The MIT Corporation — the Institute’s board of trustees — has elected 10 full-term members, who will serve three- or five-year terms, and three life members. Corporation Chair Mark P. Gorenberg ’76 announced the election results today.
The full-term members are: Wes Bush, Ruby R. Chandy, Hala Fadel, Jacques Frederic Kerrest, Michelle K. Lee, Bianca Lepe, Natalie M. Lorenz Anderson, Sebastian S. Man, Hyun-A C. Park, and Thomas Tull. The three life members are: Orit Gadiesh, Jeff Halis, and Alan Leventhal. Gorenberg was also re-elected as Corporation chair.
Stephen P. DeFalco ’83, SM ’88, the 2025-2026 president of the Association of Alumni and Alumnae of MIT, will also join the Corporation as an ex officio member. He succeeds Natalie Lorenz-Anderson ’84.
As of July 1, the Corporation will consist of 80 distinguished leaders in education, science, engineering, and industry. Of those, 24 are life members and eight are ex officio. An additional 31 individuals are life members emeritus.
The 10 term members are:
Wes Bush, former chair and chief executive officer, Northrop Grumman Corporation
Bush has worked in the aerospace and defense industry since starting at COMSAT Labs under MIT’s co-op program. After graduation, he first worked at The Aerospace Corporation, then became a systems engineer at TRW’s Space Park facility in 1987. Prior to Northrop Grumman’s acquisition of TRW in 2002, he led numerous space program activities, served as vice president of TRW Ventures, and was the president and chief executive officer of TRW’s U.K.-based Aeronautical Systems business. At Northrop Grumman, Bush served as the president of the company’s space technology sector, then as its chief financial officer. He became president of the company in 2006, served as chief executive officer from 2010 through 2018, and became chairman in 2011.
Ruby R. Chandy ’82, SM ’89, CEO, Luminas Advisory Services
With 20 years of public company board experience, Chandy currently serves on the boards of Dupont, Thermo Fisher Scientific, and Flowserve. She is on the advisory board of Pritzker Private Capital and serves on boards of its portfolio companies. She was formerly president of the industrial division and a corporate officer at Pall Corporation, which was acquired by Danaher Corporation. Prior to Pall, she served as chief marketing officer at Dow Chemical, Rohm and Haas, and Thermo Fisher Scientific. She has extensive general management experience at Dow Chemical, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Boston Scientific, and Millipore. Chandy also currently serves on the Board of the NACD Philadelphia Chapter, the Board of Trustees for Cristo Rey Philadelphia High School, and the MIT Sloan Executive Board.
Hala Fadel MBA ’01, managing partner, Eurazeo
Fadel is a member of the management committee of Eurazeo and leads the investment committee of the growth equity team. Prior to joining Eurazeo in 2022, she built Comgest’s inaugural private growth equity program. She also spent nearly 15 years at Comgest as a portfolio manager within the European growth equities team, leading investments in technology, as well as in health care and consumer goods. From 2014 to 2022, she served as co-founder and managing partner of Leap Ventures, an early-stage technology venture capital firm that invests in Europe and the Middle East. While there, Fadel led several early-stage tech investments in France, Sweden, and the U.K. She started her career as an investment banker in mergers and acquisitions at Merrill Lynch in London.
Jacques Frederic Kerrest MBA ’09, vice chair and co-founder, Okta; managing partner and founder, Windproof Partners; senior advisor to Blackstone
As Okta’s chief operating officer from 2009 to 2023, Kerrest was responsible for Okta’s day-to-day operations, drove Okta’s corporate priorities, accelerated innovation across the company, worked closely with customers, partners and prospects, and served as a key liaison with the investor community. He oversaw corporate strategy, corporate development, strategic partnerships, and Okta’s social impact arm, Okta for Good. Previously, he worked in sales and business development at Salesforce.com, and in venture capital at Hummer Winblad Venture Partners. Kerrest also served as the chair and co-founder of Herophilus, a neurotherapeutics drug development company acquired by Genentech Roche. He is the author of “Zero to IPO,” a guidebook to building startups.
Michelle K. Lee ’88, SM ’89, CEO and founder, Obsidian Strategies, Inc.
Prior to founding Obsidian Strategies, Lee was vice president of the Machine Learning Solutions Lab at Amazon Web Services. She also served as the U.S. under secretary of commerce for intellectual property and director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office from 2015 to 2017 and was the first woman to serve in this role in the country’s history. Before entering public service, she served as an executive for eight years at Google. Lee also held the appointment of the Herman Phleger Visiting Professor of Law at Stanford University from 2017 to 2018. She began her career as a computer scientist at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and Hewlett-Packard Research Laboratories.
Bianca Lepe PhD ’24, data scientist, City of Boston
Lepe’s PhD research focused on computationally guided vaccine design for tuberculosis and the development of a surface functionalization platform for M. tuberculosis to study host-pathogen interactions. As a Graduate Student Union member and REFS conflict coach, she supported fellow researchers, helped resolve conflicts, and represented student concerns. She also served as a student leader on the Graduate Student Council and the Corporation Joint Advisory Committee, where she facilitated dialogue on critical issues and advocated for people-centered solutions. Lepe has professional experience in technology policy consulting, venture capital, and biotech strategy. She recently joined the City of Boston’s analytics team as a data scientist, where she collaborates on projects to improve the city’s decision-making and operations.
Natalie M. Lorenz Anderson ’84, chief operations officer and board director, 247Solar, Inc.
Before joining 247Solar, an MIT startup commercializing a modular, scalable thermal energy solution, Lorenz Anderson was a partner at Booz Allen Hamilton, where she was a senior vice president and subject matter expert in cybersecurity, privacy, risk management, IT, and advanced technologies in the defense, national security, and civilian agency domains. She has served on several advisory and corporate boards with MIT roots, including Gigavation, Embr Labs, and Lutron, and is a former board member and current advisory board member for Ocean Power Technologies. Lorenz Anderson has also been a limited partner of Safar Partners LLC and is a former board director and vice president of the Girl Scouts Nations Capital Board.
Sebastian S. Man ’79, SM ’80, chair and chief executive officer, Chung Mei International Holdings Limited
Since 1990, Sebastian S. Man has helmed Chung Mei International Holdings Limited, which was co-founded in 1963 by his family and is a leading manufacturer of domestic kitchen electrics and air treatment products for major international brands. He is affiliated with several trade organizations, including as honorary vice president of the Hong Kong Electrical Appliance Manufacturers Association and a board director of the Pacific Basin Economic Council. He is also a council member with the Better Hong Kong Foundation and a member of the Vision 2047 Foundation. Man has been an executive committee member of the International Chamber of Commerce and the Hong Kong China Business Council. He is also an executive committee member of the Young Presidents’ Organization Gold HK and the North Asia Chair of the Chief Executive Organization.
Hyun-A C. Park ’83, MCP ’85, president, Spy Pond Partners, LLC
Park started her career working for MIT professor Tunney Lee at the Massachusetts Division of Capital Planning and Operations, and then worked on the Central Artery (“Big Dig”) project. From there, she went to Cambridge Systematics, where she was in charge of a business line focused on transportation asset management. Park recently chaired the Technical Activities Council of the Transportation Research Board, where she led a group of chairs that oversaw more than 200 committees and 6,000 volunteers on research activities related to all modes of transportation and a wide range of transportation topics. She also served as co-chair of the Women’s Transportation Seminar’s Public Art Project that resulted in the installation of a new public art piece at Boston’s South Station.
Thomas Tull, co-chair, TWG Global
In addition to his role at TWG Global, Tull founded and chairs the United States Innovative Technology Fund, and is the founder, chair, and CEO of the private holding company Tulco, LLC. Previously, he founded and served as CEO of the media company Legendary Entertainment, which produced films like “The Dark Knight” trilogy, “Inception,” and “Jurassic World.” Tull is part of the ownership groups of the Pittsburgh Steelers and the New York Yankees, and he is deeply committed to philanthropy and advancing innovative solutions to global challenges through the Tull Family Foundation. He serves as an advisor to the chief innovation and strategy officer at MIT, is a member of the MIT School of Engineering Dean’s Advisory Council, and recently served as a Visiting Innovation Scholar at MIT.
The three new life members are:
Orit Gadiesh, partner and chair emeritus, Bain and Company Inc.
Gadiesh joined Bain and Company in 1977 and served as chair from 1993 to 2025. She is currently based at the group’s London headquarters and remains active in client and advisory work in North America, Europe, and Asia. She has counseled top-level management in structuring and managing portfolios, developing and implementing global strategy, designing both cost reduction and growth programs, embedding technologies in organizations, and more. Gadiesh currently serves on the World Economic Forum board of trustees, the International Business Leaders Advisory Council to the Mayor of Shanghai, and the board of governors at Tel Aviv University, as well as on the advisory boards of the James Martin 21st Century School of Oxford University and the Peres Institute for Peace and Innovation.
Jeff Halis ’76, SM ’76, president and CEO, Tyndall Management, LLC
Halis founded Tyndall Management, an investment firm specializing in publicly traded securities, in 1991. Prior to that, he held positions in the finance and investment industry working for Citibank, Merrill Lynch, and Sabre Associates. He is a former director of several publicly traded companies, including Enstar USA, Inc., KinderCare Learning Centers, and PriceSmart. His civic involvement included his membership on the state of New York’s financial control board, the investment committee of the New York State Common Retirement Fund, and the Citizen’s Budget Commission. He has also been on the boards of WNET, CaringKind, and Bridge Over Troubled Waters.
Alan Leventhal, former U.S. ambassador to the Kingdom of Denmark
Prior to his appointment as a United States ambassador from 2022 to 2025, Leventhal was the chair and chief executive officer of Beacon Capital Partners. He previously served as president and chief executive officer of Beacon Properties Corporation, a publicly traded real estate investment company that merged with Equity Office Properties in 1997. He is the former chair of the board of the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation and also served on the executive committee. Leventhal is a trustee emeritus of Boston University, where he served as chair from 2004 to 2008. He also served as a life trustee of Northwestern University and on the boards of the Friends of Post Office Square and the Norman B. Leventhal Map and Education Center at the Boston Public Library.