GINO-MORETTI-Obituary

GINO MORETTI

Williston, Vermont

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Williston, Vermont

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GINO MORETTI - WILLISTON - Gino Moretti, 98, died peacefully on March 15, 2015, in the Vermont Respite House in Williston surrounded by family. Gino was born in Turin, Italy, on Jan. 2, 1917. He made a career-related move with the family to Argentina in 1948, followed by a move to the U.S. in...

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Gino was a good and loving person and an original thinker and a researcher. I am grateful for the opportunities to meet him at several meetings where he presented his work and we exchanged a few memories from the continent we left long time ago. I will always remember and respect him.

George S. Dulikravich

Gino your memory will live on forever in my heart
Your "Faith" in the Physical Behaviours has been a steady beacon in my research activity.
Your inexhaustible vitality, your great sense of humour , together with a skilled ranging from painting to music and literary work will remain in my memory for good , not to speak of your deep affection and caring that have always filled me with joy.
Rest in peace Gino and farewell,
With everlasting remembrance from your disciple,

Though I did not know Gino very well, it was always a pleasure to see him outside or on his back porch (we shared a roof). He was always so pleasant. I wish I had known him better.
Lilianne Lemieux
Williston, VT

Gino enlivened every scientific meeting that he attended with his combative ideas, always expressed through his genial wit. I am proud to have crossed swords with him.

My condolences to his family. I knew Gino when I was working at Grumman and he was a consultant at the time. I also was also a student of Antonio Ferri at NYU and Poly.

My mentor, my friend, will always miss you.
Manny Salas

My association with Professor Moretti is limited but he has impressed me greatly. I am a graduate of Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute (BPI), have been a student of Dr. Antonio Ferri and Dr. Moretti and a researcher at Poly's "Freeport Aerodynamics Lab at a time when Dr. Moretti joined BPI. He indeed was a "Maverick."

John Boccio, PhD

I'd seen his talent hung everywhere in his daughter's home, Paula. That will live on forever.