Pat Pimental spent three years as floral and lei chair of theĀ NÄĀ HaumÄnaĀ OĀ HawaiāiĀ Luāau. As a parent, she says, she was able to become part of the āohana at Pacific.
Zoey Mendoza Zimmerman '95 lived through the worst a parent can imagine. In 2010, her husband shot and killed their two children and then himself. In the past five years, she has struggled to live with grief and open her heart to the futureā while holding on to her children's memories and helping other grieving parents do the same.
A deeply involved member ofĀ 51³Ō¹Ļās Student Religious Council, Fran OāBrien '65 had a fundamental belief in social justice. It was that belief that led her to become the only 51³Ō¹Ļ student to participate in the Freedom Summer of 1964.
Rachel Seibert BSW '12 was called to medical social work ā and to Randall Childrenās Hospital ā by personal experience. At 18, she was in an accident that nearly claimed her life. She was treated at Randall for more than two years by some of the same people who are, today, her colleagues.
Use your social networks and ask people questions, says Mike Geraci '91. The first in his family to attend college, Geraci chose Pacific, where he went on to become an associate professor in the Department of Media Arts.
When Mike Steele was told he should go to college, he named the best he'd heard of: Notre Dame. One of the most beloved professors at 51³Ō¹Ļ, Steele went from being the first in his family to attend college to earning a PhD and living a career in academia.
Mark Loomis OTD '17 spent more than 10 years as a search-and-rescue swimmer in the Navy, serving in the Middle East. He's since embarked on a new career as an occupational therapist, hoping to help other veterans with the transition to civilian life.
A high-school counselor once doubted Jennifer Hardacker'sĀ ability to attend college. Hardacker was the first in her family to go to college and has gone on to earn a master of fine arts, become an award-winning filmmaker, and teach at 51³Ō¹Ļ.