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Colgate Magazine
  Submitting news to Editor: Rebecca Docter and co-Editor: Kathy Jipson
Colgate University Office of Communications
Class News: https://alumni.colgate.edu/general-pages/class-news#1978

Autumn 2020 issue submission:  259 words

Michael DeFilippo bicycled 1000 miles from Rapid City, SD to St. Louis MO and posted photos in his Journal. Alec Sirken had a bicycle accident and had surgery for a torn ACL. He reports it’s a long slow recovery especially at his age, which he tells people when asked, is “closer to 60 than to 50”. He says he “couldn’t have picked a better summer to be inactive.” A significant number of ‘78s have gathered on Zoom every other week or so to catch up and swap stories of who is doing what during the pandemic. Thanks to the organizational effort of Dave Johnson, it’s been good to see the faces of John Kenney, John Willis, Brion Carroll, Jeff Kaufman, Bob Schreiber, Steve Bradley, Tom Arcario, Doug Arthur, Greg Carr, Rich Cort, Bill DuBois, Ed Blair, Rick Henninger, Bill Milani, Mark Rachlin, Chris Killingstad, Paul LeBlanc, Nick Lovecchio, Tony Pietrafesa, Dick Taylor, Steve DuPont and Steve Lemkau… among some others. Chuck Dickemann and his wife Leslie report that their elder son, Mark, was married on August 7 to Laura Vanegas in Urbanna, Virginia. Mark is a financial policy analyst at FHFA, and Laura is a Sr. Training Coordination Specialist at Mortgage Bankers Association.   Allen "Skip" Merriam looks forward to attending Colgate football games.  Matt Schwach has a granddaughter named Frankie.  Rick Shaddock is Director of the Digital Currency Association in DC and sponsors the annual 911Debate.org.  Garry Dominguez is Managing Partner at York Harbor Inn.  

I hope everyone has been healthy through the coronavirus pandemic, and that by the time you are reading this many of the restrictions have been lifted so we can enjoy autumn with family and friends in person, not just virtually.

Please post your news on our Facebook group: Colgate1978 or email to Editor@Colgate1978.com


Rick,

VAL HORNSTEIN reporting in after a long AWOL.  I've been in SF Bay Area for 33 years after short stints in DC (law school) and NYC (first law job).  Been practicing in my own firm for about 25 of those years after short stints (again) in big law and then in-house. I have a more or less general business law practice with emphasis on civil litigation, securities law, intellectual property and some entertainment law. Been married for 30 years w/ two 20-something daughters living nearby.  Still swinging a bat in senior softball leagues here in Calif. where I'm on three or four teams. Glad to report that I went to the 2019 All-Class Reunion and had a wonderful time. First time for my wife. Weather was gorgeous and glad to also report that I went to Cooperstown baseball HOF during that trip and still cannot figure out why I hadn't done so while in college. I'm looking forward to our 45th in 2023!

 
Thx.

Rick - welcome to the column. Thank you for taking on the job. This is Joe Mecca writing you. I came in with the Class of '78 but graduated early in December 1977 so I am sure that our paths have crossed. Colgate allowed me to study in Teheran, Iran (January 1975 before the "revolution") and Rome, Spring '76. I wish you the best in handling the important task and trust you will put great effort into it as we in the class advance into Social Security, Medicare, expanding families, different adventures, possible retirement and hopefully fruitful twilight years. Join us in celebrating this part of our lives when we may be in a better position to enjoy the rewards of our labors.

 
Let us also hear about you and your life. It is as important to us as are the reports of others in our class and college.

 
I am very happy in my life and appreciative of the many gifts that have been bestowed on me in so many different ways. I have been blessed with a wife, Nancy of almost 35 years, and four healthy children who range from 28-34. Three of them travel the word extensively with refugee work and other interesting endeavors in several continents. We have visited them as they move around to diverse and sometimes dangerous places. As a result, they have broadened our horizons and have brought fascinating and diverse individuals into our lives. They have made us aware of the totally different lives and lifestyles of the rest of the world. The "kids" are all educated and being citizens of the EU can continue to roam the world despite the wall being built around us.

 
At home, I have a law practice that happens to be in the same neighborhood as my old paper route fifty-something years ago. And some of the same people that I delivered the Paterson Evening News to still reside there. I have no intention of retiring and enjoy my life as a sole practitioner attorney specializing in estate planning, probate administration and litigation as much today as I did forty years ago when I started out. A good part of my practice turns out to be more ministry than legal so my two years living in a Catholic Seminary may have helped to some extent in using my law degree, especially in my field of work.

 
On a personal note, I have enjoyed adventures around the world in five continents hiking and exploring mostly with my adult children but my wife, despite some handicaps, joins in the less challenging but just as fun trips. I put in ten miles a day walking ( a fairly new avocation now that I am not riding fifty miles a day on my road bike) and do my best to keep healthy, something that we cannot always guarantee at our age no matter what our efforts may be. I like to read and study French and Italian twice per week in each language, hoping that someday to relocate to Europe in retirement. I once had an active life in New Jersey politics but that is long in my past.

 
I continue to enjoy the company of some of my Colgate friends and make my way back to Reunion each five years. On a regular basis, I see my Phi Delta Theta colleagues like Jim Aber '78 in Toronto, Luke Bierman, '79 in North Carolina and Dave Mancini '79 in Connecticut. I have remained good friends with Anne Thomas Steger '78 of Rochester for 45 years. I also sail (when there are no pandemics) with Ken Macartney '78 in New Rochelle on a regular basis. They remain truly good friends who I treasure more than any material things we have been able to acquire.

 
I suppose in some ways this column helps us define ourselves and present to our classmates and others who read the Colgate Magazine an opportunity to share that part of ourselves that we wish to present, shedding good light on the good and hopefully not evolving into grumpy old guys with aches and pains and regrets about what we could have done.

 
Colgate was an important part of my life while I was there - I missed two of the Spring semesters by studying elsewhere but hold great memories of the best summer in the Chenango Valley. It remains an important part of me in that who I met and what I learned will be with me the rest of my life.

 
Tell us about yourself and share with us how you got to Colgate and your graduate work.

 
Joe Mecca '78

 Past submissions

Summer 2020 issue submission:  76 +444 words

We thank Linda Pattillo for her many years of service as Class Editor. Betsy Sweet is running to be Maine's Senator. Art Skaar, a lawyer, is running triathlons.  Jay Hancock has been nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in Investigative Reporting. Nancy Baldwin is Mayor of the London Borough of Richmond. Dr. Hans Schardey is an MD near Munich helping Germans with the virus. Matt Schwach has a granddaughter coming soon. Allen "Skip" Merriam is enjoying retirement in FL, and Lake George NY during the summer. He attends many football games, even the USAF game in CO.   

Clare Kilpatrick Benz wrote in about her special Colgate circle that includes Nancy Baldwin, Sue Hubbard Johnson, Colette Abissi ’82, Nancy Gorman ’80, Janet Schiff-DiFiore ’80, and Liz Reid Wonka ’80. “Once upon a time, there were 7 strong young women who made one of the most important decisions of their lives: to attend Colgate University during its first decade of co-education. All from the Northeast, their diversity lay in their different socioeconomic and religious backgrounds. Among them, they can count at least 7 advanced degrees, in fields ranging from accounting to career counseling. They were not all friends, or even acquaintances, during their time at Colgate. Through their lynchpin, Nancy Gorman ’80, they would all be connected eventually. As their careers and families developed over the years, there were times when 2 or more of these friends resided in the same city (DC, NYC, London). More often than not, however, they stayed in touch through letters, phone calls, and the occasional visit. They attended each other’s weddings, participated in the 2017 Women’s March, organized excursions for significant birthdays, and supported each other through the trials that life too often brings. When the COVID-19 shutdown began, this group felt the need to share their struggles and laughter, as they navigated this new normal. These women, who had felt grateful for the ability to use an electric typewriter for their college term papers, were suddenly embracing the 21st-century technology that is Zoom. Meetings were scheduled 2–3 weeks apart, with sporadic check-ins via What’s App. My, how the value of a liberal arts education and its emphasis on exploration, adaptation, innovation is demonstrated in these times. The group’s conversations, as anticipated from Colgate alumnae, are at times lighthearted, supportive, and at times intense. Deciding to add an intellectual element to their gatherings, they selected a book to read prior to their late June meeting — but not just any book. Mount Pleasant, by Patrice Nganang, transports its readers to the birth of modern Cameroon. Originally written in French, it was translated into English by yet another Colgate alumna, Amy Baram Reid ’86, sister of Liz Reid Wonka ’80.” Clare also shared a photo of a June Zoom gathering in which the women sported Colgate masks. Sue Hubbard Johnson had found Colgate cloth online and proceeded to make masks for the group. “What other institution of higher education can boast about producing THAT combination of skills and talent!?” Clare writes. “When people dare to ask what makes Colgate so unique, outside of its breathtaking campus and challenging academics, direct them to these and other stories about very special women whose friendships will endure for a lifetime. Go, ’Gate!”



Rick Shaddock
PO Box 1711, Fairfield, Iowa 52556
202-829-4444
Editor@Colgate1978.com 
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