- DeSales University
Transcription
- DeSales University
DeSales University Magazine Centaur Seasons by Steve McKee ’74 Forty years ago we played on a half-good, half-bad basketball team for a brand-new college. Forty years later a lot has changed. Teresa (Messineo) Manidis ’95 Manidis and her children participate in World War II reenactments and convey a powerful message. Alumni Events Schedule Spring 2014 Mark your calendars with the great events DeSales will host in spring 2014. Fall 2013 letter from the president It was wonderful to see many of you at this year’s Homecoming. With the glorious weather and the number of activities on both Friday and Saturday, the campus was crackling with energy. If you were here that weekend, hopefully you had the opportunity to see the Rev. Daniel G. Gambet OSFS Center for Business and Healthcare. Opened in April, our largest academic building is up and running. All of the business, nursing, and physician assistant courses and faculty of the university are now housed in this remarkable facility. It contains the first human anatomy lab of the Lehigh Valley, six simulation facilities for healthcare education, a set of standardized patient rooms, the most modern nursing equipment from B. Braun Corporation, and the PPL EnergyPlus trading floor simulation laboratory. In addition to the building, during the summer months DeSales University added six additional academic endowment funds to support the programs within the Gambet Center: Fall 2013 Editor Laura R. Zielinski Contributing Writers Joshua Martin ’13 Steve McKee ’74 Roseann Damico Schatkowski ’86 Daniel Patrick Sheehan B.J. Spigelmyer ’99 Photographers Marisha Camp Amy Herzog ’10 Pat Jacoby ’13 Printing Alcom Printing Group, Inc. On the Cover: 1. Division of Business: Activities at Homecoming included a pumpkin patch. Pictured are Christine Brett, wife of Martin Brett ’98, associate professor of sport management, their son Shea, and their nephew, Declan. (Photo by a. Mr. William Dwyer Endowment for Excellence in Undergraduate Business Education b. Dr. Hal Dolenga Endowment for Excellence in Graduate Business Education 2. Division of Science and Healthcare: a. Dr. Rodger Berg Endowment for Excellence in Undergraduate Natural Science Education b. Excellence in Graduate Nursing Education Endowment c. Excellence in Physician Assistant Studies Education Endowment d. Physician Assistant “Allentown Rescue Mission— DeSales University Free Clinic” Endowment When these funds reach investments of $500,000, they begin to generate $25,000 per year for the leader of the activity to spend on one-time projects to enhance the educational experiences of the students and to support the work of the faculty. Buildings are essential, but people truly make the difference in education. Denise Sanchez Phil Stein Rob Upton Amy Herzog’10) President Fr. Bernard F. O’Connor, OSFS Vice President for Institutional Advancement Thomas L. Campbell Executive Director of Communications Tom McNamara ’92 It is a challenging time for higher education, but challenging times are not necessarily damaging for an institution like DeSales University. As I’ve mentioned, 1965 was not exactly the best time to open a Catholic college. Saint Francis de Sales and the great optimism of Salesian spirituality will guide us well as we face each new adventure. Bernard F. O’Connor President 2 The DeSales University Magazine is published twice a year by the Institutional Advancement Office for the alumni and friends of the University. Comments and suggestions are welcome. Please address all correspondence to Laura Zielinski, editor, DeSales University Magazine, DeSales University, 2755 Station Avenue, Center Valley, PA 18034. Phone: 610.282.1100, ext. 1359; fax 610.282.2059; or e-mail laura.zielinski@desales.edu. Contents 4 In the News 8 Athletics 10 Centaur Seasons by Steve McKee ’74 Forty years ago we played on a half-good, half-bad basketball team for a brand-new college. Forty years later a lot has changed. 12 Alumni Event Schedule Spring 2014 14 Teresa (Messineo) Manidis ’95: Learning from the World’s Mistakes Manidis and her children participate in World War II reenactments and convey a powerful message. 16 Message From the Alumni Office DO YOU 16 Class Notes have a PLAN FOR THE FUTURE? Don’t delay making plans for your future! Planning is easy when you use the new online Wills Planner available on our website. The Wills Planner helps you organize your estate planning information before meeting with your attorney. You can even share your secure account information online to help your attorney complete the plan. To get started, visit our planned giving website today and click on “Plan Your Will” to create an account. We look forward to helping you plan your future. Call Thomas Campbell at DeSales University, 610.282.4604. http://desales.giftlegacy.com 3 in the news Four Alumni Awarded at Homecoming During the 2013 DeSales University homecoming weekend, four alumni received awards for their service to the community and success in their professional life after graduation. Matt McMahon ’08 received the Young Alumni Service Award for going above and beyond to serve the community. While attending DeSales, McMahon participated in many activities with the Center for Service and Social Justice, where he discovered his love and future career in promoting social justice. In 2012, he moved to Bangkok and began work with the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) and currently holds the position of Southeast Asia Regional Gender Focal Person. In his work, McMahon makes sure that women, children and marginalized groups are able to persevere through natural disasters without discrimination and to promote gender-related peace. Chris Morganelli ’11 was awarded the Young Alumni Achievement Award for striving for excellence in his field of work while still preserving a strong relationship with the university, family and community. After graduation, Morganelli founded CMorganelli Designs, LLC, where he is currently holds the position of CEO. After three years, the business has worked with clients such as the Lehigh Valley Bar Association, Arts Academy Charter School and St. Luke’s Center for Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. Alongside this project, Morganelli co-founded Snyder Morganelli IT, LLC, where his focus is spent creating the best technological solutions for clients. Tim Reilly ’79 was awarded the Alumni Achievement Award for inspiring many people, especially those within the DeSales community. After graduating in only three and a half years, he made a name for himself in the insurance business. The Tim Reilly/Nationwide Insurance Agency has graced the Northeast Philadelphia area for 33 years. On top of this, Reilly continues to make his presence known throughout the DeSales community by regularly attending alumni networking events, supporting the basketball team and is a former member of the DeSales Presidents Council and a current member of the DeSales Heritage Society. Jennifer Wall ’99 received the Alumni Service Award for her contributions to the community and preserving the principles of St. Francis DeSales. She has worked as a physician assistant, specializing in the burn and plastic reconstructive fields for 13 years. In addition to this, Wall is the founder and President of Africa Burn Relief, where she works with local healthcare providers to assist in the progression of burn treatments in Nkhoma, Malawi. In the past, she has worked with burn victims at Lehigh Valley Hospital (Allentown), The Arizona Burn Center and at the 2013 Boston Marathon. She currently works at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts. If You Build it, They Will Live There DeSales is constructing new two new residence halls, scheduled to be open in August 2014. Situated across the loop road from the McShea Student Center and DeChantal Hall, the townhouse-style buildings will include kitchens. As needs grow, more townhouses will be constructed at the site. Right: Construction of the first new townhouse is across from the McShea Student Center. 4 American Playwright Christopher Durang Visits with Students American Playwright Christopher Durang appeared on campus on Tuesday, September 24, 2013, as the featured guest in “An Afternoon with Christopher Durang” in the Schubert Theatre of the Labuda Center for the Performing Arts. “I had heard that Durang, who’s been co-chairing the Playwriting Program at The Julliard School in Playwright Christopher Durang Manhattan, enjoys visiting college campuses and interacting with students,” says John Bell, chair of the Performing and Fine Arts department. “So I decided to make the invitation and to my great surprise, he accepted rather enthusiastically.” Durang, whose latest play Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike won the 2013 Tony Award winner for Best Play. He appeared in an actors studio-like conversation, first sharing his thoughts on the process of playwriting followed by a reading of some of his favorite passages from his plays. Questions were then fielded from performing arts students. Durang is a playwright whose plays include The Marriage of Bette and Boo (Public Theatre, 1985; Obie award, Dramatists Guild Hull Warriner Award), Laughing Wild (Playwrights Horizons, 1987), Durang/Durang (an evening of six plays at Manhattan Theatre Club, 1994, including the Tennessee Williams’ parody, For Whom the Southern Belle Tolls) and Betty’s Summer Vacation (Playwrights Horizons, 1999; Obie award). His most recent works are Mrs. Bob Cratchit’s Wild Christmas Binge, which premiered at City Theatre in Pittsburgh in 2002. And the musical Adrift in Macao, with music by Peter Melnick and book and lyrics by Durang, which premiered at New York Stage and Film in summer 2002. In 2013, his play Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike premiered on Broadway starring Sigourney Weaver and David Hyde Pierce and won the Tony Award for Best Play. Durang is also a performer and shared in an acting ensemble Obie for The Marriage of Bette and Boo. In movies, he has appeared in The Secret of My Success, Mr. North, The Butcher’s Wife, Housesitter, and The Cowboy Way, among others. He has a B.A. from Harvard College, and an M.F.A. in Playwriting from Yale School of Drama. PA Utilities Commissioner Tours Gambet Center Trading Room On October 8, Pennsylvania Utilities Commissioner (PUC) Pamela A. Witmer visited the PPL Energy Plus Trading Simulation Room in the Gambet Center for Business and Health Care. DeSales faculty members, Bradley Barnhorst, assistant professor of business, and Dr. Chris Cocozza, chair of the business division, gave presentations on how the trading room is used by business and finance students. Barnhorst described software that traditional undergraduates, ACCESS students, and graduate students, use to simulate real-world market situations and simulated portfolio management. Alumnus Patrick McDonnell ’95, executive policy manager for Commissioner Witmer, also attended. Pictured right are (l-r) Dr. Cocozza,Tom Campbell, vice president for institutional advancement at DeSales, McDonnell,Witmer, Shelby Linton-Keddie, attorney for the PUC, Rev. Bernard O’Connor, president of DeSales University, Robert Barkanic, senior director of energy policy at PPL EnergyPlus, and Barnhorst. 5 in the news Denise Sanchez, The Morning Call Prayers for the Dead: DeSales Opens Cadaver Laboratory with Religious Service Somewhere along the line, the four men and four women sealed in blue bags and stretched on chilly looking metal tables in the Human Anatomy Laboratory at DeSales University had decided to make gifts of themselves in death. Here they were, then, on Wednesday, surrounded by a couple dozen students in the Center Valley school’s physician assistant graduate program -- young men and women who would soon enough begin to explore the cadavers with the intimacy peculiar to medical science. Now, though, the students were gathered for prayer. DeSales is a Catholic school, and with the introduction of the cadaver lab this year in the new Gambet Center for Business and Healthcare, the faculty saw a spiritual opportunity, a chance to remind students embarking on medical careers that the dead were once living -- not very long ago at that -- and were owed the respect due any human being. This was all in keeping with Catholic teaching, which demands respect for life from conception to death and holds that the soul will be reunited with the perfected body at the end of time -- 6 even bodies that have long gone to dust or been scrutinized by young learners in laboratories. “This is a new step for us into another way of learning,” said the Rev. Douglas Burns, a biology teacher in the natural science department. “It’s an opportunity to learn from people who have given us the gift of themselves.” Burns and his colleague, the Rev. Peter Leonard, dean of graduate education, led the brief service, reflecting on the continuity of dignity beyond the grave. In offering themselves to science, the dead, in a particular way, had fulfilled Christ’s dictum that laying down one’s life for another is the greatest love. “These were people like yourselves, who made a generous decision to offer their bodies to you so that you may be better educated and help others be well through what you learn in this lab,” Leonard said. The new lab -- equipped beyond cadavers with precise reproductions of bones and organs and a full-sized plastic skeleton, indistin- guishable from the real thing -- will enhance learning immensely, said Dr. Wayne Stuart, director of the 14-year-old physician assistant program. “They’ll get a better understanding of the three-dimensional aspect of anatomy ... and it’s variability,” he said. “Not everyone is built the same way.” In Pennsylvania, which is crowded with medical schools, the demand for cadavers far exceeds the supply. The cadavers at DeSales, elderly men and women who died of natural causes, came to the school from Albany Medical College in New York. None had any known connection to DeSales, or to the Lehigh Valley. To minimize any chance that students will end up working on the cadaver of someone they knew, donated bodies are always sent far afield. Cadavers from Pittsburgh, for example, are sent to schools in Philadelphia, and vice versa. “We’ve had people make requests to be donated here,” Leonard said. “We have to say no.” The cadavers arrived in July and will be returned next July. Beyond the graduate students, they will likely be used in the training of residents and medical students at area hospitals, Stuart said. None of the students on hand for the prayer service betrayed any queasiness at the prospect of working with cadavers. And they seemed to appreciate starting the program in prayer. “I think it’s a really good way to give us some perspective on this,” said Molly Geiger, 21. Caroline Seery, 24, a New Yorker, said she was drawn to DeSales specifically by the addition of the lab to the program. “We’re going to be the first class to have it,” she said. “I think it’s a great experience we can have prior to getting hands-on with living patients.” Burns told the students the prayer service didn’t have to be a onceand-done thing. “Perhaps each time you come into the lab, it would be a good spiritual exercise to remember the people you’re going to work with in prayer,” he said. —Daniel Patrick Sheehan This article was reprinted with permission from The Morning Call. For more photos, visit http://www.mcall.com/news/breaking/ mc-grossanatomylab-20130828-pictures,0,7433441.photogallery DeSales University 33rd Annual Dinner Dance Saturday, March 15, 2014 To be placed on the invitation list, contact Diane Moeser 610.282.1100, ext. 1307 • diane.moeser@desales.edu Breakfast with Santa DeSales University Center Sunday, December 8, 2013 • 10 am to 12 pm Cost: $10 per person and $5 per child under age 12 RSVP at www.desales.edu/santa Come join Santa for a special breakfast at DeSales University! All alumni and their families are welcome to join us for this festive event, which will include a delightful breakfast and the opportunity to take pictures with Santa. Please bring your own camera so you don’t miss out on the fun! Available seats for the breakfast are limited so please RSVP quickly. There will also be a Mass that follows the breakfast at 12:30 pm in the Wills Hall Chapel for those who are interested in attending. Questions? Contact Adam Tucker at adam.tucker@desales.edu or call 610.282.1100, ext. 1789. 7 athletics Men’s & Women’s Basketball 2013-14 2013 Athletic Hall of Fame For the full team schedules, including tournaments and non-conference games, visit athletics.desales.edu. Home games in bold type. Men’s Basketball Gettysburg College Tournament 11/15 Penn State- Harrisburg 8:00 p.m. 11/16 Consolation/Championship 2:00/4:00 p.m. 11/20 at Penn State Wilkes-Barre 8:00 p.m. 11/23 at Arcadia University 3:00 p.m. 11/26 Moravian College 8:00 p.m. 12/4 at FDU-Florham 8:00 p.m. 12/7 Wilkes University 3:00 p.m. 12/9 at St. Mary’s College (MD) 7:00 p.m. 12/11 Penn State Berks 7:00 p.m. 12/14 Muhlenberg College 3:00 p.m. 1/3 Medgar Evers College 8:00 p.m. 1/5 Haverford College 3:00 p.m. 1/8 at Catholic University 7:00 p.m. 1/15 King’s College (Pa.) 8:00 p.m. 1/18 at Delaware Valley College 3:00 p.m. 1/22 at Misericordia University 8:00 p.m. 1/25 Eastern University 3:00 p.m. 1/29 Manhattanville College 8:00 p.m. 2/1 at King’s College (Pa.) 3:00 p.m. 2/5 Delaware Valley College 8:00 p.m. 2/8 Misericordia University 3:00 p.m. 2/12 at Manhattanville College 8:00 p.m. 2/15 FDU-Florham 3:00 p.m. 2/18 at Wilkes University 8:00 p.m. 2/22 at Eastern University 3:00 p.m. 2/26 Freedom Conference Playoffs (Semis.) TBA 3/1 Freedom Conference Playoffs (Champ.) TBA WoMen’s Basketball Morgan Stanley (Easton office) Tip-Off Tournament 11/15Lycoming College 6:00 p.m. 11/16Stevens Institute of Tech. 4:00 p.m. 11/20 at Gwynedd-Mercy College 11/23 Immaculata University 11/26 Moravian College 12/4 at FDU-Florham 12/7 Wilkes University 12/14 Muhlenberg College 7:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. Juniata College Holiday Tournamnent 12/29 Saint Vincent College 5:30 p.m. 12/30 Consolation/Championship 2:00/4:00 p.m. 1/3 Ursinus College 6:00 p.m. 1/5 at Baruch College 3:00 p.m. 1/11 at Rosemont College 1:00 p.m. 1/15 King’s College (Pa.) 6:00 p.m. 1/18 Delaware Valley College 1:00 p.m. 1/22 at Misericordia University 6:00 p.m. 1/25 Eastern University 1:00 p.m. 1/29 Manhattanville College 6:00 p.m. 2/1 at King’s College (Pa.) 1:00 p.m. 2/5 Delaware Valley College 6:00 p.m. 2/8 Misericordia University 1:00 p.m. 2/12 at Manhattanville College 6:00 p.m. 2/15 FDU-Florham 1:00 p.m. 2/18 at Wilkes University 6:00 p.m. 2/22 at Eastern University 1:00 p.m. Freedom Conference Playoffs 2/26 Freedom Conference Playoffs (Semis) TBA 3/1 Freedom Conference Playoffs (Champ.) TBA 8 The DeSales University athletic department inducted three new members, Kate Corcoran ’00, Frank Yasunas ’92, Jerry Wilkinson ’72, as well as the recognition of the 2003 baseball team at its Athletics Hall of Fame ceremony held on Friday, September 27. Corcoran joins the DSU Hall of Fame as a standout on the women’s basketball team from 1996-00 in which the Bulldogs won three conference championships and made three trips to the NCAA Tournament in her four years on the team. She was named to the All-Freedom Conference First-Team twice (1999 and 2000), was named the Lehigh Valley Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (LVAIAW) Player of the Year in 2000, was named to the WBCA Mid-Atlantic Region First-Team and WBCA HonorableMention All-American as a senior. Yasunas was a four-year player on the men’s basketball team from 1988-92 and was a junior on the 1990-91 team that was the first men’s basketball team to win 20+ games and also won the ECAC South Region Tournament Championship. He was named to the All-ESAC First-Team once and was named the Dr. John Compardo Male Athlete of the Year as a senior in 1991-92. Yasunas was also named the team Most Valuable Player three times and was a two-time team captain as a junior and a senior. Wilkinson was a four-year player on the very first men’s basketball teams at DeSales University and also played one year as the starting goalkeeper for the men’s soccer team in 1971. He was a team Co-MVP and co-captain as a senior on the basketball team. Wilkinson led the team in rebounding in 1971-72 and helped the Bulldogs record its first .500 or better season with a final record of 8-8. Wilkinson was also an intramural standout and served as the President of Intramurals in 1971-72. The 2003 baseball team becomes the fifth team recognized by the University’s Hall of Fame committee. Current baseball head coach Tim Neiman was the coach of the team in 2003 as the Bulldogs posted a 30-14 overall record, their third straight 30+ win season, and won the program’s first and only NCAA Regional Championship, advancing to the NCAA Division III College World Series. —B.J. Spigelmyer For extended biographies of this year’s Hall of Fame class, visit www.desales.edu/athletics. Five Minutes With a Bulldog Michelle Churchman ’15 Soccer and Track & Field Major(s)? I am a Sport and Exercise Science Major. Career Goals/what are you interested in doing after graduation? After graduation I’m going to go to school to be a physical therapist. Ideally I would love to work in the clinical setting and rehab a variety of patients, but work with local athletic trainers on injury prevention of high school and collegiate athletes. Do you have any special pre-game preparations? Among the things I do—I always put my right cleat on before my left. When we get out to the field, the team drapes their jerseys on the benches and I make sure I am always next to #20, Alyssa Brandt, my best friend. My right glove always comes on first and I ask Alyssa to pull on my left one for me. Finally, right before every half, after the team huddle with the starters, I run straight through the center of the box and jump up and tap the crossbar. What’s your favorite aspect of being a student athlete? My favorite part of being a student athlete is the connections I make with my teammates. My best friends are those who I play or run with. There’s some camaraderie about sweating, bleeding, crying, and celebrating with a team. I never would know that feeling of connection and form the bonds I have with my teammates. What’s your personal sport highlight at DeSales? Starting in goal this year has been a real accomplishment but I think something that combines my two favorite sports was the mile goal. I ran a 6:09 last year but my goal was to break 6 minutes this year. I trained all summer, running and pushing myself every day. When it came to preseason time, we had to run the mile the first thing in the morning. I ended up running a 5:57. I think it was one of my proudest moments. You have a rigorous athletic schedule being a three-sport athlete (Soccer, indoor T&F, outdoor T&F) and you also carry a 3.78 GPA into your junior year. How are you able to balance such a busy athletic schedule and balance your time to get your school work done? The thing that I love about practice is that it gives me a break from the academics stressors. Practice allows me, for two hours every day, to let me have a release and allows me to do the things I love. I constantly write down everything that I need to do on these sticky notes. It’s an awesome feeling when I’m done with something and I can cross it off my list. But having fun is a big one for me. I’m an extremely bubbly person and those who know me will certainly attest to this. So, I set goals and cross things off my list. You have started every game in goal this season for the Women’s Soccer team and the team is enjoying some tremendous success so far. What has the difference been? The team dynamic is awesome this year. We brought back some really good players but also brought in some key freshman. We have a really good bench this year. There’s a mutual respect on the team by everyone for everyone and I think that has been a factor. In all honesty though, Coach Kemp has been the game changer this year. She is so passionate about the sport of soccer and thoroughly dedicated to this team. Before the season started she handed out a six point list that describes “Who We Are” as DeSales University Women’s Soccer. The new direction has been the mantra for the season. Every time we step out onto the field, our goal is to win, but even if we fail at our goal, “Success is not defined by an external outcome but by your ability to do the best of which we are capable.” If we failed, but improved from that game so be it, next time we will be ready. 9 Centaur Seasons by Steve McKee ’74 Forty years ago we played on a half-good, half-bad basketball team for a brand-new college. Forty years later a lot has changed. The problem is remembering what to call them. When I played we were the Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales Centaurs. These days they’re the DeSales University Bulldogs. Centaur-Centdog-Bultaur-Bulldogs. And the mascot and name aren’t the only things that changed a dozen years ago. When I showed up at the school in Center Valley, Pennsylvania, in the fall of 1970, the college had graduated two classes. There were five buildings, lots of cornfields, maybe 450 students. The barest of bones; a handful of majors. The entire place making itself up as it went along. “It was the frontier days of the university,” says Jim Naccarato, a guard on the team two years ahead of me and an Oblate of St. Francis de Sales seminarian. “Everyone was taking a gamble. There was real risk. It was an adventure.” The bet paid off. Today, DeSales University boasts dozens buildings, perhaps 1,700 undergrads, a full complement of majors, all the bells and whistles of a competitive college in the digital world. As for the basketball teams. Well … When I arrived the Centaurs’ two-year record was 8-28, with losses of 20, 21, 22 (twice), 26, 27, 37, 41, 42, 61 and … 70. “Nobody was doing anything but trying to win, play the best 10 they could,” says Tom Junod, an under-sized center on those first two teams. “There was a lot of spirit among the people who were there. Everyone wanted the school to succeed. I don’t think any of us felt like we were wasting our time, and I don’t think any of us did. We wanted to win.” In my four years the Centaur went another 29-44. If you’re scoring at home, for the first six years of the Centaur’s existence, that’s a combined 37-72. “Wins meant so much to us,” says Dave Glielmi, my roommate junior year. “We used to count them like they were jelly beans when you were a kid.” Meanwhile, the current DeSales Bulldogs coached by Scott Coval have won 20 or more games in nine of the last 11 seasons. There have been three appearances in the NCAA D-III postseason. These guys are good. And here’s the bonus: The better the Bulldogs are now, the better we Centaurs can believe we were then. Don’t think we don’t. This past September I began posting at “Centaur Seasons.” A “memory blog,” it’s about those early days of Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales and the certain something that I believe came with attending a brand-new school that was right then as much a concept as it was a college. Included in Centaur Seasons Opposite: Photo of the 1971-72 men’s basketball team. McKee is in the center in the back row, number 54. got ready for the next game. To me it was pure sport. We were just a bunch of guys playing ball.” are the entries from an actual diary I wrote during the 1972-73 season, my junior year, posted 40 years later in “real” time. But mainly Centaur Seasons is about the striving. The trying to win but too-often losing. The playing in front of a handful of fans. The being there at the beginning. The not knowing what our efforts might bring, but knowing whatever it was we’d be long gone by the time it happened. Joe was a pass-first junior point guard when I was a senior. I looked to him to get me the ball, which he did, consistently. As a result I, me, Steve McKee, and my 6-foot-8-inches and 165 pounds of pipecleaner body that had not played basketball in high school, became the hoops star I had long wanted to be. Even if just for one year. Even if just at brand-new Allentown College of St. So-On and So-Forth. “We knew we weren’t going to be the centerfold story in Sports Illustrated,” says Chris Cashman. “We had no real expectations.” Joe told me about a visit to Center Valley a couple of years ago. “I went back and saw how beautiful the campus is,” he said. “There’s a soccer field right in the middle of the place now! I got choked up. We had not even a quarter of all this. I looked around – the beautiful facilities, the townhouses up on the hill, everything going on – and thought, Man, this is a real college now. But you know, what? We had a real college too.” Cash, a year ahead of me, was the classic “last man cut” from his high school team. At Allentown as a 6-3 center-forward he played in every game his first three seasons. Then, senior year, on the first day of practice he ripped up his ankle — and with it the gamesplayed streak. “We were a Catholic start-up college fielding a start-up team,” he says. “It was what it was. But what was magical about it was that A) we loved to play basketball, B) we grew to kind of love each other, and C) we took ourselves seriously enough not to run out there and knowingly take the chance that we were going to embarrass ourselves – even though, sometimes, we did embarrass ourselves.” Writing the Centaur Seasons blogs, I’ve had pleasant occasion to talk to many of my former teammates. It’s been great to reconnect, to hear the old stories. But I’ve also asked them to help me try to get my hands around the certain something that I believe made going to Allentown College when we did a particular, unique experience. If only I can find it. Tony Mazzeo offered this about the college, immediately. A threesport letterman, Maz won all the MVPs (soccer, hoops and baseball) and was named the Varsity Athlete of 1971-72 my sophomore year. “If there had been an Allentown College in the 1930s, would we have cared about it the way we did?” he asked me when we talked. And then he answered: “No.” It’s the fact that there was no Allentown College until we got there, until we made it so, Maz says, that makes our being there so special. “I am absolutely convinced of this,” he says. Joe Thomson, meanwhile, suggested this about Centaur Basketball. “In a crazy way, in the purest sense of the word, it was just playing the game for the love of the game,” he says. “There weren’t a lot of externals. We weren’t getting money, we weren’t on scholarship. We didn’t have to worry about who was getting all-conference. We just played. We didn’t like the losing, but when we did we just Which is why I think this is telling: Not one of my teammates I’ve talked to has said they wished they were going to DeSales U now, playing for the Bulldogs at a packed Billera Hall, taking a run at conference titles, postseason play, league honors, all that. No, thanks, we’re fine. “If we go back to a game now,” says Dave Gleilmi, a 6-2 forward and arguably the best player of the Centaur Season era, “the place is called DeSales University and we’re watching a team called the Bulldogs – that is obviously A LOT better than we used to be. But then we get together after and we have a few drinks and now we’re the Centaurs again, we’re Allentown College. And nobody’s saying, ‘Geez, I wish we were DeSales University.’ That wouldn’t be right. We were who we should have been, and we always will be.” The Centaur-Centdog-Bultaur-Bulldogs? They are who they should always be. As Jerry Wilkinson – with Tony Mazzeo the cocaptain of a half-good 8-8 Centaur team their senior year – wrote me in an email after some of us got together for a Bulldog game: “I do hope these kids today feel anywhere near the joy that we do that we played way back when.” Joy.Yes, that’s the right word. Feel it forever, Bulldogs, forever. This essay is drawn from the “Centaur Seasons” posts Steve McKee has written since September 2012. Steve worked for 14 years at The Wall Street Journal, where he was the first writer of the popular online sports blog, “The Daily Fix.” He is the author of three books, including Coach, an oral history of the sideline profession. To read more of Steve’s blog, visit www.steve-mckee.com/category/ blog/ 11 alumni events Homecoming Homecoming Alumni Events Win For more information, visit www.desales.edu/alumni, call Dug Salley at Manayunk, Pa., Presidential Tour (Young Alumni) December 5 • 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. cocktail reception Manayunk Brewery, Philadelphia, Pa. Homecoming Alumni Lunch and Photos with Santa December 8 • 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. DeSales University Center, Center Valley, Pa. Alumni Donor Reception, Hotel Bethlehem December 11 • 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. cocktail reception By Invitation Only; Hotel Bethlehem, Bethlehem, Pa. Florida Presidential Tour 2014 January 8: Naples • January 9: Miami • January 11: Orlando Texas Presidential Tour 2014 January 14: Dallas • January 16: Houston Career Networking Event February 5, 2014 • 5:00 to 7:30 p.m. DeSales University Center, Center Valley, Pa. Homecoming Bucks County, Pa., Presidential Tour February 12 • 6:00 - 7:30 p.m. cocktail reception TBA Donor Wine Tasting Event February 14, 2014 • 6:00 to 7:30 p.m. DeSales University Center, Center Valley, Pa. Philadelphia Presidential Tour March 6 • 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. cocktail reception • TBA Homecoming 12 Dinner Dance 2013 NYC Harbor Cruise nter/Spring 2014* 610.282.1100, ext 1694, or e-mail dug.salley@desales.edu. 33rd Annual Dinner Dance March 15 • DeSales University Campus Young Alumni Event at Revolutions March 28 • 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. Revolutions at Saucon Valley, Bethlehem, Pa. New York City Presidential Tour Dinner Dance 2013 Dinner Dance 2012 April 3 • 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. cocktail reception • Location: TBA Monmouth County, N.J., Presidential Tour May 8 • 6:00 - 7:30 p.m. cocktail reception • Location: TBA Lehigh Valley, Pa., Presidential Tour June 4 • 6:00 - 7:30 p.m. cocktail reception Gio Italian Grille, Macungie, Pa. Hershey Park June 22 • All day • Details TBA 26th Annual Golf Tournament June 9 • Brookside Country Club, Macungie, Pa. Alumni at the Iron Pigs Game August 1 • Details TBA Virginia Alumni Reception NYC Broadway Show August 23 • 9:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. • Details TBA * Schedule is subject to change.Visit www.desales.edu/alumni for the most current list of events. Most (though not all) of these events are free, and some have limited capacity. Spinnerstown Hotel Reception 13 Teresa (Messineo) Manidis ’95: Learning from the World’s Mistakes by Joshua Martin ’13 For the past 23 years, Reading, Pa., has hosted the annual World War II Weekend where thousands gather to view reenactments, antique war equipment, and the variety of costumes worn by their fellow participants. Those who attend this event are a key part of the World War II era resurrection, dressing in vintage clothing in what is known by those in the reenactment business as “impressions.” Most dress in vintage American garments, some in military uniform and others in the dress of civilians from their respected countries during the war. Two years ago, however, someone brought something new to the table that, despite its simplicity, changed the atmosphere of the festival entirely. Teresa Manidis ’95 had an idea on her way home from her anatomy and physiology class. “I thought to myself, there’s got to be something we can wear, some accessory or something that we can use to distinguish ourselves from the typical costumes,” says Manidis, “and then it hit me, the Star of David! Clearly we will be living in German held lands right before the start of the war.” According to Manidis, the representation of European Jews at the Reading WWII festival had been virtually non-existent up until 14 her decision to dress up, along with her three children, as a family during the early stages of anti-Semitic discrimination in Germany. The outfits prepared by Manidis and her family were just like those of the other German civilian impressions, but with one distinct addition; a homemade, artificially faded, realistically depicted Star of David. Manidis and her family portray a Jewish family during a time when the discrimination taking place in their lives had reached a pivotal point. “For us, it is still 1939. We are forced to wear something that isolates us within society - I couldn’t shop in your store, for example, and you wouldn’t shop in mine - kind of like the ‘Separate But Equal’ policy of the American South,” says Manidis, “But the point is, it could have stopped there. It could have ended with just ostracism, wrong as that was. History could have played out another way.” The simplicity and understatement of the impression seemed to be the reason for its overwhelming impact. By dressing normally, as Jewish citizens certainly did before their ostracism, and not brandishing the typical physical stereotypes that the Nazis inspired Opposite: In costume, Teresa Manidis is pictured with her three children (from left) Nicholas, Grace, and Sophia. Photo by Marisha Camp. Used with permission. and encouraged, the Manidis’s humanized the Jews in a way that reminded countless veterans and actors what they were celebrating that day, and what they had risked their lives for in the first place. “Literally hundreds of people have come up to us to shake our hands, to take our picture, to thank us, to kiss us, to cry over us,” says Manidis, “People told us they had always hoped to see - but never thought anyone would actually have enough moxie to do - this impression at a reenactment; that it was an impression that needed to be done.” It is no surprise that Manidis is a DeSales University graduate, since her actions and the impact she has on the people around her radiate with the Christian Humanist philosophies that shape the mission of the University. “What we learned in Dr. Kane’s theology classes; that we are all human, we are all the same underneath, the ideas of charity and justice and sticking up for the underdog, those are all things that we learned here,” explains Manidis, “everywhere you went you had this theme of goodness and solidarity.You had a lot of self dignity, but you weren’t better than anyone else.” Manidis, who has recently applied to DeSales’ masters in physician assistant studies program, has always had an interest in medicine along with WWII history. Her interests and ambitious spirit have inspired her to begin writing her first historical fiction novel, which follows two frontline nurses on the battlefields of World War II. The historical fiction work follows the protagonists through a time period where nurses were present in front-line combat for the first time in military history. Manidis developed this story idea after more than six years of research. “Once I told them what I was doing, they let me handle everything; the surgical equipment, the old bottles of morphine, and they showed me how it worked since everything was so different. Modern orthopedic surgery, prednisone and antibiotics didn’t come into play until the war had already started, or even after the war itself,’ says Manidis, “When it comes to the second World War, people are still alive, and a lot is written about it, so you really need to be diligent in your fact checking.” The same values being celebrated at these reenactments and at DeSales are the ones Manidis is passing down to her children. After developing her own curriculum, Manidis has been home schooling her children for the past 16 years in a way that she says “prepares” them to potentially become DeSales students (her eldest, Johnny, is a freshman) as well as citizens free of prejudice. “The kids and I voted on a motto that sums up our home schooling philosophy. We picked, ‘We learn from our mistakes.’ And that’s something our world, as a whole, would do well to do,” says Manidis, “Maybe our family is really good at imagining how it would feel to be someone who is marginalized; maybe our faith has taught us that we are all equal, all the same underneath; maybe we just like pulling for the underdog. But it seems ludicrous to my kids that they could be accepted without a little yellow star tacked to their shirts but hated - really hated - if they wore one. That just doesn’t make any kind of sense to them. I’d like to always keep it that way.” “I decided to try something more along the lines of Gone with the Wind, where you have Rhett and Scarlet as the only two fictitious characters in that book while every other person and event was real,” says Manidis, “so I am taking two fictitious Nurses; one in the Pacific theater and one in the European, and putting them in a real world.” Manidis’ book is a work in progress and she continues to research, contextualize and envision the scenarios she is dropping her characters into in order to portray the most realistic and riveting experiences she can. She understands, though, that unlike regular fiction works, there are many pitfalls that need to be avoided in the creative process. While most people go to the Reading WWII reenactment to see the skirmishes, Manidis visits the medical tents and talks to doctors in the name of research. February 19 to March 2, 2014 • Labuda Center for the Performing Arts • Main Stage Tickets and Information: 610•282•3192 • desales.edu/act1 15 class notes Dear Alumni Message from the Alumni Office I suspect that each of you, like me, as a graduate of DeSales University, are quite proud of the University’s accomplishments this past year, especially the opening of the Gambet Center for Business and Health Care. It’s a game changer! This year, we brought in a great class of firstyear students, all eager to pursue their degree at our alma mater. Let’s wish them well as they get started building a lifetime of memories. We will never forget our experiences as undergraduates or how DSU shaped us into who we are today. Your involvement and awareness of DSU happenings is critical to the success of the University. In fact, recruitment and retention of students is one DeSales priority where you can be very helpful. You may remember receiving information about the Heritage Scholarship. It’s an easy way for you to help us build our incoming class. In fact, all you need to do is find a deserving student and we award a scholarship after you complete some paperwork. It’s that easy. Take a minute to learn more and complete the form online at www.desales.edu/heritage. This year’s Homecoming Weekend was exciting and fun and possibly the best to date. Hayrides and mazes and sports fun and cocktail receptions at the new Gambet Center -- If you missed any of the excitement, take a look at some photos at www.desales.edu. And, if you have not seen the Gambet Center, please contact me and we can schedule a tour. Mark your calendars NOW for Homecoming 2014 – scheduled for September 26 & 27, 2014. And, take note if it’s a reunion year for you next year -- reunion years are: 1969, 1974, 1979, 1984, 1989, 1994, 1999, 2004, and 2009. Remember, if you ever have questions or want to volunteer for your reunion class committee, please feel free to contact me at Dug.Salley@desales.edu or 610-282-1100 ext. 1694. Sincerely, Dug Salley ’07 Director of Alumni Relations 16 Jerry Weiss ’75 and Maryanne (Janus) Weiss ’77 celebrated the wedding of their youngest daughter, Joanna, on June 22, 2013. Dick and Deb (Barnak) Burke ’75 and Jay Farmerie ’75 and Mary Cay (McCole) Farmerie ’76 have been invited to all four of the Weiss children’s weddings. Also in the photos is Fr. Jim Turner, OSFS ’75, who has been the principal celebrant for all four of the kid’s weddings. Joanna is a Penn State graduate in civil engineering who had a full AirForce ROTC Scholarship. Jerry had the privilege of commissioning her and giving her the oath of office as a United Sates Air Force Officer the day she graduated. She returned from a six-month deployment to Southwest Asia in early May and was married six weeks later. She married an Air Force intelligence officer, 1st Lieutenant Michael Leger a University of Texas grad. Joanna is also a 1st Lieutenant. They are both stationed at Beale Air Force Base in California. • 1973 In October 2007, Thomas Marino D.O. was diagnosed with an auto-immune disease called Myasthenia Gravis. While his medical treatments have made him feel somewhat better, he had to give up his medical practice, though he continues to read and volunteer at a free clinic in West Chester, Pa., for 10 or more hours per month. Thomas and his wife Maria will be married 40 years in December and are the parents of two grown daughters—their oldest was married in December 2012. Members of the class of ’69, the Storti family, and Dr. John Compardo got together for a reception on June 8 in the lobby of the new Gambet Center for Business and Healthcare. Through the class’s giving and the generosity of the Storti Family, a faculty office in the Gambet Center was named to honor the memory of John P. Storti ’69. • 1975 • 1985 After 27 years, Gail “Clyde” (Roney) Mallett retired from her job as a school psychologist in Wissahickon School District. She’s now in private practice doing educational neuropsychological evaluations, and she’s finishing her doctorate in health psychology from Capella University. Gail also renewed her Phillies season tickets (hope springs eternal), is going to loads of concerts, and hopes to spend as much time as possible with family and friends (especially my old pals from AC!) On February 15, 2013, Lou James accomplished a major life goal of owning his own business when he purchased the former Snyder, Hinkle & Lunsford Funeral Home in Bethlehem, Pa. The business will take the new name of James Funeral Home & Cremation Service, PC. Lou has been a licensed funeral director for more than 15 years. He is also a past president of the Eastern Pennsylvania Funeral Directors Association and is active in the Knights of Columbus, Ancient Order of Hibernians Lehigh County Division 1, and is on the board of the South Bethlehem Historical Society. He is a member of Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, Upper Saucon Township. Lou has also become an Irish-holic. In March 2013, he led a group of 10 travelers to tour Ireland and Northern Ireland. This was his 15th trip over to the Emerald Isle. • 1977 Marie Lange began a new position with the Independence Blue Cross Foundation in June 2012. She’s responsible for their Building Healthy Communities grant program and foundation communications. Marie’s position with the IBC Foundation is a culmination of more than 25 years working in the non-profit sector as a fundraising and development specialist and in the for-profit sector as a proposal writer in sales and marketing. She’s pleased to help organizations meet the health and wellness needs of their communities, not only through the financial support of the IBC Foundation, but also by drawing on her experience ‘walking in their shoes.’ • 1986 Jennifer (Lawrence) Kennedy is a current Ed.D. doctoral candidate at NOVA Southeastern University. • 1988 As of July 31, 2013, Thomas Williams has been promoted to partner at Cloudburst Security in Alexandria, Va. Thomas M. Bozzuto ’75, DO, medical director of the Phoebe Wound Care and Hyperbaric Center, recently returned from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where he was the only physician faculty in the first Middle-East primary training course in hyperbaric medicine in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia at the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre. There were more than 60 participants from civilian facilities in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait as well as the Saudi Navy. Tom was presented with a plaque and Ceremonial Saudi Sword by Professor Abdullah al Hokail, medical director of the King Faisal Hyperbaric Centre. Recently, Tom was awarded Fellowship in the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society at it’s Annual Scientific Assembly in Orlando. This is the second year that fellowships were awarded, and of the 500 board certified physicians in Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine, only 35 have been awarded UHMS Fellowship to date. Tom is medical director of the Phoebe Wound Care and Hyperbaric Center and will be installed as president of the Georgia Osteopathic Medical Society at the annual meeting in October. • 1991 October 1, 2013, Matt Casper’s book Saving Casper: A Christian and an Atheist Talk about Caring Versus Scaring Evangelism ... and Why We Need to Change the Conversion Conversation was published by Tyndale/ Momentum. This is his second book for this publisher. The first was Jim & Casper Go to Church, published in 2007. Saving Casper is a sequel of sorts (with a foreword by Paul 17 class notes Gerry Pandaleon ’82 and Nancy Sayre ’08 have published a book—How to Sell a Business for What It’s Really Worth: Nononsense secrets from a forensic accountant and CFO. Gerry is the author, and Nancy and her husband Michael published the book through their business— Sayre Design—which recently branched out to include publishing. Nancy edited the book, while Michael designed the cover. Gerry and Nancy met through DeSales’ ACCESS program—Gerry is an adjunct accounting professor and Nancy is a graduate. Young, who wrote The Shack, which sold more than 20 million copies worldwide) and can be purchased on Amazon and in most bricks and mortar bookstores. • 1992 Each year, during National Nurses Week, Lehigh Valley Health Network honors Friends of Nursing award recipients. Christine (Opilla) Heffernan, a radiation oncology nurse, won the Keri Fegley Suchy Award for Excellence in the Delivery of Ambulatory Care. A celebration was held in May at the Steelstacks in Bethlehem, Pa. Christine has worked in the network for the 23 years. • 1993 Cecy (Galdamez) Robson is happy to report tremendous success with her Weird Girls Urban Fantasy Romance Series, published with Penguin’s Signet Eclipse. USA Today’s HEA, Publisher’s Weekly, and Romantic Times have praised her debut novel Sealed with a Curse, released December 31, 2012. A Cursed Embrace, the second book in The Weird Girl Series, releases July 2, 2013, followed by Cursed by Destiny in early 2014. For more information, check out www.cecyrobson.com or find Cecy on Twitter or Facebook: www. twitter.com/cecyrobson www.facebook. com/Cecy.Robson. Cecy thanks all her friends, including many DeSales alumni, for all their continued support. 18 Cemantha (Morris) Giulian ’04 married Bill Giulian ’04 on September 15, 2012. The ceremony and reception were held at Lulu Country Club in Glenside, Pa. Alumni in attendance included Tony Hudacs ’01, RJ Scala ’04, Cagney Brennan ’05, Bob McCall ’04, Kristina (Grogan) Prozorov ’04, Lauren Schuette ’06, Hannah (Tuszynski) Sullivan ’06, Dan Sullivan ’04, Vinny Mezzanotte ’07, Maria (Tate) Mezzanotte ’06, Carolyn DeMayo ’04, Katelyn (Finnegan) Piotrowicz ’04, Theresa Strayer ’05, Rachel Kuter ’04, Amanda (Doklan) Lieberman ’04, Joanna (Lewis) Hudacs ’04, and Tammy (McMullin) Kissinger ’04. • 1994 • 1999 Derek Hulse authored and directed an Jacob Campbell ’99 is now the business intelligence analyst in the office of financial and business at The New School. He’s working on the data warehouse team as they build a warehouse for the entire university. original, full-length comedy entitled At Any Rate... that was produced at the Spring Lake Theatre in Spring Lake, N.J. The production ran for three weeks in February 2013 and starred DeSales alumni Colleen (Welsh) Hulse ’97, Tim Walling ’02, and Ian Kearns ’06. • 1995 Cindy Graf retired from Mondelez International/Kraft Foods on May 31, 2013, after working for 34 years. • 1997 Amy Phillips, Esq., and her husband Dave Schanbacher welcomed their first son, Colton Matthew, on November 28, 2012. Jeni Ascosi launched a short film, Beloved on the Earth, to an online audience. The film was shot surrounding the Lift-Life Retreat, which Jeni hosts each year at an organic, biodynamic farm and resort in the Guanacaste region of Costa Rica. Jeni also owns and runs a private practice in Holistic Health and Fitness in Manhattan. Her new interactive website is in the final development stages but can still be accessed to view the film: BelovedOnTheEarth.com. • 2001 Ward Van Haute lives in Pennsburg, Pa., with his wife Becca, and their four kids, Caius, Audrey, Maximilian, and Hezekiah. During the summer of 2013, Ward showed some of his contemporary reverse glass paint- ings at Art Nouveau Galleries in Quakertown, Pa. Ward is also excited to announce that in the spring of 2015 he will be having a solo exhibition in Villanova University’s Art Gallery. • 2002 Shelly (Beermann) Zarenkiewicz and her husband Dave welcomed their second son, Luke Braden, on December 3, 2012. Jesse Clancy ran his first Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013. He finished in a time of 2 hours, 55 minutes, and 57 seconds. His thoughts and prayers go out to all the victims of that day. Kathleen (Closkey) Rasley and Dennis Rasley ’03 welcomed their first child, Elizabeth Grace, on February 18, 2013. Elizabeth was born at Sacred Heart Hospital, Allentown, Pa. She weighed 7 lbs., 12 oz., and measured 19 inches long. Mom and baby are doing well. • 2003 Ryan Gingrich and Nicole (Ferraro) Gingrich ’06 M’12 welcomed their first son, Brett Aaron. He was born on December 30, 2012. Theresa (Cermanski) Westwood and her husband Rob welcomed their first child, Lily Rose Westwood, on May 30, 2013. Lewis Campanaro and Heather (Mooney) Campanaro ’03 welcomed their second daughter, Rowan Phoenix, on June 12, 2013. She weighed 7 lbs., 4 oz. Her big sister Melia couldn’t be more excited! On January 12, 2013, two members of the class of 2007 were ordained deacons in the Roman Catholic Church. Joe Newman, OSFS ’07 and Brian Zumbrum, OSFS ’07 were ordained at St. John Neumann Church in Reston, Va. Joe will continue to serve in that parish, while Brian will serve at Our Lady of Good Counsel in Vienna, Va. Alumni in attendance included Hannah (Boyd) Vargo ’06, William Vargo ’07, Janna (Fellmeth) Kerr ’07, Lauren Cupples ’07, Ernie Justice ’07, Jenilee Raia ’07, Rachel Wamba ’07, Elizabeth (Pfister) Poindexter ’07, Brian Radziwill ’07, Erin (Frey) Doolittle ’07, and Bro. Robert Killion, OSFS ’09. • 2004 Steven Kaminski married Liz Dufner in Southampton, Pa., on December 1, 2012. DeSales alumni in the wedding party included Jon Slabek ’04, Frank Mancuso ’04, and Kelly (Kaminski) Krall ’02. Other alumni in attendance included Scott McMillan ’04, Jon Fehringer ’04, and Phillip Immediato ’04. Steve is finishing his final year in earning his degree in court stenography at Orleans Technical Institute. Liz teaches 5th grade in the Boyertown School District. The couple lives in Blue Bell, Pa. television shows White Collar and Law and Order: SVU. Her modeling credits include calendars, websites, magazines, and more. Matt Curtolo and Lauren Gotthelf are happy to announce their engagement. Matt is a senior private equity analyst at Hirtle Callaghan & Co. in West Conshohocken, Pa. Lauren holds a degree in Pastry Arts from the Restaurant School at Walnut Hill and is a sales representative for the Chef’s Warehouse. The couple is planning a May 2014 wedding in Conshohocken. Tammy (McMullin) Kissinger has been modeling and acting professionally under the name Tammy Jean. She’s currently playing a lead role in an independent film in production— Apocalypse Kiss—by Potent Media. Tammy’s also had minor roles in several films: Martin Scorcese’s The Wolf of Wall Street, Guillaume Canet’s Blood Ties, and Half Full Media’s Dark Shield as well as Miss December which was picked up by Kevin Smith’s Movie Club. Additionally, she’s appeared in the Jim Kilcur ’02 married Kristen Johnson on July 14, 2012. The ceremony was officiated by Jim’s uncle, Monsignor Ralph Chieffo, at St. Mary Magdalene church in Media, Pa. 19 class notes Jason Barnes ’04 M’07 senior manager in ParenteBeard’s tax services group, has been selected by Lehigh Valley Business as a member of their 2013 Forty Under 40 class. He was recognized for his ongoing commitment to business growth, professional excellence and community service. Christopher Fulmer debuted season four of the show he co-hosts at WYLN in Hazleton, Pa., titled Off the Beaten Path and recently appeared in a production of Hello, Dolly! at the Strawberry Playhouse in Tuscarora, Pa. Georgeann Crossan married Joseph Moore on May 3, 2013. The bridal party included DeSales alums Alicia Gould ’04 and Steven Gallagher ’03. • 2005 Jennifer Simpson and Justin Farah ‘03 welcomed a baby girl on March 14, 2013. Gwendolyn Ann weighed 6 lbs., 15 oz., and measured 19 inches long. Jessica Bedford had her play Blessed Are produced by the Passage Theatre Company at the Mill House Playhouse in Trenton, Elizabeth Koneyak ’10 married Kevin Rakszawski on April 14, 2012, in Hunt Valley, Md. Maddie Cummings ’10 was maid of honor and Katie McNally ’11 was a bridesmaid. Ian Carr ’10 served as lector. Also in attendance: Michelle Kuhner ’11, Matt Kuhner ’10, Bob Schillinger ’10, Izzie Valk ’11, Brian Kaelber ’10, Ryan Ludwig ’10, Melissa Ludwig ’06, Stephanie Chrzanowski ’11, Ricky Malo ’11, Kathleen Corrigan ’10, and Paul Rakszawski ’11. N.J., in October and November 2012. Her husband Ian starred along with fellow alumna Kim Carson ’05. In November 2012, Donna Bolton joined Michael E. Orlic Real Estate in Quakertown, Pa. She’s working with rentals as well as sales. • 2006 Dan Maher had his work The Mighty Ducks selected as the Best Web Series in the second Annual Greater Lehigh Valley Filmmaker Festival. Angela Sigley and Marc Grossman are excited to announce their engagement. Angie is an assistant professor of dance at DeSales, and Marc is a biotechnician at Merck & Co., Inc. Marc and Angie are planning a summer 2014 wedding. • 2007 Ashley (Heilman) Bilotti welcomed a Nicole (Bealer) Branagh ’11 married Shawn Branagh on March 16, 2013, in Pottstown, Pa. Melissa (Ehrenzeller) Haines ’09 was the matron of honor and Jamie Trindle ’11 served at a bridesmaid. 20 son, Octavian Joseph, on December 12, 2012. Octavian weighed 9 lbs., 13 oz. He joins sister Jasmine, who was born December 12, 2010. He was a great 2nd birthday present! Former DSU men’s basketball players came back to campus for the annual alumni basketball game last spring. Scott and Amy (Ward) Rhine ’07 were married on August 11, 2012, at Holy Spirit Church in Palmyra, Pa., with a reception at the Hershey Country Club in Hershey, Pa. Tom Lovelund ’07 , Monica Bendekovitz ’07, Amanda Fabrizio ’07, Melanie McGregor ’07, Alissa DeVito ’07, and Tim Radecki ’07 were in attendance to celebrate. the Christmas 2013 season, a new venture for the company. Ryan Connolly received his doctorate of Maggie Hoerburger became engaged to osteopathic medicine from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, and he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant in the United States Navy on June 2, 2013. Ryan will be pursuing a residency in OB/ GYN. Andrew Drake on December 23, 2012. The couple is planning an October 2014 wedding in Macungie, Pa. Tara (Tedesco) Uhnak and her In June 2013, Amanda Fabrizio completed her M.Ed. in educational leadership with a focus in higher education from Lehigh University. Shortly after graduation, she accepted a new role as the associate director of Immaculata giving at Immaculata University. Sr. Joanna Armstrong received the Holy Habit of the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary and began Novitiate on December 8, 2012, at Mont Deux Coeurs (the Monastery in Tyringham, Maine). This is the order founded by St. Francis de Sales and St. Jane de Chantal. Lorelei Marquis has been promoted assistant director for the Musical Arts Academy of Music and Dance in Exeter, N.H. She has been with the company for 5 years as a dance teacher. As assistant director, Lorelei is proud to be spearheading the full-scale production of The Steadfast Tin Soldier for husband Chad welcomed their first child, Braxton Pius Uhnak. He was born in June 2013. • 2008 David Wasserman left his position as producer of visual media and took a role with Lehigh Valley-based FireRock Productions to help launch the news magazine show, The Peak in Fall 2012. After his time there, David was offered the position of director of digital media at The American College in Bryn Mawr, Pa. He now manages a team of seven, including two producers, two editors, a studio manager, and two interns. Their high-profile clientele includes Miller Coors, Johnson & Johnson, General Mills, Nestle, Northwestern Mutual, Sam’s Club, Bankers Life and Casualty Company, Merck, Dow Corning, Aflac, State Farm, Penske Racing, Walmart, Peabody Energy, and New York Life. This fall, Courtney McClurkin begin attending Temple University’s School of Podiatric Medicine. On March 7, 2013, Gia Zimmerman became engaged to Justin Long. The couple is planning a late 2013 or early 2014 wedding. • 2009 Kevin Thomer BSN, RN, CNOR is a certified nurse in the operating room (CNOR) and is currently training to be a registered nurse first assistant (RNFA) for Shriners Hospital for Children in Philadelphia. Nakia (Gard) Jones and her husband Arnell welcomed their second daughter—KateLee Rosa—on June 11, 2013. Their older daughter is named Nayelle Narene. Nakia is the assistant director of admissions at Drexel University School of Public Health and is a professional modern dancer for SomaticMovers Dance Company. Mary Galantino was featured by WFMZTV 69 News for her work to help bring holiday cheer to young patients at St. Joseph Medical Center in Reading, Pa. For the past four years, Mary, a nurse, has budgeted 15 percent of her salary for gifts for kids in the medical center’s pediatric department. Victoria Bonito appeared as Lil Bit in the Villanova University production of How I Learned to Drive by Paula Vogel in September 2012. 21 class notes Jeffrey Lanigan performed in Sherlock Holmes and the Crucifer of Blood at Hedgerow Theatre in Rose Valley, Pa., in October and November 2012. Margaret Marshall is engaged to Jason Rousis. Margaret is a doctoral candidate in the pharmacy program at Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, and Jason is the owner and operator of Dialed In Autosports. The couple are planning a December 2014 wedding. Sarah Nelson married Joseph Gelet on August 31, 2013. Randi Leibowitz-Barroso graduated from On November 24, 2012, Kate (Peters) McGuigan ’02 married Shawn McGuigan. Alumni in attendance included Matt Barber ’02, John Doumaux ’01, Bob Valente ’02, Tim Wilkinson ’02, Michael Blakely ’03, Dave Grubb ’00 and Clare (Laracy) Grubb ’01, Collette Mancuso ’00, Dennis Murphy ’01 and Karen (Loftus) Murphy ’03, Bridget (Sweeney) Blakely ’03, Jennifer (Cameron) Kincel ’02, Megan (Schnatz) McDevitt ’01, Kristen (Gallo) Knudsen ’02, Joe Kozole ’02, Chris Shelly ’01 and Cathy (Samoylo) Shelly ’01, Kelly (Kaminski) Krall ’02, and Deema (Toumeh) Hadid ’02. The couple lives in Warrington, Pa. Kathleen Glynn is engaged to Matthew Miccarelli. Matthew graduated from The University of California Berkeley in 2008 and the couple met in January 2012. The couple is planning an October 2014 wedding. Madeline Moore and her sister Rebecca are dancing with Catapult Entertainment, a shadow imagery company based in Connecticut. They have been competing on the NBC reality show America’s Got Talent, and advanced to the Top 12. The sisters recently formed a wedding dance choreography company—YourFirstDance (yourfirstdance.com). Brian Coll recently self-published a horror novel on Amazon called Inner Demons. It’s available in paperback as well as on the 22 Kindle. The central theme of the book is bullying and how the victim often demonizes the person who is bullying them. The story centers on a group of high school students who run a protection racket—if someone pays them, they’ll make sure that person is never bullied again. Things don’t turn out the way they hoped, however, when it turns out that the person who is stalking their most recent client isn’t even human at all. Amanda (Miner) Conklin and Seth Conklin ’10 welcomed their first child. Emma Therese was born on July 25, 2013. • 2010 Doug DeGirolamo was named the artistic director for Thibodaux Playhouse, Inc., in Thibodaux, La. the University of Phoenix with a master’s in psychology. • 2011 Chris Stevens played in the ensemble of The Sound of Music at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, N.J., in December 2012. Amanda (Roberts) Umstead and Weston Umstead ’11 married on June 22, 2013. In May of 2013, Samantha Lohr graduated with her master’s of education in school counseling from West Chester University. Allan Rush and Kelly (Morrison) Rush ’12 married on October 13, 2012. Three DeSales graduates were groomsmen: Kristopher Reif ’11, Dan Kwiatkowski ’12, and Peter Kaplan ’12. Also in attendance were alumni Ally Castellano ’12, Kolbe Rubin ’14, Isabel Garcia ’13, Ani Lucas ’14, and Samantha Gambler ’14. Amy Klotz has been promoted to senior accountant at ParenteBeard, a top 25 accounting firm. Jessica Weaver graduated from Wilson College in August 2013 with a degree in veterinary medical technology. • 2012 Abbi Snee recently booked a role on the CW network’s Gossip Girl. Michael Liiro was a stage manager and area supervisor for events and productions at Busch Gardens during the summer of 2012. Julia Salvo was accepted into and began the master’s of arts program in theatre at Villanova University in January 2013. Adriana Stigliano released her first album, titled, The Gift, which can be downloaded through iTunes. • 2013 Dawn Marie Tuers M’13 had her first article published thanks to research she conducted while attending classes at DeSales. The article, entitled “Defensive Medicine in the Emergency Department: Increasing Health Care Costs Without Increasing Quality?” was published in the Nursing Admin Quarterly, April-Jun 2013, Vol. 37, No. 2, pp. 160–164 In Memoriam Andrew D. Ardinger ’90 Paul W. Barndt Sr. P’78 Michael Baxter P’98 Dr. Julius G. Bede Mary Jane Compardo P’70 Anthony J. Cushing ’72 Ashley Gonzalez ’07 and Thomas Hodgskin ’07 were married at DeSales University on May 4, 2013. Alumni in attendance included Ryan Whalen ’07, Joseph Casilio ’07, Becky (Kelly) Friedenberg ’ 06, Caitlin (Kinsella) McLemore ’07, Moira Ryan ’ 07, Laura (Hrapczynski) Taylor ’07, Krista (Grunklee) Armbruster ’07, Brian Donnelly ’07, Shannon Dooling ’07, Lauren Fanslau ’08, Brian Thornton ’07, Mikki Conway ’07, Patti DeMatteo ’07, Julia Stroup ’10, Andy Wertner ’07, Angela (Pomo) Wertner ’06, and David Martin ’06. Analisa (Santangini) DeFilippo ’88 Inez C. Donley Charles J. Dowd ’75 Rose M. (Szerensits) Dries ’93 Kristin L. Ekey ’10, ’11M Therese M. (Herbacek) Faust ’87 Marlene O. Fowler Regina Gallagher P’00 Louie J. Herczeg ’74 Priscilla Payne Hurd John A. Lyman ’98, ’01M James V. Magee Jr., Esq. ’69 Ann Marie Mahoney ’03 Anne P. McGeady Tara J. (Boyle) Mirabella ’97, ’01M Shirley Pritulsky ’82 Frederick V. Schubert David M. Seese ’96M Thomas P. Stormes ’77 Irene J. Strella Kathleen A. (Hahn) Wiegand ’77 J. Bowling Wills Get Your Class Note in the Next DeSales Magazine Have you recently moved, changed jobs, received a promotion, married, welcomed a child or grandchild, and/or received an honor or award in your profession or community? Do you have any interesting news to relay to us about other DeSales University alumni? Visit www.desales.edu/alumniupdate to update: • Your information • Submit class notes and photos. Class notes are entered in the field at the bottom of the form. Please make sure photos are high resolution. We accept digital photos as well as prints. Digital photos must be in JPG or TIF formats, as close to the original print size as possible (larger is better) and at a minimum resolution of 300 dpi. Questions about photos? Call 610.282.1100, ext. 1359. It’s especially important to let us know your new address if you’ve moved. In addition to submitted information, DeSales receives press releases from businesses and organizations and other news alerts announcing alumni achievements. These items are edited and placed in class notes. 23 2755 Station Avenue Center Valley PA 18034-9568 Address Service Requested
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