Lou Zuccarello was a straight-A student, on track to becoming class valedictorian at Mount St. Michael Academy, a Marist Brothers high school in the Bronx, and winning debate competitions all over New York City. But college? It didn’t look like college was going to happen.
Lou’s father passed away suddenly at the age of 51, when Lou was 16, and his mother took over the family dressmaking business.
“No one in my family had been to college,” Lou remembered, “so I had no idea how to navigate the world of higher education, much less the world of financial aid. But my mother was steadfast in her insistence that I go to college. I envisioned working days and somehow saving enough money to go to night school.”
It was a Marist Brother at his school who reached out to St. John’s University, pitched Lou’s potential, and helped Lou navigate his way to a full scholarship. Lou commuted by subway nearly two hours in each direction, graduating summa cum laude in 1958.
That Marist Brother, Ed Cashin ’52, later moved to Marist College and recruited Lou to the faculty in 1966. Dr. Zuccarello, who retired as a professor of political science in 2001, led the creation of the Criminal Justice department and served as academic vice president and academic dean from 1975 to 1980.
“Getting a college degree changed the script not only for Lou, but for future generations of our family,” said Barbara Zuccarello, Lou’s wife of more than 60 years and a longtime volunteer leader for the Marist College Center for Lifetime Study. “All three of our boys graduated college and have built fulfilling careers and beautiful families. We’ve always said that if we ever had the financial means to do so, we wanted to help create more stories like Lou’s.”
Lou and Barbara established the Zuccarello Family Scholarship, supporting talented Marist students from the Bronx with demonstrated financial need.
“The Marist community has been our home for 56 years,” Lou said. “Barbara and I are blessed beyond our wildest imagination, and we hope others will follow our lead and make stories like ours possible for future generations.”