Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/674746
75 Years of Achievement 25 The first inductees to the UConn School of Business Hall of Fame in 1993 included — Front Row: Edward A. Horrigan, Jr. '50, Gen. Samuel Jaskilka '42, Harry A. Gampel '43, Edward F. Heberger '58, Robert R. Googins '58. Back Row: G. Robert O'Brien '60, James F. McNally '54, Robert Cizik '53, Ronald J. Bushwell '56, Gordon W. Tasker '47, Thomas J. Wolff '56. Paul F. Fagan '49 Mark E. Freitas '81 E. Bulkeley Griswold '66 MBA Christopher P.A. Komisarjevsky '79 MBA Ronald J. Meoni '55 1999 Susan D. Abbot '81 MBA John H. Dowd '47 (Ex '44) Clinton G. Gartin '77 Lawrence D. Handler '67 A. Donald Iklé '56 Kamal Mustafa '71 MBA 1998 Bruce S. Butterfield '78 MBA Brian J. Foley '74 Eugene J. Kelley '44 Ronald C. Licata '63 The Honorable Paul W. Speltz '69, '72 MBA Joseph A. Zaccagnino '68 1997 Thomas O. Barnes '78 MBA Jean M. LaVecchia '81 MBA Raymond J. Martino '81 MBA Marvin Pearlman '51 Arnold J. Price '53 John A. Somers '72 MBA 1996 David I. Barton '61 Aldrage B. Cooper, Jr. '59 Laura R. Estes '78 MBA Gerald M. Lieberman '69 Denis M. McCarthy '64, '65 MA Walter A. Rhulen '52 Sudhakar V. Shenoy '71 MSE, '73 MBA Louis H. Ulizio, Jr. '64, '66 MBA Charles P. Waite '57 1995 Janet A. Alpert '78 MBA Scott S. Cowen '68, '10 HON Peter S. Drotch '64 Roger A. Gelfenbien '65 Peter R. Gerosa '63 Philip H. Lodewick '66, '67 MBA, '14 HON Richard W. Michaels '43 Frank L. Rainaldi '60 Arnold S. Zackin '57 1994 Dale R. Comey '64 Robert W. Crispin '75 MBA Ronald D. Jarvis '65 David P. Marks, CFA, '69, '71 MBA Denis J. Nayden '76, '77 MBA Theodore R. Rosenberg '55 Mitchell L. Strauss '79 MBA 1993 Ronald J. Bushwell '56 Ozer U. Ciller '69 MBA Robert Cizik '53 Harry A. Gampel '43, '93 HON Robert R. Googins '58, '61 JD Edward F. Heberger '58 Edward A. Horrigan, Jr. '50 Samuel Jaskilka '42 James F. McNally '54, '89 HON G. Robert O'Brien '60 Gordon W. Tasker '47 Thomas J. Wolff '56 During his tenure as the School of Business' third dean, Ronald Patten (1974-1988) developed a reputation for being honest, fair, personable and hardworking. It is the latter trait that still causes him to cringe a little bit today. During a particularly lengthy meeting about tenure and promotion, Patten looked up to see Gladys Tucker knocking on the window. Gladys was the wife of Edwin Tucker, who headed the business administration department, and he was in the meeting. "It's 3 a.m.! Why are you still there?,'' Patten recalls Mrs. Tucker saying when he opened the window. "I had lost track of the time, and I think the department heads were too reluctant to say anything,'' Patten said. "It was one of those 'red-faced moments' that I haven't forgotten.'' SOMETIMES THE MEETINGS RUN A LITTLE LATE