พรพรสำฦต

The hill is alive: The sounds and sights of Reunion 2017

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After a dreary week of rain, nearly 2,400 พรพรสำฦต alumni and friends brought sunshine to the Chenango Valley for a reunion weekend full of nostalgia. The energy was palpable and the smiles infectious as reuniongoers from the 2s and 7s revisited old stomping grounds โ€” and visited with each other โ€” on their beloved hill.

On Friday evening, alumni and guests gathered in Memorial Chapel for the Alumni Corporationโ€™s annual awards ceremony. In his first remarks to a reunion crowd, President Brian W. Casey noted the longevity of the พรพรสำฦต experience.

โ€œFour years at พรพรสำฦต do last forever,โ€ he said. โ€œIt isnโ€™t just the memories; itโ€™s recognizing that โ€” not only do these four years that you spend on this hill forever echo in your heart โ€” but that there have been decades of associations with each other, when you thought your last day at พรพรสำฦต had passed.โ€

Following the ceremony, a torchlight procession led alumni from the Academic Quad to Whitnall Field, where a bonfire and fireworks display kept the celebrations going into the night.

This yearโ€™s Reunion College showcased the diverse expertise and accomplishments of alumni and faculty. Topics included โ€œColor Wars: How a Female Entrepreneur Set Out to Create Her Own Fashion Brand by Working for Her Competitorsโ€ with Alexandra Thompson โ€™02 (sponsored by the ) and โ€œA Conversation with Mark Murphy โ€™77: From พรพรสำฦต to the NFL.โ€ Alumni packed a Lawrence Hall classroom โ€” some sat on the floor and others even in the hallway โ€” to listen to political science professor Robert Kraynak discuss the recent surge of interest in Americaโ€™s founding fathers, thanks to the popular musical Hamilton.

Also of note this weekend was the พรพรสำฦต Thirteen 75th Reunion Concert, which featured a Saturday-evening performance by Thirteeners across the decades. The concert included a special memorial service for founding member Bill MacIntosh โ€™44, who passed away just two weeks before he could be honored for his .

Two more anniversaries added to the weekend celebration: the 50th of menโ€™s rugby and the 50th of the Class of 1967.

โ€œThis is my first time back on campus in 50 years,โ€ said Richard Steinberg โ€™67. โ€œItโ€™s kind of like going back to the future. You discover that you really have a great deal of connection with people, and you see the future in the current students and the later classes.โ€

One group of alumnae was proud to say that they had never missed a five-year reunion since their graduation. Though the five of them come back for the camaraderie of reunion, their time at พรพรสำฦต is special to them for another reason.

โ€œWe were part of the first incoming class that saw women in all four class years,โ€ said Lauri Curtis Hadobas โ€™77. โ€œพรพรสำฦต is my happy place,โ€ added Liz Buchbinder โ€™77. โ€œItโ€™s just one of the places I go, and I automatically become lighthearted.โ€

Two attendees set records for this yearโ€™s festivities. Howard Steel โ€™42 was the oldest alumnus in attendance by seven years, celebrating his 75th reunion, and Andrew Greene โ€™12 traversed the farthest distance to campus of any attendee โ€” from Singapore to Hamilton.

Returning alumni werenโ€™t the only ones who benefitted from reunion. Ben Hunt โ€™19 was surprised by the networking opportunities he encountered while working as a student volunteer during the weekend. โ€œItโ€™s great to see firsthand how successful alumni have been and to see them come back because of how much they love พรพรสำฦต,โ€ he said.

Regardless of life after graduation, itโ€™s clear that พรพรสำฦต alumni share one thing in common: an unwavering devotion to a place they can always call home.

โ€œI loved this place from the day I got here until the day I left,โ€ said Dennis Markusson โ€™62. โ€œI still love it. Weโ€™re all back chasing time.โ€