Portraits Summer 2022

Page 16

Making the big move to Pittsburgh is easier with help from friends

the

Bradford Gang B Y K I M B E R LY W E I N B E R G

NO ONE IS LONELIER THAN A FIRST-YEAR student dropped off at college. “I was 1,000 percent alone,” said Alexis DeFilippo ’15-’17, who would spend two years at Pitt-Bradford before going to the Pittsburgh campus to finish her degree as a materials science engineer. “Going to a small campus like Bradford forced me to make friends and reach out.” She made friends the way many first-year students have done over the years, sitting on her stoop in the “Zoo,” a U-shaped group of townhouses with green space in the middle that’s always a popular place in the fall. “I was sitting on the stoop looking lost, and an RA had a bunch of students sitting at a picnic table doing some sort of activity,” she said. The resident assistant, the gregarious Zachary Hadfield ’17, convinced her to take part. “I was hell bent on sitting on that stoop, but those people at that picnic table became my best friends. I was Steve Werner ’72-’74, bottom just at one’s wedding last week.” left, and his best Pitt-Bradford Deep friendships form on a small buds gathered on campus the campus, but what happens to those year after they left. Others pictured are (clockwise from students who have to transfer to the Werner) Dr. Mitch Joseph and Pittsburgh campus to finish their Dr. Dave Robinson. The other degree, as all students did in the early two alums have been lost to time. years and a handful of majors still do 14

PORTRAITS

today? They take a Bradford gang with them. Steve Werner attended Pitt-Bradford from 1972 to 1974, where he met lifelong friends Mitch Joseph and Dave and Libby Robinson. He graduated from the Pittsburgh campus in 1978 with a degree in civil engineering. “I met my best friends at orientation during the summer of 1972, and we have remained close ever since,” he said. “Our three families basically grew up together. While we settled in different parts of the state, we have gotten together every year for family outings, football games and a couple of Bradford reunions.” Brandon Chavel ’95-’97 spent two years in Bradford before heading to Pittsburgh with fellow engineers. “We felt a little isolated from the rest of the students because we knew that we weren’t going to be there for all four years,” he said. That helped create camaraderie within the engineering class that made the leap to the Pittsburgh campus more manageable. “I still have friendships and relationships that I know from Pitt-Bradford,” said Chavel, who went on to earn his master’s and doctoral degrees in civil engineering from Pitt as well. William “B.J.” Wright ’88-’90 and his friends Dave Moniot ’88-’90 and Scott Wivel ’88-’90 made the leap nearly a decade before. “I definitely developed a peer group in Bradford,” Wright said. “It didn’t prevent us from making friends down there at main campus, but it definitely was helpful. Many of the people I ended up with in my study groups were Bradford people.” A Bradford student who was a year ahead of him, Tom Pfaff, helped him academically, and Wright was friends with the students who had been at Bradford after him, too, overlapping by just a year in the small program. Wright, Moniot and Wivel bonded for life on the Bradford campus, not only studying engineersummer 2022


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Portraits Summer 2022 by Pitt-Bradford - Issuu