The company has received numerous design awards over the years, and in 20 was voted one of the top 50 companies in the country by Pool and Spa News. While attending CGS, Henry became involved in the construction business, installing swimming pools in 1960, he started Easton Pool and Spa, a multimillion-dollar company now managed by his sons. For 26 years, he worked as a teacher, a principal, and an administrative assistant for kindergarten through eighth grade. “The education I received at CGS was outstanding.” Henry graduated from Wheelock with a degree in elementary education and earned a master’s degree at Framingham State University and a Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study at BU.
He attended CGS through his veteran status. Henry Hobaica (’58, Wheelock’60,’67) writes that in 1957, he was a Korean War veteran who had just been discharged and was unsure about his future. Ralph Fasano (’57) writes that at 87, he is a retired photographer, father of 7, grandfather of 41, and great-grandfather of 11. George is married to Denise Lilly and lives in Santa Barbara, Calif. He is chair of SJL Broadcast Management Corporation, with stations in New York, Pennsylvania, and Hawaii, managed by his sons, Brian (COM’56) and Kevin (Questrom’90,’97 COM ’97). George Lilly (’54, COM’56) spent 60 years in television as an engineer, salesman, sales manager, station manager, group head, and owner of television stations. One granddaughter receives her doctorate in pharmacy in May. He writes, “There are now 23 in our Mahon clan in Florida and Connecticut. Don’s daughter, a mom and dialysis nurse, was named 2016 Big Sister of the Year. Don was named 2016 Volunteer of the Year for Rotonda West Association, Florida’s largest HOA, and for the last three years, he has been honored as “Big Brother of the Year” for the Englewood, Fla., chapter of Big Brothers Big Sisters, where he has been a board member and mentor for seven years. in Norwalk, Conn., for 32 years, and retired to Florida where he has been receiving awards for his volunteer work. Over time, some pigments fade or change color, and this is reflected in the color reconstruction.” Photo courtesy of Norman Mullerĭon Mahon (’52, COM’54) was a communications manager for PerkinElmer Corp. This reconstruction was made by a former conservation intern of mine, who took tiny pigment samples from the painting, identified the pigments by chemical analysis, and from that made the reconstruction. To the right of the painting is a color photo reconstruction of the painting as it may have once looked when it was new.
He writes, “This photo was taken in the lab at the Princeton University Art Museum, and I’m looking at a panel painting in the museum’s collection by Andrea di Bartolo, a Sienese artist. Mathews) The Dawn of Christian Art in Panel Paintings and Icons (Getty Publications, 2016). Before that, Norman worked at the Worcester Art Museum Balboa Art Conservation Center in San Diego Los Angeles County Museum of Art Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. You are shooting commercials, designing Japanese gardens, delivering babies, developing apps, conserving art, installing swimming pools, publishing novels, and practicing law….See what’s happening in the lives of CGS alums, and submit your class note here.ġ950s Norman Muller (’58, CAS’61) was an art conservator for 50 years, and retired in March from the Princeton University Art Museum, where he worked for 35 years.