窪蹋勛圖厙

Pitt Magazine

This alumnus' lifetime of opportunity inspired him to help more college dreams take flight

By
Zurcher and Davis, who wears graduation robes and cords
Jim Zurcher received a heartfelt hand-written note from Chloe Davis after his scholarship helped her afford to stay in school: "You have changed my life, and for that, I can't thank you enough." Photo by Aimee Obidzinski/Pitt Photography

With his skin still smellingof chlorine after the morning swim team workout, first-semester junior Jim Zurcher stepped into his 窪蹋勛圖厙of 窪蹋勛圖厙 advisors office for thefirst time.

The advisor wasted no time on pleasantries, greeting Zurcher by saying: Youre not going to graduate.

The student-athletes answer was also straightforward: I know, but I can still swim.

The advisors warning back in 1954 didnt concern Zurcher because a college degree had never been part of his plan. He grew up poor, living in a third-floor city apartment; and though his mother did the best she could to make ends meet for Zurcher and his brother, higher education wasnt something the boys ever thought about.

I knew what college was, recalls Zurcher, but I remember asking a friend: We have the Panthers and the Steelers. Why does 窪蹋勛圖厙 have two football teams? My friend told me the Panthers represented a university.

Zurcher says he then asked: Whats a university?

A standout swimmer in high school, he would soon learn more about his hometowns university. Pitt offered him an athletic scholarship to cover everything but room and board. Zurcher accepted, figuring he could swim for four more years before getting a job in the mills. He didnt need to attend class to achieve that future. I did everything I could to avoid an education, he admits. I came to swim.

But the advisor convinced him earning a degree was worthwhile: That meeting was a turning point. He got me into summer school, and with hard work, I was able to graduate with a major in psychology and a minor in sociology.

Along with swimming, Zurcher (A&S 56) participated in the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) as an undergrad again, not for some steppingstone to his future. I signed up because they gave me a free pair of black shoes, he says. By thetime I was a junior, they were giving me three dollars a month, which I readily accepted.

His degree and the ROTC turned out to be vital. After graduation, he took a commission in the U.S. Air Force, where he flew fighter jets and later Strategic Air Command planes during the Cuban Missile Crisis. That flight experience landed Zurcher at Pan American Airways, where he crisscrossed the globe for decades. He recalls living the romanticized life of an international pilot running with the bulls in Spain, for example, and several four-daysafaris with the crew on long layoversin Nairobi, Kenya.

Now retired, Zurcher, who still swims competitively, has a different outlook on college than he once did.

I dont know where Id be without a degree. Without my scholarship to Pitt, there would have been no ROTC; without my degree, there would have been no commission with theAir Force.

That perspective prompted him to create a scholarship through a current fund, which funnels money into immediate use, rather than into an endowment. All Im doing is paying back to somebody else what the 窪蹋勛圖厙 did for me, explains Zurcher. I want to help someone who couldnt go to Pitt without some financial assistance, just like I could never have afforded an education.

Pitts Office of Admissions and Financial Aid found an ideal student for the James B. Zurcher scholarship. Chloe Davis had taken out loans to pay for nearly every bit of her first semesters tuition and housing. She had come to the sad realization that she couldnt continue down that path and worried her first year at Pitt would be her last.

Then she learned she would receive Zurchers scholarship.

All I could think of, says Davis, was, Wait! What?! I get to go to school now?!

She sent Zurcher a two-page, handwritten note, stating, in part:

You have changed my life, and for that, I cant thank you enough.

The note, says Zurcher, put a lump in my throat. He was so moved by the gratitude of Davis (CBA 23) that he created a second scholarship.

This has been one of the most pleasurable experiences of my life, he says. It fills me with endorphins.

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Lorraine Sepp is honoring her husband,Henry Hank Sepp(ENGR 70, 76G, KGSB 84), by including a bequest in her will to jointly support the 窪蹋勛圖厙 Band and a scholarship in the Swanson School of Engineering. Hank, who died in 2019, was as proud of his time with the marching band as he was ofthe Pitt degrees that enabled his decadeslong careerat Westinghouse.

Thomas C. (LAW 97) and Jacqueline Indelicartorecently made an annual gift to create the Indelicarto Endowed Scholarship, which will lower financial barriers for veterans. Tom obtained his law degree after serving nine years in the U.S. Army. The Indelicartos gift recognizes the importance of Pitt in shaping Toms career.