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Campus & Community

Alumni Dan and Kathy Mezzalingua Support University, Student Scholars through $5.25 Million Gift

Tuesday, September 5, 2017, By Kathleen Haley
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University Trustee Dan Mezzalingua ’60 and his wife, Kathy G’62, are generously supporting future generations of high-achieving students at ϲ through a $5.25 million gift for undergraduate financial aid. Their support is directed to the Invest ϲ Initiative, a $40 million fundraising effort for new student scholarships. The Invest ϲ Initiative is part of , a $100 million initiative that seeks to redefine the student experience, advance discovery and innovation, and expand opportunity, access and affordability.

Dan and Kathy Mezzalingua

Dan and Kathy Mezzalingua. Photo credit: Mila Bridger Photography

The couple is excited by the work being done by Chancellor Kent Syverud and his leadership team to provide new possibilities for students through Invest ϲ and advance the University’s academic excellence. “The Chancellor is strengthening ϲ academically. He’s been really doing a wonderful job enhancing the entire institution,” Dan Mezzalingua says.

Giving back in support of students and the University is important to Dan Mezzalingua, who is thankful for the opportunities that were provided to him by the faculty and staff during his time at ϲ. He recalls the support and assistance of then Dean of the College of Liberal Arts Eric Faigle who put him back on track after Dan had left SU without completing some exams to briefly attend another school.

“Dean Faigle was very understanding. When I came back, he gave me all sorts of academic instructions to adhere to, but he allowed me to return, which was very unusual in those days,” says Dan, who graduated with a liberal arts degree. “I felt very grateful to him and without him I probably would not have graduated from ϲ.”

Dan fondly remembers his professors as encouraging students to think critically and ask questions—an essential element of a liberal arts education. “We had some very lively conversations,” he says. “It was shaking me out of my comfort zone. That’s what college should be all about; I loved it.”

Working his way through college, Dan, who was a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, would pay his own tuition throughout the semester, sometimes asking for payment extensions from the Bursar’s office. “I will never forget how good they were to me, and I want to do whatever I can to give opportunities to other students,” he says.

Kathy, who is from the ϲ area, earned an undergraduate degree in retail from Marywood University in Scranton, Pennsylvania. She received her master’s degree in education at ϲ while working as a teacher in the ϲ City School district. “There weren’t a lot of opportunities for retail in ϲ, so I decided to teach and I found I really did love working with adolescents,” Kathy says. Kathy taught for several years in the school district before the couple married, and she then retired to have and raise their six children.

Dan worked with his father, who had a small machine shop, and started to build the family business by manufacturing patented products. They purchased an operation that created parts for community antenna television systems, the beginning of the burgeoning cable television industry in the 1950s and 1960s. “We started making machine parts and that developed into coaxial cable connectors, and eventually into other parts for cable systems, such as amplifiers and cable,” Dan says. The family later developed manufacturing plants in Copenhagen, Denmark; St. Kitts, West Indies; and Suzhou, China.

As their family and company, Production Products Co., flourished, the couple began to think about how to share their blessings with others. “We were very blessed in terms of what had occurred for us, and we wanted to make sure other people had opportunities through meaningful help,” Dan says.

Over the years, Dan has served with many civic organizations, including the United Way Resource Development Committee, Community General Hospital Foundation and the Manlius Pebble Hill School Board of Trustees. For ϲ, he served on the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees, and was a member of the Society of Fellows and the Chancellor’s council. He served on the Advisory Council and the lead trustee on the Schine Student Center Campaign.

Growing up, Kathy was inspired by her father who was an attorney and provided free services to those who were not able to pay. “I saw how he gave back. Dan and I were blessed with six children and as the business started to grow I knew that we had an obligation to give back to the community,” Kathy says. She eventually became involved in such organizations as Hospice of Central New York, Friends of the Central Libraries and the Order of Malta, a Catholic lay organization that assists the elderly and poor in the community.

The couple and their family also became deeply committed to redeveloping a private Catholic school in St. Kitts, where their daughter Laurie oversaw the family’s business operation on the island. Laurie had been approached by the school’s nuns about providing some basic supplies, but she realized that their needs were much greater. The family funded the construction of a library, which the school named after Laurie, and eventually created five buildings. The school has grown to an enrollment of 500.

Laurie passed away from breast cancer eight years ago, but her legacy continues not only through the school but also in the Saint Agatha Foundation, which she started to help pay the medical bills of patients unable to afford their treatment. Kathy, at the request of her daughter, now operates the foundation, assisting breast cancer patients in Central New York with all treatment and recovery related costs not covered by other insurance. “When she was going through breast cancer, her mantra became ‘helping those who cannot afford their illness,'” Kathy says. Laurie’s spirit of giving continues through her family’s support and volunteer work in the life of their community. It’s an important message the Mezzalinguas want to pass on to others.

Through their support of ϲ scholarships, Dan hopes students continue the pattern. “We hope that they will all give back to ϲ one day,” Dan says. “They have to keep passing the torch.”

Kathy agrees, “For the student scholars our wish is that they take advantage of the education they are receiving, and when they are successful will do the same to help other students. Our legacy for them is the philosophy by which we’ve tried to live, when you receive, you must give back.”

Interested in funding opportunity? To make a gift and to learn more about Invest ϲ: Advancing Academic Excellence and the Student Experience, visit .

 

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Kathleen Haley

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