There are power couples, and then there are brainpower couples such as Apostolos Kizilos and his late wife, Betty Ahola Kizilos. During their 58-year marriage, they forged impressive careers together as Honeywell scientists in the 1960s before veering off into organizational development, poetry and Christian activism.
After childhoods spent 5,500 miles apart, their improbable partnership began by accident when they met in an advanced calculus class. Something — fate? — persuaded her to skip the regular class and take the harder course.
Tolly, as everyone calls him, grew up 3 miles from the ancient stone columns of the Parthenon in Athens. Just as he turned 6 in 1941, the Nazis swarmed into his Greek homeland. A civil war between fascists and communists followed that German occupation during World War II.
"Survival became a game; I remember the hunger and suffering," Kizilos, 83, said from his Wayzata home. "It was pretty bloody and pretty scary. I remember the mortars, and the shells, and the airplanes coming down and strafing the neighborhood."
Betty Mae Ahola grew up a world away amid the pines and lakes of northern Minnesota — the second daughter of an Ely dentist and granddaughter of Finnish immigrants. At 10, she dreamed of a boy across the sea.
Their paths first crossed in that calculus class for engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the 1950s. One of the only women studying physics at male-dominated MIT, Betty continued her pioneering ways after they were married and moved to Minnesota. Gauging electrical measurements of tellurium, she was the only woman among 60 scientists at Honeywell's research center in Hopkins in 1960.
"Femininity rears its lovely head only on rare occasions at the Honeywell Research center," according to the opening line of a 1960 profile of her in the Minneapolis Star. She was 23 at the time and photographed in her lab coat.
Three years and two kids later, she told the "Women's Section" of the newspaper in 1963: "Women aren't supposed to be intellectuals. Even in high school, girls interested in science fields are kind of neglected by boys. They are thought to be too brainy."