Two alumni from the Class of 2013 are among the nation’s “brightest young stars and future leaders of everything” on Forbes’s 30 Under 30 lists: Maggie Dunne ’13 for education and Ryan Smith ’13 for enterprise tech.
Geoffrey Craig '65 retired from his "eminently satisfying" first career as a banker in 2002. Since then he has found a second career publishing everything from a novella, to a prose novel, to full-length plays. He has even taken the helm as a theatrical director.
At work, Jeffrey Schneider '92 helps students find the right college for their interests. At play, Schneider works with American Ninja Warriors to grow a chain of parkour gyms.
Jess Blank ’11 and her boyfriend, Adam Weisbarth ’10, volunteer as foster “parents” for Badass Brooklyn Animal Rescue, a four-year-old group that rescues dogs from high-kill shelters in the South.
Robert Virgil Smith, Harry Emerson Fosdick Professor of philosophy and religion emeritus and a United Methodist pastor for more than 45 years, died peacefully at home on Feb. 12, 2015. He was 94 years old.
To this day, actor and author Olivier Sanjay Lafont ’01 is amazed — and amused — each time someone approaches and calls him “Price Tag,” the nickname of the materialistic character he played in the 2009 Indian blockbuster 3 Idiots.
Slightly sweet, somewhat spicy, a little bit vinegary. This isn’t a characterization of Dave Mundis ’90 and Mike Vincent ’90 (although it could be), but rather, how they describe their award-winning ThunderSnout BBQ Sauce.
When Jason Sawtelle '92 thinks about his “road taken,” he sees a trailhead with many different paths, all looping him back to the same spot: the world of art.
“If walls could talk,” Scott Donahue ’76 mused recently about Apartment 6A on 91st and 3rd in Manhattan. Starring a colorful cast of Colgate characters, some of the apartment’s stories were retold — and a few relived — this past November at a multigenerational reprise of a gathering called Fall Ball.