Alumni Achievers
Ray Linder
To Ray Linder '77, MBA '82, a major part of business is personality. It affects how people treat their money. In addition, how personalities mix can make or break an operation.
Manjit Singh
Ask Manjit Singh '90 how he's been able to quickly climb the corporate ladder, and his first answer is that he has been at the right places at the right times. More than that, he says, it's the ability to help businesses move from outmoded practices to those needed to be competitive in the 21st century.
Stacy Kellner Rosenberg
Stacy Kellner Rosenberg MBA '78 knows what it's like to live a dream, then give it up. A big-city lawyer, Rosenberg had carved out a profession many college students would love. Yet she gladly left to lead a nonprofit agency that helped her cope with the death of her daughter, Amanda.
Eric Paul Schafer
Sometimes a stopover becomes permanent. That's true for Eric Paul Schafer '85, MA '89, MBA '02, marketing director at American Pacific University, the first American university in Viet Nam.
Melissa Sutherland
"[Decker] has a great reputation," she said. "It gave me a solid foundation for my education. The professors were excellent. They really encouraged me from day one that I needed to go on for my Ph.D."
Robert Whitaker
When spinach tainted with the deadly E. coli bacteria rocked the produce industry and depleted consumers' confidence in what they were purchasing and eating, the federal government called upon a Binghamton graduate already at the forefront of food safety.
Sean Egan
When it comes to sending an instant message, our options are a virtual alphabet soup. We have AOL, ICQ, MSN, IRC, SILC, and several others; in fact, a number of PC users have accounts on more than one network.
Jane Gottlieb
Jane Gottlieb '76 says she learns something every minute in her work with scholars and musicians at Juilliard in New York.
More Binghamton Achievers

