “As a group, we hold ourselves accountable to be better men,” Singletary sums up. Singletary who has majored in management and minored in accounting, sees to that by keeping the books — or at least the Excel spreadsheet that measures the members’ progress. He notes improvement in both GPA and retention. Singletary is taking the program beyond Nichols, most recently to a demonstration for Brown University in Providence, R.I. “With the help of our board of advisors, we’ve been able to take what we’re doing to the next level,” he reveals. “We want to become a hub for other institutions.”
and has greatly improved the retention rate of its more than 50 members. (See sidebar above.) The ODI is taking a more institutional approach to the same problems. Blake serves as part educational resource, advocate, event producer, and host for the students who come by. Her office, she emphasizes, is “on the beaten path,” on the main floor of the Fels Student Center.
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“I want diversity, equity, and inclusion training for the faculty and staff as well,” Blake states. To that end she is aiming to develop activities for the Professional Development Seminars required for all Nichols students. Without minimizing the importance of increasing the admissions and retention of minority students, Director of Admissions Paul Brower promotes a larger meaning to diversity at Nichols.
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Those differences extend to the different regions of the United States that the college has tapped into, Brower adds — from Florida for the football team to Oregon for the men’s volleyball squad. “A kid from Texas has very different views than students from New England,” Brower emphasizes. “And that’s better for the college.” Despite the gains in student diversity and the addition of nearly half a dozen professors from other countries, Nichols still faces the challenge of adding minorities to the faculty, staff, and administrators. “Dudley, Massachusetts, is primarily an old school New England area, and that creates a unique set of challenges when building a staff. Fortunately, over the last few years we have made progress as an institution, but it’s certainly not easy,” Brower concedes. “But if you look at the trends, for example, in the Hispanic population over the next 10 to 15 years, we need to prepare our faculty and staff from that perspective.” Brower isn’t alone in his perceptions. “The more diverse the college becomes, the more professors need to respond to them,” Gil Vazquez insists. “[More minority professors] would allow for a greater pool of students to reach out to Nichols,” senior Richard Vazquez notes. “Seeing that diversity would open the floodgates.”
From the Archives a
Contributed by Jim Douglas
The Nichols-Cuba Connection, 1931–1959 From 1931 to 1959, men from 36 states and 33 foreign countries took advantage of the many opportunities offered by Nichols Junior College. Nichols became a familiar name to many secondary schools in the eastern and mid-western United States as well as numerous south and central American countries and the Caribbean. Of all the countries represented at Nichols, however, students from Cuba numbered the most by far. A total of 55 Cuban students attended Nichols Junior College between the years of 1931 and 1959. While never large in numbers for any given year (usually between four to six), many of these students made significant contributions to the school. This was particularly true during the mid-1930s when Cuban students held leadership positions in various organizations (including editor of the student newspaper, and president and officers of student government), and were valuable players in various sports, especially soccer. (A “Cuban Trophy” for the most outstanding soccer player was first awarded in 1937 and was still being given in 1958.) Nichols, in turn, was a warm and welcoming place for students living far
from home. With six Cubans attending Nichols in 1937, for example, the campus celebrated the 35th anniversary of the inauguration of the Republic of Cuba. The Cuban students spent weeks preparing special talks on different aspects of their homeland and held a special dinner, complete with songs and Cuban cuisine. The student newspaper issued a “Souvenir Issue Dedicated to Cuba” that printed the talks and included an editorial praising the authors for their planning and execution of the events. “We cannot emphasize too much,” wrote the editor, “how happy we are to know and have such fine fellows as our friends and classmates….Viva Cuba! Viva los Estados Unidos!” How did Nichols attract students from Cuba and other parts of the world? For one thing, in the 1930s Nichols was one of only two New England junior colleges for men. It was also the only New England junior college focused on business administration, and it offered courses that were considered upper level and transferable to four-year institutions. Some heard about the college through friends, family, or other relatives who attended Nichols or knew someone who had. There was also an official “clearinghouse” in Havana that
maintained a list of recommended business administration schools, including Nichols. Some American companies doing business in Cuba, such as the Bank of Boston, would also suggest Nichols as a great place to study and learn American business and culture. Upon graduation, most Cuban students returned to their homeland to work in family businesses, start their own, or take a position in a government department. Some continued their education in America or Cuba before returning to Cuba or settling here. Some maintained the friendships they formed while at Nichols. When relations between the two countries dramatically worsened after Fidel Castro came to power in 1959, a number of prior students fled Cuba, leaving all their worldly possessions behind, and, with the help of former classmates in some cases, made their way to America and rebuilt their lives. Such was the Nichols-Cuba connection. Note: Special thanks to Mrs. Marianne Gruskin, wife of the late Matthew P. Gruskin ’54, and Enrique Lopez-Balboa ’54 for their assistance with this article.
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Armed for the digital age of accounting by Ron Schachter
On a cold January morning, the juniors in a Professional Development Seminar have gathered for their first class of the term. What’s notable is that all 20 are majoring in accounting, are focused on the course instructor — PricewaterhouseCoopers Director Scott Robb — and are wide awake. PwC isn’t far from the minds of the class. On their desks sits the handout, “How We Teach Digital Skills at PwC,” and Robb invites them for a class trip to his office there. It does not take long for this initial PDS class to convey what the accounting major at Nichols has become.
traditional study of financial accounting and analysis. “Most schools have built around the CPA vision, and we’re awesome at that,” says Accounting Program Chair Bryant Richards. “But the accounting world is much more complex.” Gone are the days of a solitary figure bent over a ledger and wearing a green eyeshade, starting with the explosion in forensic accounting — tracking data and transactions to detect fraud such as money laundering and embezzlement. “Back when I was an undergraduate, the courses were plain vanilla,” usually leading to a career as a CPA or as a financial auditor for private companies, recalls Martin Shanahan ’91, adding that when it came to the field of fraud, “People would fall into it and get experience over time.”
The digital imperative that Robb lays out for these soon-to-be-grads highlights a new accounting world for which Nichols is preparing them. The ageless major has recently added tracks in IT and data, as well as in fraud, to the
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Senior Bethany Faford has run full speed down the forensic avenue available at Nichols. That includes being able to mesh what she has learned with her experience in a part-time job at which her boss is being investigated for fraud. “It’s been an ‘aha’ moment for me,” she says. It’s also proved an impressive resume item at job interviews. “The fact that I researched fraud at work blew their minds,” Faford says. She’s since been hired by AAFCPAs, which has a forensic accounting team in Boston. She has also had the chance to publish an article in Accounting Today.
This class is one of the few PDS sections dedicated to students in a single major. “They hone in on what accounting firms are looking for,” explains Liz Horgan, director of the Career and Professional Development Center who heads the college’s PDS program. “In their four weeks of mock interviewing, Scott brings in people from the field who also do the hiring.” This year, six seniors have found jobs at the venerable Big Four accounting firms, including PwC, not to mention several regionally prominent firms, AAFCPAs, Marcum and RSM among them. Others are headed to elite jobs at corporations such as Raytheon, Aetna, and National Grid.
foundation: he serves on the board of advisors for the accounting major, with a focus on fraud and forensic accounting, and he also teaches at Nichols. “The curriculum is bold and puts Nichols in a very good position going forward,” Shanahan says. “Even if you are becoming a traditional CPA, an expertise in forensic accounting gives you a leg up.”
After graduating Nichols, Shanahan became a CPA and added a law degree. He joined several Fortune 500 companies before going into the public sector, where he has worked for the past 20 years at the U.S. Dept. of Labor as a supervisory investigator and a senior advisor and special assistant to the secretary of labor. “If you discover someone who stole $1 million, that’s exciting,” he observes. Shanahan is ensuring that the college’s accounting majors have a different
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On the IT and data accounting front, Nichols is rolling out courses including Accounting for Information Systems and Advanced Analytics for Accountants. “You’re auditing to make sure that the data has integrity,” Richards says, adding, “When it comes to IT and data, the industry can’t get enough. They’ll hire our students in a heartbeat and want 10 more.” The advanced Analytics for Accountants serves as a capstone for the IT and data track. Among the takeaways: learning to create a software “bot” that follows the instructions of the accountant and can perform better than 50 percent of the work previously done by humans.
Robb describes a world of opportunity. “We have to change to meet our clients’ needs,” he points out. Fifty-five thousand of my colleagues at PwC are being asked to learn digital technologies. We’re being purposely disrupted to become digitally fit. “PwC surveys state that 73 percent of all internal processes can be automated. This has a profound impact on our business as we are shifting the work of our associates to be focused on analysis and less on data collection and manipulation,” Robb continues. Their advanced digital training will give graduates more than a leg up, Robb predicts. “It will give them real-world experience that will let them leapfrog students from other accounting and finance programs at local colleges and universities.”
The standard equipment that now comes with the accounting major also includes mentorships and training in communications. While all students do internships — often finding their first jobs at the companies for which they are interning — they have the new option of mentorships with professionals in the accounting field. That arrangement lets the students follow a mentor through the day and talk less formally about the profession. Richards notes that about 120 Nichols students — evenly split between men and women — are majoring in accounting at Nichols, and that each will come away with extensive writing and presentation experience, a prerequisite nowadays for communicating the complexities of fraud and an almost unlimited amount of data.
All of which, says Robb, has turbocharged the Nichols accounting program. “We got four students hired at PwC this year, so Nichols is on the map,” he emphasizes. That’s one reason he wants his students in PDS to visit PwC later in term. “I need them to understand where the trend lines are going,” he says. “It’s changing so rapidly.”
“Most schools have built around the CPA vision, and we’re awesome at that, but the accounting world is much more complex.” –
Bryant Richards Program Chair, Accounting
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Lessons learned Nichols bids farewell to three veteran faculty members
by Susan Veshi
This spring Nichols College will see three of its longest tenured faculty — Jack Armstrong, Jeff Halprin and Libba Moore — retire. The sum of their service to Nichols — a combined 89 years — could be measured by the impressive array of courses delivered, committees chaired, research conducted, administrative posts held, and teaching awards garnered. But they prefer to focus on what really counts — their impact on students. Moore, who is finishing her 27th year at Nichols, says that being surrounded by a steady stream of 18 to 22 year-olds is always “fresh and energetic.” “Our whole purpose is to open their minds, help them think and develop perspective on their personal and professional lives,” she says. “We are engaged in a noble and important mission.” Prior to teaching, Moore worked in human resources for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for seven years. She was asked to develop the human resources specialization at Nichols, which she did in 2001 with assistance from Mary Trottier, associate professor of management, and has been chair of the program ever since. While Moore admits that many students stumble into HR accidentally, she finds the subject matter engaging, dynamic, and relevant. “It gives me the opportunity to challenge and inspire students, discussing issues so important today, such as immigration, sexual
harassment, religious freedom,” she says. “The job of the HR professional is to ensure a work climate that is open and inspirational and to find and develop good talent. We cover all of these issues through the lens of academics.” What is unique about the Nichols program, says Moore, is its strong and dedicated network of alumni, who frequently return to campus to help current students. Alumni, like Jennifer (Clark) Carabba ’03, are chiefly motivated to help out of their respect and admiration for Moore. “She was not only my academic advisor and professor, but has continued to be a lifelong trusted mentor,” offers Carabba, assistant vice president and employee relations manager at Middlesex Savings Bank. “She truly cares about her students from the time they enter her classroom and exposes them to real life business examples. She has coached me throughout my career and has been there for me every step of the way, whether discussing current HR events or a job change. I wouldn’t be where I am today without her guidance and inspiration.” Sentiments shared by Kevin Leary ’18, HR administrator for the Kraft Group & Affiliates: “Professor Moore created an interactive HR curriculum centered on relationship building and knowledge of the field. Her efforts prepared me for the professional world and contributed to what made my Nichols experience so rewarding.”
“Our whole purpose is to open their minds, help them think and develop perspective on their personal and professional lives.” – Professor Libba Moore
Like Moore, Armstrong began his career as a practitioner and sought to combine it with teaching. A CPA, he plied his trade at Arthur Young, one of the big 8 accounting firms
(now EY), and as an auditor for New York City Agencies and Authorities. Before Nichols, he served part-time posts at Fairleigh Dickenson University and Morris County Community College before signing on full time at Suffolk University. During his seven years at Suffolk, Armstrong taught part time at Nichols and joined the faculty full time in 1986. Armstrong’s educational philosophy — that learning is a lifelong endeavor — has actually shaped his own career. Throughout his tenure, he has kept a steady finger on the pulse of the accounting field. He is widely known for the more than 400 continuing professional education seminars he conducted, the consultation he provided for numerous CPA firms, the presentations he made in ten states and three countries, and the journal articles he authored, including an award-winning “How Auditors Get into Trouble and How to Avoid It.” Through these professional encounters, Armstrong estimates that he has assisted or directly placed more than 200 students in CPA firms and was able to organize 50 student field trips to business concerns and more than 40 professional dinners. His connections also allow him to keep tabs on many of his former students. “I get to see them again, maybe five years later, maybe 10, and I see how they are doing,” says Armstrong, who chaired the Accounting Program for 19 years. “I see some of them moving up the ladders and becoming partners at firms. It’s interesting to see them blossom from what they were when they were here to what they have become.” Students commend him for his guidance and support, even long after they leave Nichols. “I was privileged to work with Professor Armstrong both in and out of the classroom,” says Cynthia (Harmon) Ickes
books and being involved in the discussions.”
“With everything I do — watch TV, go to a movie, listen to music — some part of me thinks, ‘maybe this is something I’ll apply in class.’” – Professor Jeff Halprin CPA ’87, a financial manager. “He brought his professional experiences into the classroom giving students a chance to see the application of the theory he taught. In the professional world, his door was always open and he gave generously of his time.” Kevin Johnson CPA ’02 MBA ’04, who was recently named partner at O’Connor Maloney & Company, is impressed with Armstrong’s dedication to his students. “He has always been a valuable resource to me even long after I graduated,” he says, “and I have always looked forward to when he would invite me back to talk with the Accounting Club.” As an English professor at a business school, Halprin found an unlikely home at Nichols. Coming to the unknown Nichols in 1990 from the massive Michigan State, he proceeded with caution. “I assumed I wouldn’t be here long and would move on to some other school,” he says. “It turned out that Nichols fit really well with the kind of professor I wanted to be.” When he arrived, Nichols did not have an English major, and even when it did, the small numbers in the program meant his courses were still filled mostly with business students. “I really like working with students for whom the material was not the central focus of their life or career planning,” says Halprin, who chaired the department. “For these students, literature was something exciting, but they had no plan of going further in it. They just liked reading
At Nichols, Halprin also found fertile ground to explore teaching approaches and to grow in his understanding of pedagogy — a passion he shared not only with his Nichols colleagues, but also as president of the New England Faculty Development Consortium. As for his own teaching style, Halprin says that he regrets not being a better lecturer. “The few professors that I had as a student who were most memorable to me were great lecturers. I wish I could do that.” Caroline (Monroe) Teves ’12 disagrees with that assessment. “Jeff Halprin is one of the greatest instructors — so engaging, motivating and inspiring. He made a major impact on the teacher I became. I often tried to mimic the tone he was able to set in his classroom to motivate and inspire my own students the way he did for me,” says Teves, currently acting director of the Academic Resource Center at Nichols. Others remember Halprin for encouraging and empowering students. Chrissy (Savastano) Manzi ’92 was editor of the Bison newspaper when Halprin took over as advisor. “He had a way of supporting smart decisions while gently guiding us through less favorable ones,” recalls Manzi. “While I never felt he would let me undertake a risk too large, I always felt he gave me the freedom to explore my options enough to make my own conclusions.”
— his only immediate plans are to spend more time with his grandchildren and to be open to what’s next, whether it’s dabbling in carpentry for the needy or polishing a memoir on teaching that he began while on sabbatical three years ago. As for second — or is it third? — acts for his fellow retirees, Moore plans to return to her statehouse roots, perhaps to conduct tours as a way of promoting the “important foundational values of our country that are enshrined in the structure of our government: the ideas of democracy and open government, freedom and tolerance, and equality and justice for all.” She also hopes to reignite her love for figure and portrait drawing, which began in college. Armstrong, who has cut back on the number of professional seminars he gives to 12 to 15 a year, will continue to consult. He is also on the board of Unibank and an avid golfer who has marshalled at 15 PGA tournaments.
“It’s interesting to see [students] blossom from what they were when they were here to what they have become.” – Professor Jack Armstrong
In retirement, Halprin fears he may miss the mental stimulation of teaching. “With everything I do — watch TV, go to a movie, listen to music — some part of me thinks, ‘Maybe this is something I’ll apply in class.’ I wonder what I am going to do with that brain space,” he muses. He’ll have some time to figure that out
Whatever is next on the horizon for professors Moore, Armstrong, and Halprin, they will go with the gratitude of Nichols and the thousands of students they’ve inspired to expand their own.
alumni.nichols.edu
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AT H L E T I C S
The record-breaking run of Marcos Echevarria by Pete DiVito
The calendar denotes February 14 as Valentine’s Day, but for Nichols senior Marcos Echevarria, it’s the day after one of the most important wins of his basketball career, a 107-93 thumping of Gordon College that secured the No. 1 seed in the Commonwealth Coast Conference (CCC) Tournament for the men’s basketball team for the sixthconsecutive season. On the surface, it may appear that Echevarria has it all — the looks, the grades, the game — but not long after the program’s all-time leading scorer arrived on campus in August 2015, he began to wonder if he could play for one of the elite programs in the Northeast. “I called my dad after one of our first pickup games and said, ‘I’m not sure I
can play on this team. There are so many good players!’” he recalls. “When preseason started, I was on the second team doing everything I could to crack the rotation. Then, Gustave [Koumare] injured his knee and Coach [Tom] Glynn called my name. I was very surprised. Here I was, this quiet kid who didn’t talk and worked hard, stepping into the starting lineup. I scored 33 points in my first game, which was so surreal to me!” Now, more than 2,000 points later, Echevarria is leaving his mark as one of the best student-athletes — if not, the best — in school history. The son of Marcos, Sr. and Shirell Echevarria grew up idolizing the game of former NBA All-Star Latrell Sprewell, who was known for his cornrows, strong takes, and pull-up jumper. Today, Echevarria models his game after one of the most
“As far back as I can remember, I was always going to my dad’s practices. I would run on the sidelines and try to shoot with the guys. I owe all of my success to him.”
prolific scorers in NBA history, James Harden. “I really like his game, all the step-backs and crazy isolation moves.” Echevarria explains where his passion for the game of basketball developed: “My dad put the ball in my hands. He coached high school basketball at Lynn Classical. As far back as I can remember, I was always going to my dad’s practices. I would run on the sidelines and try to shoot with the guys. I owe all of my success to him.” Playing against the likes of future Detroit Piston Bruce Brown, UConn guard and American Athletic Conference POY candidate Jalen Brown, and Creighton student-athletes Kaleb Joseph and Jordan Scurry made Echevarria feel he could “play anywhere with anyone.” He grew four inches during his junior year in high school and, while he never ruled out playing at the Division I level, he felt confident that his skill set, combined with his grades, could earn him a partial scholarship at a Division II institution. “The recruiting process wasn’t what I hoped. Coaches always thought I was too small, which put a damper on my confidence,” says Echevarria. “I didn’t lift weights. My workouts were push-ups and pull-ups. I learned to use my speed to my advantage, to get into the paint and dish the ball to help my teammates get easy points.” Archrival Endicott was the first school that Echevarria visited, followed by stops at Wheaton and Clark. Then, Nichols came into the picture. “My dad suggested doing an overnight visit. Nichols was an up-and-coming program, and their win-loss record spoke for itself. He left it in my hands to decide and I felt Nichols was the best place for me.” Then-coach Glynn, now head coach at Rhode Island College, reflects on his recruitment of Echevarria: “As an
Photo: Brian Foley
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Nichols College Magazine
l Spring/Summer 2019
Photo: Brian Foley
assistant coach at UMass Lowell and MIT while Marcos was in high school, I was very much aware of his talent. I was able to watch him play numerous times in both high school and on the AAU circuit. He had the ability to really shoot the ball, pressure the ball on defense, and he was extremely competitive.” Coming off a devastating loss to Gordon in the conference championship game in 2014 and a stunning first-round exit at the hands of No. 8 seed University of New England the following year, Glynn felt Echevarria was the final piece to get the Bison over the playoff hump…and he did not disappoint. Echevarria led a veteran-laden squad in scoring as a freshman (18.9 ppg) and was named CCC Rookie of the Week five times. After scoring 33 in his collegiate debut against Becker College, he reached the 20-point mark 11 more times during the 2015-16 campaign, as the Bison rolled into the playoffs seeking to capture the championship
that had eluded them the previous two seasons. Facing the Endicott Gulls at Nichols in the CCC Semifinals on February 25, 2016, the Bison trailed by 19 points with 10:49 remaining in the contest. Facing a third-straight playoff failure, the Bison ripped off a 22-3 run over the next six minutes and knotted the game at 74. Then, trailing by three with one second remaining, Echevarria was fouled attempting a three-pointer, sending him to the line with the chance to send the game to overtime. “With the game on the line, I had a chance to make free throws that I usually hit,” says Echevarria. “I made the first, but when the second one went in and out, it broke my heart. I knew that I had to miss the next one, and we’d have to get the rebound and put it back up. Endicott tapped it out and I felt like I let everyone down. I took it to heart. Over the summer, that was my
motivation. Whenever I was tired, I thought back to how that season ended and that’s what got me through every workout. I kept telling myself, ‘Don’t let it happen again.’” Echevarria left the court that night with his jersey pulled over his face, tears streaming down his cheeks. The Bison, meanwhile, experienced a dramatic roster shift following that contest as three senior starters — Christian Horton, Gustave Koumare, and Irving Eggleston — passed the torch to a trio of talented freshman — DeAnte Bruton, Jerome Cunningham, and Tyler Dion. Suddenly, Echevarria was thrust into the role of team captain. “To get back to where we were and to get to where we wanted to be, I told the guys that no one was going to outwork us.” What followed was the most memorable season in program history. A sophomore, Echevarria was tabbed CCC Player of the Year after averaging a
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AT H L E T I C S
career-best 23.4 ppg. Playoff wins over UNE and Wentworth sent the Bison back to the championship game and set up a rematch with the Gulls. The Bison rallied from a seven-point deficit in the final 101 seconds to defeat Endicott and capture their first-ever CCC Championship. At the forefront of the comeback was Echevarria, who canned a pair of three-pointers, including the go-ahead basket with 13 seconds left. “I remember being at the free throw line, hanging my hands on my knees and looking up at the scoreboard thinking, ‘Down seven with one minute left….how are we going to do this?’” says Echevarria. “Jerome made two free throws, we got a stop, I made a three, and we called timeout. Now I’m thinking, ‘We have to get another stop!’ We went into our 2-2-1 press and the ball went out of bounds off me. Endicott called a timeout, and then we got a five-second call on the inbound pass. Suddenly, my mindset changed. We had done everything we could to get to within two [points], and now down two with the ball, there was no doubt in my mind that we were going to win.” Echevarria continues, “The first thing I did when the game ended was weave through the crowd and find my family. To be able to share that moment with them was surreal. I get goosebumps talking about it because I carried such a burden my back with the way my freshman year ended. When they handed me the trophy, the tears just came. When we cut the nets down, it felt like we’d won the national championship. It was the perfect ending to a perfect story for Nichols College.” What could Echevarria do for an encore in his junior year? His response: a second-straight CCC Player of the Year Award and another conference championship. “I didn’t work as hard as I wanted to after that first championship,” explains Echevarria. “I was in the gym when I could be, but I had an internship in Boston. I was a little bit satisfied.
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When I came back to campus, I just focused on being consistent both on and off the court. To be able to go back-toback and get back to the NCAA Tournament was a product of that consistency.” The 2018-19 campaign has seen a litany of records fall. On December 1, he became just the third student-athlete in program history to reach the 2,000point mark for his career. Less than one month later, he became the college’s alltime leading scorer. Echevarria scored the first basket of the game at Salve Regina on January 26 — a three-pointer — that gave him at least one triple in an NCAA-record 94 consecutive games spanning Divisions I, II, and III. Entering the conference tournament, Echevarria was poised to become the CCC’s alltime leading scorer and to finish in the Top five in Division III history in threepointers. He will also graduate as one of the Top 25 scorers in Division III history.
guided the Bison to the best start in program history this season (10-0). “He’s very driven and wants to win. When the lights are on, he’s going to show up. He’s a high-level shot maker at this level and will go down as one of the best shooters ever. He has a great feel for the game. He makes the right basketball play every time and makes his teammates better.”
Editor’s Note: After clinching its third straight CCC Championship with a win over Gordon College, the Bison advanced through the first round of the NCAA with a win over Middlebury College and to the Sweet 16 for the first time in school history with a win over Rowan University. They defeated no. 7 Amherst College to advance to the Elite 8 but suffered a loss to no. 6 Swarthmore College, 69-65.
When asked about his record-breaking feats, Echevarria is stymied, saying, “When I came to Nichols, I never, ever dreamed that I would be in this position. I didn’t think I would play. I hoped that by my sophomore year, I’d have a chance to show what I have. To be able to hold these records and break new ones…all I can say is, ‘Thank you’ to Nichols College, and ‘Thank you’ to all of the coaches that have helped me get to this point.” Echevarria is currently enrolled in the 4+1 program at Nichols and is interested in pursuing his Masters of Science in Accounting, his undergraduate major. “Basketball is in my head and I definitely want to see where that takes me after graduation,” he states. “But, I also really want to be a graduate assistant. I want to be able to help give kids the experience that coaches gave me. I want to pass my knowledge along.” “He’s an absolute gamer,” sums up Head Coach Scott Faucher, who took over for Glynn this past summer and
l Spring/Summer 2019
Photo: Mark Seliger
CLASS NOTES
1954 > 65th Reunion
1958
Marianne Gruskin, widow of Matt
Class Champion: Paul Price
Gruskin, would like to remind the
937-631-7649
class to send in their donations
pprice@woh.rr.com
for the Class of ’54 Scholarship
Florida, we attended a Nichols
I am still working diligently to get
gathering in Punta Gorda (a first)
a current roster of the Class of
and had an opportunity to meet
’63. Thanks to those who have
some wonderful alumni. On
responded to my emails, calls and
February 5th, we were able to
postcards. I still have a number
William Bolean says he is living
spend some special time with
of classmates to pursue. I will
Fund, which benefits a Nichols
in Atlantic Shores Retirement
then publish a list of folks that I
College student each year. She
President Susan Engelkemeyer
Community, “doing the best I can
and her husband Dave. It was nice
couldn’t find and, hopefully,
hopes everyone will participate,
to be able to meet with Dick and
someone out there will have a
so the scholarship will continue
with old used parts.”
Pam Makin, Hugo and Carol,
connection.
Duke MacNair ’66, Ken Beyer ’60,
I was finally able to get in touch
to benefit Nichols students in the future. This year’s scholarship recipient, Brooke Schlosser, is a
1959 > 60th Reunion
freshman who is studying sport
1962
management at Nichols and is
Class Champion: Charlie Howe
involved with the Campus
charleskatehowe@gmail.com
Activities Board.
609-494-5450
who sends a hello to his Conant
with Denny Kuvalanka. He has
buddies, and a host of other
lived in Tarpon Springs, FL, for
friends that we have made over
the past ten years. He stays busy
the years. President Engelkemeyer
playing senior softball four days a
gave us a State of the College
week and plays in tournaments
update. Bill Pieczynski and John
once a month. He works out
McClutchy Jr. ’72 filled us in on
twice a week with a personal
From John J. McCabe: “This year
I thought that I might start out by
I finally retired after working 54
clearing up some administrative
events and trustees, and Molly
trainer and does some traveling.
years as an attorney with the
matters. In our advanced years,
Thienel did a great job ensuring
In July, he’ll be off on a cruise
Treasury Department. It feels a
we seem to be regressing a bit
that everything ran smoothly.
that starts in Copenhagen and
little strange not to have a daily
when it comes to following
Add to all of this correspondence
tours the Baltic Sea with stops in
routine, but the upside is now I
through in our support of the
from Paul Zimmerman, Dick
Germany, Russia, Finland, Estonia
have time to smell the flowers
college. Not a good thing!
Knoener, John Turro, Bart
and Sweden. Stay healthy, Denny,
and do things normal retirees do.
When it came down to class
Henkle, and Rene Langevin,
and have a great time on your
My wife and I extend our best
participation, we have always
as well as Dave ’65 and Susan
cruise.
wishes to the entire Nichols
been in the top five. I am hoping
Lombard. The real bonus was a
family and wish you health and
that we can and will reverse what
call from my roommate Pete
happiness.”
appears to be an oversight, and
Whitney. Keep in touch….That’s
again take a leadership role,
what family is all about. Best to all!
1956 Art Fries is retiring from the role of class champion (formerly, class scribe). We thank him for the time and dedication he devoted to this volunteer role for many years!
whether you support the Nichols Fund, Conrad Society (bequest
Note: A warm welcome to Danny Tomassetti '64 as class
(athletics) Club. There was a time
champion. Would you believe
(long ago) when the college was
that the champions for the
If you are interested in serving as
College. During the past six
the class champion for the Class
months, I must say that I've never
of ’56, please contact Jillian
felt closer to Nichols.
Riches, alumni engagement manager, at 866-622-4766. Wayne “Tom” Keith reports: “Barbara and I celebrated our 55th wedding anniversary on July 13 by taking our son’s family on a
problems lately but, as usual, Ross has blown right through the college contacted him to let
scholarships, or the Bison
to be supportive of Nichols
experiencing some medical
them and is doing well. Recently,
Charlie
through your estate), endowed
there for us; now it is time for us
Ross Chambers has been
classes of ’62, ’63, and ’64 all played on the same lacrosse team together! Bison Pride!
1963
Kate and I, following a visit
Class Champion: Art Tozzi
with Hugo ’63 and Carol Pagliccia
3710 Marion Court N
on Nantucket, attended
Wilson, NC 27896
Homecoming on the Hill, and
252-291-7020
along the way visited with Henri
toz1369@earthlink.net
Ross Chambers enjoys an outing with the women’s basketball team in Washington state.
David ’64. When we returned to
Caribbean Christmas cruise out of Port Everglades, FL.”
1957 Class Champion: Kent Tarrant (413) 566-5130 kent100@charter.net
Please send your news directly to your class champion. If you do not have a class champion, news may be forwarded to classnotes@nichols.edu. Digital images are preferred, but please do not crop them! The higher the resolution the better — 300 dpi (dots per inch) is best. Digital images may be sent directly to the Alumni Relations Office classnotes@nichols.edu. Prints may be sent to: Nichols College, Alumni Relations Office, P.O. Box 5000, Dudley, MA 01571.
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CLASS NOTES
Ted Shephard is wintering
Just found out this week that Bill
in Florida for a couple of
Wurtz passed away in September
months and then will be
2018. Our prayers are with the
returning home to
Wurtz family.
Newburyport, MA. After Nichols, Ted got into the Alumni gather in Myrtle Beach, including Art Tozzi ’63, Chris Barroso ’08, Lauren McGinn ’05, David Doe ’64, Warren ’64 and Lila Bender, and Bruce ’63 and Connie Siegal.
insurance business in his hometown, got married, and later started working in real estate with Hunneman & Co. He rose
him know that the women’s
to senior VP and a part owner of
Tom Niles had knee surgery a year ago and is still experiencing difficulty moving around. On top of that he had two more surgeries for other problems and is still recuperating. Please keep Tom in your prayers and,
Don Kraft, Art Tozzi and Bry Beeson in Munich, circa 1962.
hopefully, 2019 will be a better
basketball team would be playing
the company, retiring about 10
Seattle Pacific and Pacific
years ago. Ted said he still “tickles
Lutheran in Tacoma, WA. Ross
the ivories” like he used to at
Spoke to Bob Therrien. Sadly,
year. Get well quick, Tom.
Austria, Italy, Switzerland, and France. That was followed by an ocean voyage aboard a
beat feet over there wearing his
Nichols and has been a Rotarian
Bob’s wife of 50 years passed
Nichols soccer hat and carrying
for the past 35 years. Up until
away in 2012. He now winters in
his ’63 Ledger yearbook. He
recently, he was a skier and
Myrtle Beach and spends his
joined the girls for dinner at the
power boater and, when not
summers at his cottage in Wells,
Seattle Center. The kids loved it
involved in those endeavors,
Maine. Bob is very active, playing
and Ross had his picture taken
loves to spend time with his son
tennis and golf two and three
with the team. The photo made
and daughter and four grandkids.
times a week. He said he has
the girls’ day, but Ross said it
Good talking to you, Ted, and
recently been playing golf once a
really made his day. His comment
glad all is well.
year with Bob Sanford ’65 and
Gene couldn’t make the Naples
Paul Zimmerman ’62 at a course
reunion this year because he was
was that they are all wonderful
Bob Sharp has moved from
women and they’re all Bison!
Connecticut to the Palm Beach
February. I was the overnight
the racing business but is still
guest of Bruce and Connie Siegal.
involved in a teenager driver
Thank you for your hospitality
safety program. Bob mentioned
and it was great catching up with
that his son Scott, who most will
you. (As I was driving south on I-
remember was an Indy car driver
95, I called Bruce and reported
for many years, has now retired
that “Bitchin Betty” says I’ll be
from active racing. All will
Gene Cenci sent me a picture,
there at 12:30. Bruce said, “Oh,
remember sitting on the hairpin
which he had gotten from Pete
even more snow, but he and Millie
Some live in Wells so he gets to
escaped it for a while by visiting
see them often. The remainder of
the grandkids in San Diego. Since
the family lives in Kenosha, WI,
being back, he’s been doing
and he gets to see them for a
some skiing and snow biking.
week or so during Christmas.
Pete said they’re not as fast as
Great to hear from you, Bob.
they used to be, but still trying. Bry Beeson said they got the
you’re bringing your wife?” I
turn at Thompson Raceway on a
Smith, of Don Kraft, Bry Beeson
beautiful spring day watching
and me at the Haufbrau Haus in
was my GPS.) We gathered at
Bob race his Bug-Eyed Sprite and
Munich, circa 1962, on Dr. Nath’s
Tupelo Honey in Myrtle Beach for
his Lotus. As I remember, there
first European study tour. It’s
cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, and
was always a big cooler, probably
obvious how studious we look.
dinner.
filled with Gatorade or Mountain
We traveled England, Belgium,
Dew, to combat the heat and
Holland, Denmark, Germany,
more about Nichols’ past, present
most snow and he was out with his tractor plowing. He said he is feeling much better; he’s finished all his treatments and is on maintenance. Bry, you’re in our prayers. Finally, I spoke to Peter Brusman, who is much farther south in Virginia but then, it doesn’t take much snow to bury
dust. There were also the Camel
Buddha. He’s been very helpful in
cigarette ads, “The Exciting Life
trying to locate and provide
of Bob Sharp, Race Car Driver”
current information on some of
on the back covers of Post and
our classmates. Thanks, Buddha.
Life magazines. Bob, thanks for the great weekends at the track.
and future than did our beloved
gotten a master’s degree.
grandkids keep him on the run.
explained that “Bitchin Betty”
reach their goals. She knows
weeks and we could at least have
Five grandkids and five great-
weather down there. He’s out of
how it is helping young adults to
ocean crossing took, but it wasn’t long enough. A couple more
buried up to his hindquarters in
evening in Myrtle Beach in
college — where it’s going and
remember exactly how long the
snow. Pete Smith said they got
area and is enjoying the warm
As usual, Molly Thienel provided
were studying so hard, I can’t
around Lake Winnipesaukee.
We had a fantastic Nichols
her exceptional brief on the
French liner, The Flandre. We
Talked with Bob Donovan recently, who, you will remember
Col. Conrad. Thanks so much,
Bob was recently interviewed for
was the first Mayor of Dudley Hill.
Molly, for your professionalism
an upcoming Nichols College
He now resides in Sarasota, FL.
and dedication to Nichols. Also,
podcast episode at his new
Bob said that in his junior year he
thanks for the golf balls. If I lose
home, and is pictured at right
conducted a project with human
one (highly unlikely), it could be
with his wife Carol.
resources at American Optical
found by a future Nichols student.
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Nichols College Magazine
l Spring/Summer 2019
that he turned in to Dean Leach
Working hard, playing hard Paul Blasewitz ’87
Whether he’s attending a Nichols
MSP was established in 2000 and is
reunion in Florida or attending a
the leading manufacturer for self-
Nichols home basketball game, Paul
fusing silicon tape and other specialty
Blasewitz ’87 stands out in a crowd
products. Silicon tape is a versatile
of Bison. His 6’5” height advantage
product used in aerospace, telecom,
didn’t hurt his athletic career on the
and electrical utilities. MSP supplies
Hill either.
the product to top retailers, such as
Blasewitz came to Nichols from
Home Depot.
Wallingford, Conn., with an interest in
He says what he enjoys most about the
studying business but a desire to
job is “working with our customers to
continue playing basketball. He was a
achieve their goals, our team, and
scoring leader for his team and
having the freedom to work from
became the college’s ninth 1,000-point
wherever I want to live.” For Blasewitz,
scorer during his senior season.
that means splitting his time between
This past November, Blasewitz came back to campus for the first time in almost ten years. He watched the conference champion men’s basketball team play in his old gym in the renovated athletics center and couldn’t help but marvel at the improvements
his home in the Old Oakland area of Indianapolis and a condo in Estero, Fla. Both residences are on golf courses, which suits him just fine, as he traded in his basketball sneakers for golf cleats years ago. He recently enjoyed playing the links in Ireland.
and changes. “We had a few different
In his free time, Blasewitz also enjoys
coaches, played only half the games
cooking, live music, boating and travel
that are played today. There was no
with friends, whom he hosts at both of
conference, no championship, and NO
his homes throughout the year. He has
weight room!” he says. But, the
invested time in real estate and
prominent reminder of his proud
renovations, recently in his newest
accomplishments — his name on the
property in Indy. “I’d like to retire in the
staying in line academically and
1,000-point scorer banner — remains
next ten years,” says Blasewitz, and
socially,” Blasewitz asserts.
the same.
plans to maintain his split-year lifestyle
In an article written about Blaze at the
eye on me and made sure I was
in the two states.
time of his 1,000-point record-
sales position with Starter, a premium
“Blaze,” as he is known to his Nichols
breaking achievement in 1987, the
athletic brand, after graduation. In
classmates and friends, counts Bison
author describes him as, “the type of
1992, he was relocated to Indianapolis,
from the classes of ’86 and ’87 among
person who will give you everything he
Ind., a place he has called his home
his close friends for over 30 years.
has got, on court and off.” Blasewitz
ever since. His career took him from
From his days on the Hill, he fondly
still embodies that Bison spirit today,
Starter, Reebok, and Under Armor to
remembers Professor John Katori and
as someone who works hard, plays
an opportunity to work for a friend’s
the campus jobs he held, as a public
hard, and supports his alma mater.
business.
safety dispatcher and in the dining
A management major, Blasewitz took a
Today, Blasewitz is the senior director at that company, Midsun Specialty Products, Inc. Located in Berlin, Conn.,
hall. Herb Durfee, the beloved public
– Molly Thienel
safety director at Nichols for 23 years, was also very influential. “Herb kept an
alumni.nichols.edu
l Nichols College Magazine
17
CLASS NOTES
for credit. American Optical liked his work and hired him after
Driving his own path
graduation. Vietnam was in full
Andrew Frydryk ’10
swing so Bob joined the Army Reserves. After training at Fort Dix, he spent his active duty time at Fort Jay on Governor’s Island. After completing his active duty time, AO sent him to Cincinnati for a management training program. He was assigned to sales for Cincinnati and eastern Kentucky and in his spare time enrolled in the MBA program at Xavier University. Promotions moved him to Atlanta and put the MBA program on hold. While there, he was approached by Wesley Jessen, contact lens manufacturer, to move to Miami and become manager for the state of Florida. Bob, still single, said, “Oh, don’t throw me in that briar patch” and beat feet for Miami. Later he decided to return to Georgia and pursue his MBA at the U of GA. He met Lisa, the girl of his dreams and, two weeks later, they were engaged. Two years later their son Matt was born. On June 7th they will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary. While in graduate school, Bob got a job working as the administrative assistant to the Mayor of Greenville, SC. He thinks it was because his resume indicated he was the Mayor of Dudley Hill. He was later recruited by Metropolitan Life and was fast tracked up through the insurance business ranks. Later, a friend who was VP of the number two Fraternal Life Insurance Company hired him to be their director of recruiting for the U.S. That led to his promotion to be in charge of insurance sales for the U.S. and Canada. Bob retired from business in 1998 and wrote a book, “Whatever Happened to Dick and Jane.” Four years ago, he and Lisa returned to her home of Sarasota, which he said is paradise.
18
Nichols College Magazine
For over six years, Andrew Frydryk ’10 has pursued a career in program and project management for a global consulting firm. His latest endeavor, focused around cybersecurity, has allowed him to develop a foundation of skills critical to the rapidly evolving technology sector. Based in Washington, D.C., Frydryk works with his clients daily to minimize risk and issues and helps monitor threats and system vulnerabilities within their networks and infrastructure. “What I like best in my current role is that I’m always learning. My workforce is considered an ‘emerging market’ and with that, comes unchartered territory. I get to be part of a group that drives a path of setting cyber policy and standards that is such an important topic in today’s day and age.” As an undergraduate, Frydryk was an active member of student life, working as an admissions ambassador, a tutor for the Academic Resource Center, and even had the opportunity to work with the school’s marketing department, helping to produce some promotional videos. “I liked the idea of a smaller school where you could get to know your peers and professors,” he says. “Even if it meant during 8 a.m. Friday morning accounting classes (Hi, Professor Behrens).” After graduating as a Nichols marketing major in 2010, he gained some early professional experience as an admissions counselor at the college, where he was able to meet with students interested in attending Nichols. Traveling and recruiting prospective students in and around the mid-Atlantic was a beneficial step in the next stage of his professional career. He took an opportunity in Washington, D.C., at a recruiting company, staffing recent college graduates within various consulting firms. His observations of the high demand of young professionals within a growing city encouraged Frydryk to apply for a role as a technical analyst.
l Spring/Summer 2019
Frydryk started as a technical writer documenting system operating procedures. As time progressed, he started working with his management team to create plans that overviewed system design, security, incident response, risk, contingency and configuration, which allowed for a basic road map on project management and how systems are designed and deployed. Outside of work, Frydryk enjoys visiting all of the sites, museums and up-and-coming neighborhoods D.C. has to offer. “D.C. really is a great place for starting your career. There are people from all over the world here who come from completely different backgrounds and have their own stories.” As time allows, Frydryk enjoys travel. Though Frydryk is transitioning into his recent promotion to manager and new residence in the Eckington neighborhood of D.C., he has plans to continue his education through professional certifications in system security and project management in the near future. “Although D.C. is a transient place, the connections you make are sustained, just like Nichols.” So, no matter where the road takes him, he will always have company.
– Molly Thienel
Bob said he would like to
times the size as I recall. However,
1965
whiskey, unfortunately, is not
thank all his classmates at Nichols for giving him the
Class Champion: Jack MacPhail
opportunity to be Mayor of
503-227-2761
stayed only to finish our drinks;
Dudley Hill. That, and the
jackmacphail1@gmail.com
15 minutes later we were off to
Justinian Council, helped
Rick Blankley shared a memory
him acquire a degree of
of Sneaky Pete’s, the bar at the
social mobility that one cannot pick up by just reading a book or going
Rick also notes that another old frequently visited spot during the
spot around for bourbon on the
’60s, Main Lunch, no longer exists
rocks, about 50 cents a pop.
in Webster. “Progress sucks!”
Richard Zarzecki lives in
For the remainder of my career
old (about our age now) and
Port St. Lucie, FL. After
I was in school supply sales and
either fast asleep or drunk as
graduation, he worked for PMM in
did national new product shows
skunks. One night, Dave Bates
New York City and then for
with manufacturers of various art
and I, feeling sorry for ourselves
Certainly not fancy; most of the few customers at the bar were
several companies as assistant
supplies, early childhood
being without dates, decided
controller. In 1973, he bought a
products etc. to all of the major
to drown our misery as
bakery in Worcester, MA, and ran
school supply distributors and
economically as possible at
it for about 20 years. He now
their retail outlets along the East
Sneaky Pete's. We were still
works as a business broker, listing
Coast and eastern Canada.
nursing our first when, low and
and selling businesses in Florida.
1964 > 55th Reunion
the booze is actually cheaper.”
at Nichols that was the cheapest
“Y’all come see us, here!”
as they say in the South,
our hotel in Southbridge, where
bottom of the Hill: “I recall while A group of 1963 classmates reunited at the President’s Society Dinner in October: from left, Tom Niles, Art Tozzi, Al Rock and Peter Brusman.
to class. Thanks again and
50 cents a pop but now $6. We
behold, a large bus pulls up in the I am lucky to have an incredible
parking lot and who walks in but
family. My son Dan Jr., his wife
The Brothers Four with their
Rick enjoyed a lunch with Geof Meyer. He and his wife Lynn live in Amelia Island, FL, where Rick and Mary Ellen spend the majority of their winters. He is retired from Dow Jones. “Geof looks great (still sports his full red hair, actually a few grey strands here and there),” reports Rick. “We spoke of the old college days and the Nichols of today. He is in good health, and enjoys his children and grandchildren who visit Amelia often.”
Jane and my 15 year-old
Class Champion: Daniel Tomassetti
entourage. They stayed about
granddaughter live in Minnesota. I
413-567-0085
15 minutes. Each had a beer and
get to see them two to three
Dave Lombard, and Henry St.
papa.wadur@gmail.com
picked up several six packs for
times a year. I am a charter
the road. They talked with us and,
Cyr ’66 (photo below) were
member of the local chapter of
for a short moment, Dave and I
spotted at a Nichols College
UNICO, the largest Italian service
formed new friends.”
men’s basketball tournament in
My name is Dan Tomassetti, and I’d like to introduce myself as your new class scribe, or class champion as they are now calling it! First, I’d like to thank Warren Bender for an incredible job keeping us all connected and informed of each other’s lives. I have enjoyed reading his class note submissions. Tough job to follow Warren, but I’d love to keep the momentum alive that he created with us! I’ll start…a brief update on what I’ve been up to since 1964: After Nichols College, I was off to the
organization in the U.S. I love After the homecoming football
enjoying our place in R.I. at Dunes
game this fall, Rick and his wife
Park Beach. I also keep myself
Mary Ellen visited Sneaky Pete’s
busy with all my hobbies! I love
for old time sake. “What a
outside gardening; I have 35
difference 50 some odd years
potted plants out in the
make! It is now known as
spring/back to sunroom in the
Yummy’s, a Chinese restaurant
fall. I started and still make wine
that still has a bar. On this
After being contacted by friends
after 12 years.
Saturday night, the place was
Dwight Gessewein ’67 and Bill
I keep in contact with former
pecollins10@aol.com
packed, mostly couples of all
Fredericks ’67, George Preisner
ages. The joint is probably four
sent in the following: “After
and roommate Bill “Buff” Bufalino.
updates; I can’t wait to read
Co., in the order and customer
them!
I then left to be the marketing
Class Champion: Phil Collins 703-627-9924
David, Phil “Meatball” Donnelly,
I encourage you to send along
department assistant manager.
1966
classmates, Henri “Frenchman”
late ’70s, I was at Milton Bradley
supervisor/educational sales
Springfield during winter break.
clamming, fishing, relaxing,
workforce. From the ’60s to the
service department, as a
Lew Gelman, Jim Robinson,
Wishing you all the best! I hope to see you this fall for our 55th reunion!
manager at Riverside Park in Agawam, MA.
alumni.nichols.edu
l Nichols College Magazine
19
CLASS NOTES
graduation, I went to work at my
1973
father and uncle’s pewter and
anniversary. Also, on March 10 we
High Hall of Fame. He serves as
were blessed with our fifth
chief operating officer and chief
silver holloware company. I then
Class Champion: Jay Reese
found a job at Travelers Insurance
(508) 359-7862
Co. in Hartford, in group
Jay.reese@verizon.net
1981
Gregory Pogue received the
Bryan Morrissey
underwriting, which wasn’t for me. I worked at Lux Box Green & Stevens Jewelers (now Lux Bond & Green) and started my own small jewelry store in 1969.
1988
Honorary Doctorate of Humane
notes: “We
Class Champion:
recently hired a
Diane Golas
230th commencement exercises
former Nichols
spongedicat@aol.com
on May 5, 2018.
athlete, Chris
1974 > 45th Reunion
factory. I became closer in touch with Dwight Gesswein, whose
financial officer at the Shepard Group in South Windsor.
Letters from Becker College at its
I eventually opened another store and my own pewter holloware
granddaughter (no grandsons).”
1975
family owned Gesswein Co.,
Silvia ’18. His parents and Nichols College did a great job raising him up.
supplying tools and equipment to
He and I are separated by 35
the metal-working and jewelry
years, but we both have great
industry. I also had the pleasure
memories of our time on the Hill!”
of working with fellow classmate
Chuck DeCoste won reelection as a selectman in Littleton, MA.
1989 > 30th Reunion 1991 Class Champion: Donna Small 336-692-5157
Brad Babb, who was a giftware
1983
representative for the Peisner Silver Co. and Connecticut House
Class Champion: Michael Donehey
of Pewter and then the George S.
mdonehey@live.com
Preisner Co. It is so much fun and
Marc Emmi met with Development
brings back memories of how my
Director Brent Broszeit in Fort
experience at Nichols would
Lauderdale, FL, where he lives
influence my life. I am now in the
when not in Maine. Marc is the
Rosario “Ross” Bacarella,
semi-retirement phase and take
senior vice president of sales at
president and CEO of BTX Global
care of my personal customers at
Starbrite. He looks forward to
Logistics, won this year’s Top
reconnecting with Nichols
Leadership award for small
both factory and store. Feel free to
dsmall9242000@yahoo.com
1992 Class Champion: Keith Hofbeck
1984 > 35th Reunion
contact me at gspreisner@aol.com
classmates and former lacrosse
employers in Hearst Connecticut
or 203-376-1534 (cell).”
teammates.
Media’s Top Workplaces. BTX now
khofbeck@comcast.net
has 28 regional offices throughout
1976
1969 > 50th Reunion Class Champion: Robert “Kuppy” Kuppenheimer rkuppy@gmail.com
the country and employs 350 people with about 100 based at
Mike Ehlers and his daughter
Peter Coyle was inducted into
the Shelton, CT, headquarters,
Samantha, and Cliff and Donna
the Massachusetts Baseball
providing air, ground and sea
Whynott and their daughter
Coaches Association Hall of
services, warehouse fulfillment,
Lauryn, met up for dinner in
Fame. At his time at St. Peter-
and e-commerce services.
Ipswich, MA. They've stayed
Gil Rochon reports: “My wife and
Marian High School, he has
I recently completed a trip to
amassed 270 victories and a
South Africa. It was the best trip
70 percent winning ratio over
yet! We will also spend the winter
19 seasons; team winning records;
Class Champion: John Donahue
in Florida this year.”
MIAA Division I Tournament in
609-257-8717
18 seasons; Central Massachusetts
Johndonahue1234@gmail.com
1972
Conference title seven times;
friends since their Nichols days
1985
1986
Class Champion: Mark Alexander
appearances and championships.
mark1alex12@gmail.com
Class Champion: Susan Zimonis
He was a three-sport career
561-707-8781
Mark Alexander reports: “I have
coach for 27 years.
susanzimonis@bellsouth.net
Care.com, the world’s largest online platform for finding and managing family care, as senior vice president of sales for Care@Work, the company’s
five grandsons. On December 31, we got a granddaughter. Finally a
1979 > 40th Reunion
1987
enterprise arm. He most recently served as senior vice president
princess!”
1980
Nichols College Magazine
1993 Matthew B. O’Connor has joined
and District E Division finals
20
and often get together with former classmates.
Tom Kirby, a 1996-inductee in the
and general manager at Monster
Nichols College Athletic Hall of
Worldwide. During the course of
Jim Lyons reports: “Lori and I just
Fame for baseball, was recently
his 17-year tenure at Monster, he
celebrated our 40th wedding
inducted in the Rockville (CT)
held a variety of executive
l Spring/Summer 2019
positions across multiple business
2003
areas, including enterprise, staffing, healthcare, SMB sales,
Class Champion:
software and e-commerce.
Jillian (Hayes) Smerage
2012
Jnhayes80@gmail.com
1994
> 25th Reunion
Richard Burke Jr.
Jenn Pepe reports: “In October,
Class Champion:
after eight years of working for
Danielle (Troiano) Sprague
the Webster Public Schools, I
thedwoman@yahoo.com
Jennifer Hess and were married on August 8, 2018, surrounded by
began a new position with the
Bison friends and
Central Massachusetts
1998
family.
Collaborative as a special
Class Champion: Emily (Seiferman) Alves Millie.176@hotmail.com
education creative reading and writing teacher at Central Mass Academy in Worcester. I am working with students who have
Anthony Osimo MBA was named
social/emotional disabilities, and I
director of operations at Quality
am currently pursuing a master's
Beverage LP, Taunton division.
degree in special education
He previously worked at National
at American International
DCP, where he served as director
College.
of operations for its northeast distribution center based in
2004 > 15th Reunion
1999 > 20th Reunion 2000 Class Champion: Andrea Sacco Andrea.j.Sacco@gmail.com
2001
every day so much so that I convinced the Alumni Relations
2010
Office to give me a volunteer role! I will be helping as the class
Class Champion: Katelyn Vella katelyn.vella@yahoo.com
champion for 2013. Be on the lookout for some outreach emails from me in the near future! I can't
2011
wait to hear all about where you
Class Champion:
are in life!
Alexandria Hallam
Bellingham, serving 2,600 Dunkin’ Donuts locations.
2009 > 10th Reunion
2005 Class Champion:
aliemchal@gmail.com
Melissa Jackson
2012
msmeljackson@gmail.com
Bryan Riley was named
2006
2014 > 5th Reunion
basketball coach at Nashoba Regional.
Class Champion: Erica Boulay
Previously, he was the
erica.boulay@hotmail.com
basketball coach at Marlborough High School
2007
Class Champion: David Twiss Class Champion: Meaghan Larkin
978-979-7658 David.twiss14@gmail.com Michael Farina was re-elected as a city councilman in Cranston, RI.
meaglark@gmail.com Matthew Burke MBA was named athletic director at Fitchburg
and an assistant coach Ryan Finnegan and Hayley
at WPI.
Cunningham were married on
2013
October 12, 2018. Joining in the
Class Champion: Ryan Flavin
Michela Purdon ’16, Brian Girard,
celebration were, from left, rtflavin@gmail.com
Ryan Finnegan, Chris Giacalone,
served as the athletic director at
Hello, Fellow 2013 Bison! Things
Tom Haggerty ’13, Chelsea
Mount Ida College for eight years.
are going well in the Flavin
Rafferty, Matt McGue.
Kevin Johnson MBA ’04 was
At FSU, he will be responsible for
household. All three children are
named partner at O’Connor,
administering 17 varsity sports,
married and making awesome
Maloney & Co., a Worcester area
350 athletes and over 50 staff
memories! Sabrina Palanza
Class Champions:
members.
and I were
Andrew Haas and Mike Ricci
State University. He previously
2002
certified public accounting firm. He joined the firm
married on
2008
andrewhaas3@gmail.com
October 6,
michaeljamesricci@gmail.com
Class Champion: Nicole Curley
2018. We
nsc3129@gmail.com
just bought
in 2014 after more than 10 years in public accounting, and has spent his career
2015
2017
a house in John Curley was
Class Champion: Nicole Labrack
Mansfield
njlabrack13@verizon.net
providing tax, accounting and
named head coach
and are
consulting services to a variety of
for the Medford
currently in the middle of a home
industries.
Mustangs football
renovation project so if you are
team at Medford
living nearby give me a shout! I
High School.
miss the time we had on the Hill
alumni.nichols.edu
l Nichols College Magazine
21
CLASS NOTES
A digital space odyssey Alex Cifone ’13
When Alex Cifone graduated from Nichols College in 2013, she packed her things and moved to New York City. Now, she’s on the move again, this time to Sydney. In the interim, Cifone has become no stranger to packing. As project manager for Tigerspike, a global digital services organization, she has embarked on a travel odyssey that has taken her to three continents, including her newly adopted homeland of Australia. Her first job in New York City was a recruiting coordinator for Align, an IT company, working with applicants and new hires. When her team adopted a new recruiting software, Cifone was put in charge of system setup and company training. That led to her next gig at Tigerspike, and “the start of my career in the digital space,” she states. The opportunity to travel soon followed when Tigerspike, which utilizes a global resourcing model, placed Cifone with an office in Singapore. She spent two and a half months there during which she enjoyed travel on the weekends to Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam, exclaiming, “It was an amazing experience, and I’m so glad I accepted it!” Last May, she flew to Dubai for five weeks, for a website redesign project for Emirates Airlines. Beyond the work, the trip offered a unique cultural perspective for Cifone, who was there during the Muslim observance of Ramadan, a monthlong period of fasting. “Restaurants were either closed or eating in public was extremely limited out of respect for those who were fasting,” she relates. “Work days were shortened and families spent their time at home
22
Nichols College Magazine
until breaking fast.” A highlight for Cifone was a visit to Abu Dhabi and the Grand Mosque. “During the tour, I was told that many mosques only welcome Muslims, so this was one of the few I was able to step foot in, and it was absolutely stunning!” she says. This past September, Cifone was sent to Sydney for six weeks, outsourced as project manager for GrainCorp, one of Tigerspike’s biggest clients there. She returned in mid-November for another project with GrainCorp. That’s when she decided to move to Sydney for a year or two. The why? “Well, why not?” she poses. The experience will give her access to interesting projects and strategic partnerships with companies such as Apple and SAP Software. “It is a big move that I definitely was not planning, but I say now is the time to do it and I would be silly to not take advantage of this opportunity.” In April, Cifone was scheduled to pack up her Brooklyn apartment, awaiting a visa approval and “a one-way ticket back to my future home.” Despite her recent globetrotting, Cifone is still rooted to Nichols and in touch with a few of her professors for advice and career support. She praises the Professional Development Seminar, the four-year course that enhances career readiness. “I still remember my first interview when I brought my portfolio…and my interviewer telling me how impressive it was to see samples of work and my internship experience,” she says. “Made me feel so proud to be a Bison.” She also credits her marketing seminar with Professor Len Harmon for the experience of working with real
l Spring/Summer 2019
clients to deliver a business improvement plan. Cifone, who played singles and doubles for the women’s tennis team and served as a student ambassador and office assistant in Graduate and Professional Studies, urges current students to take full advantage of every opportunity Nichols has to offer, especially internships and any type of job experience. “Sometimes you may not get the job you want when you first graduate, but that is okay,” she advises. “Build your resume and take in all the learnings you can, because it may present a career you would have never considered!” – Susan Veshi
NICHOLS REMEMBERS
❖ John
E. Bent ’48, of Watertown, MA, October 16, 2018.
❖ Robert
B. David Sr. ’49, of Webster, MA, and Melbourne, FL,
December 28, 2018. ❖ Gilbert
W. Parks ’52, of Clearwater, FL, December 11, 2018.
Kenneth A. Cantley ’57, of Ozark, AL, January 16, 2019. ❖ Rene
L. Fontaine ’58, of Gardner, MA, October 26, 2018.
W.K. Read Dickinson ’60, of Yarmouth, ME, December 4, 2018. ❖ William
C. Watson ’61, of Fort Lauderdale, FL, November 19, 2018.
O’Neil T. Mills ’61, of West Paris, ME, December 7, 2018. William S. Edmunds ’62, of Burlington, VT, January 1, 2019. Stanley Urban ’63, of Lauderdale Hill, FL, April 7, 2018. ❖
William S. Cleary ’63, of San Antonio, TX, September 17, 2018.
William W. Wurtz ’63, of Cutchogue, NY, September 7, 2018. ❖
David Anderson ’65, of Scarborough, ME, October 8, 2018.
Barry B. Segal ’65, of Lake Grove, NY, April 2018. John “Jay” F. Sayers ’68, of Conshohocken, PA, September 7, 2018. ❖
Robert H. Burns ’69, of Largo, FL, November 9, 2018.
Steven W. Macdonald ’69, of Agawam, MA, November 4, 2018. Stephen V. Roy ’72, of East Falmouth, MA, January 9, 2019. Roland D. Lamothe ’76, of Middletown, CT, October 7, 2018. Robin B. Menard ’82, of Lowell, MA, September 24, 2018. Athas Tsongalis MBA ’85, of Worcester, MA, December 20, 2018. Jeffery J. Pizzetti ’86, of El Cajon, CA, July 8, 2017. Kevin R. O’Neill MBA ’01, of Franklin, MA, September 16, 2018. ❖Arthur
J. Remillard Jr. DBA (Hon.) ’14, of Boca Raton, FL,
November 28, 2018.
Faculty/Staff ❖
Frederick Bacon, of Worcester, MA, former maintenance superintendent, January 18, 2019.
Katherine Condos, of Dudley, MA, former dining services staff, January 8, 2019. Albert H. Grudzinskas Jr., of Charlton, MA, former soccer coach, September 15, 2018. Jeffrey G. Hunter, of Jamestown, RI, former faculty member, December 28, 2018. John R. Suroviak, of Forest Grove, OR, former accounting professor, December 31, 2018. ❖
Denotes service in the United States military
kNichols College volunteer
alumni.nichols.edu
l Nichols College Magazine
23
Charlie Howe ’62: Bison Pride
Charlie Howe is pictured front and center with the N Club.
Some of you may know Charlie Howe for his folksy and fraternal prose as the Class of ’62 scribe for Nichols College Magazine. In his columns, Howe reports on the happenings of his classmates, providing lively, caring, and informative updates that are infused with his immense pride for his alma mater and its accomplishments. (He often signs off with “Bison Pride.”) He also never misses an opportunity to needle his readers about showing their love for Nichols in the form of financial contributions. As a donor for more than 50 years — since graduating in 1962 — Howe has been a model of support. It was no surprise, then, when he took his giving to the next level by joining the Colonel Conrad Society, individuals who have documented a bequest to Nichols through their estate plans.
then had “two great years” in Budleigh Hall. ”It was here that I made lifelong friendships,” he reflects. “Many, like myself, had something to prove, others to rekindle their educational experiences. We all were determined to make the most of the challenges and opportunities that college had to offer.” Howe played football and lacrosse, and was a proud member of the N Club, comprising lettered athletes who rallied behind all Bison teams and encouraged the participation of all students in both social and intramural activities on campus. He has been a devoted alumnus and volunteer ever since. “As we slide down the banister of life,” he says, “we will at some point reflect on our Nichols experience, and more
Like many of his classmates, Howe enjoyed navigating the business world for over 20 years following college, then made the move to the Jersey Shore, where, until he retired, sold real estate and managed the Surf City Yacht Club. He and his wife Kate still reside on the Jersey Shore for half of the year (the other half in Punta Gorda, Fla.). He fondly recalls his days at Nichols, which started, he says, “where many good stories start.” He lived in Conant Hall
24
Nichols College Magazine
l Spring/Summer 2019
than likely, end up with a smile on our face. I know I do!” Howe’s commitment to Nichols, however, is not just rooted in nostalgia, and his decision to initiate a planned gift is proof. A frequent homecoming attendee and a regular at the Naples alumni reception, he has witnessed or kept apprised of campus renovations, academic initiatives, and Bison athletics. Seeing today’s and tomorrow’s students flourish in a dynamic and state-of-art learning environment, as well as make meaningful connections like he did, motivated Howe to link his legacy to Nichols. He’s asking others to join him: “Be part of the future and dedicate what you feel is a suitable gift and tribute to the college through the Colonel Conrad Society.”
If, like Charlie Howe ’62, you have included Nichols College in your estate plans, please notify the Advancement Office so that we can appropriately thank and welcome you to the Colonel Conrad Society. For more information on planned giving opportunities, such as charitable bequests, charitable remainder trusts or gifts of life insurance, please contact Jillian Riches at 508-213-2211 or at plannedgiving@nichols.edu. Additional resources on planned giving and helpful information on the tax advantages offered by planned giving can be found at www.nicholsgiving.org.
S TAY C O N N E C T E D
Class of ’69: Do you remember when? Join us for Homecoming 2019, September 27 and 28
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