College Opens Arcidi Center, Celebrates Benefactors

The Arcidi Center, named for the late Dr. Alfred L. Arcidi '53, will house the College's Welcome Center and the O'Brien Center for Career Development.
Merrimack College logo

Merrimack College dedicated the Dr. Alfred L. Arcidi Center on Thursday, as President Christopher Hopey cut the ribbon surrounded by the benefactor family that has sent three generations to Merrimack College.

The ribbon-cutting preceded a scaled-down dinner, at which donors and friends of Merrimack came together to honor those who have supported the Together for Good campaign, including the Arcidi, Gallant and Edmunds families.

Hopey talked about Merrimack’s progress, including recent recognitions for academics, athletics and the transformational nature of a Merrimack education.

“Truly, we have come into our own as an institution and as a community,” he said. “These recognitions are not the reasons for our success — they are the results of it.”

Part of that success, Hopey said, is due to “the support, the vision and the wisdom of those like the families we honor this evening — the Gallants, the Edmundses and especially the Arcidi family, whose legacy now greets everyone who enters the campus.”

The Arcidi Center, named for the late Dr. Alfred L. Arcidi ’53, will house the College’s Welcome Center and the O’Brien Center for Career Development. Arcidi, who built a dental practice into the thriving multi-state Whittier Health Network, “looked to the future while always remembering where he came from.”

A short video recounted for the attendees the life and legacy of Dr. Arcidi, and was followed by remarks from his sons Alfred’84, chairman of the board of trustees; Philip’81, chair of the trustees’ committee on real estate; and Michael ’85.

The Gallants were honored for their lead gift to support athletics through the Competing for Good goal of the capital campaign, and the Edmunds family — children of the late Robert F. Edmunds Jr. ’66, a Merrimack trustee — for their gift to endow a scholarship in his memory.

The event was scaled back due to simultaneous events in Lawrence, North Andover and Andover as both campus officials and guests from the local area worked to respond.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

Related News

Photo of Faryal Yaquby sitting in a chair. The Merrimack College logo is superimposed on the right of the image.

From Afghanistan to Merrimack College

 |
By: Michael Cronin
Faryal Yaquby, M’24 came to Merrimack after two years of evading the Taliban.
Headshot of Douglas Pisano.

Merrimack College Names Douglas J. Pisano New Dean of its School of Nursing and Health Sciences

 |
By: Michael Cronin
Pisano brings more than 35 years of higher education experience and has launched two independent health professional schools within university settings.
Three Merrimack students at a Relay for Life event.

Relay For Life Returns to Merrimack College’s Lawler Rink

 |
By: Michael Cronin
This year’s edition of the American Cancer Society fundraising event at Merrimack will be held in part to honor the late Kevin Salemme ’95.