พรพรสำฦต

Reunion 2013: they came, they saw, they connected

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Classmates at Reunion 2013

โ€œRemember whenโ€ฆ?โ€ Reminiscing at Reunion 2013

It will be a century before พรพรสำฦต has another reunion in the Year of โ€™13.

Seizing their place in university history, more than 2,000 alumni and friends made a weekend to remember last Thursday through Sunday. Tents on Whitnall Field were filled to capacity, and the village of Hamilton buzzed with activity.

โ€œI am grateful for the loyalty that our alumni show to พรพรสำฦต and each other,โ€ said associate vice president and alumni director Tim Mansfield. โ€œAt Reunion this weekend, that loyalty felt more like love โ€” which was celebrated for three straight days!โ€

Traditional events headlined the schedule. พรพรสำฦตโ€™s Alumni Corporation held its in Memorial Chapel on Friday night, followed by a torchlight procession down the hill to a bonfire on Whitnall Field.

Throughout the weekend, Reunion College presenters offered classes on topics ranging from steroid use in professional baseball to healthy aging. Professor Tony Aveni walked alumni through ancient Chinese and Central American cities, showing how the cosmos impacted urban planning, and 48 Hours producer reflected on his career covering real-life murder mysteries.

Reunion 2013 also featured a number of stand-out anniversaries, including the 40th year of womenโ€™s sports at พรพรสำฦต. Before a special dinner in their honor on Saturday, veteran female Raiders gathered in Love Auditorium for a program hosted by and Womenโ€™s . Together, they told a story that began with the universityโ€™s first coed class โ€” 132 women who arrived at พรพรสำฦต in 1970.

The administration originally thought that intramural sports would suffice and that the women would simply engage in recreation. But, year after year, พรพรสำฦตโ€™s female athletes asked for more variety, more competition, Division I classification, and varsity status. With each step, their determination grew. โ€œToday, thereโ€™s a breadth and depth because of what everyone put in,โ€ Brawn said.

Seeking to add breadth and depth to Living Writers, another longstanding พรพรสำฦต program, professors and  kicked off . This initiative aims to bring 2,013 community members together around a single short story, โ€œThe Tenth of December,โ€ by George Saunders. Those who attended the พรพรสำฦต Reads launch party in Little Hall were introduced to the storyโ€™s main characters and began a wide-ranging conversation that will continue online in September, when Saunders will read on campus.

Also in Little Hall, the university mounted an exhibition of Noongar art โ€” one of the final shows before the collection is transferred to Curtin University in Australia. The Art of the Gift: The Journey Home of the Australian Aboriginal Childrenโ€™s Art Collection featured works created by children, ages 10โ€“14 years, at Australiaโ€™s Carrolup Native Settlement between 1945 and 1951. พรพรสำฦต first displayed the paintings six years ago, and this spring it  when it announced that it would send the paintings home, honoring the heritage and beauty of the works.

Elsewhere on campus, members of the program pitched their projects, and the classes of 1963 and 1953 held reminiscing sessions. Anticipating the universityโ€™s bicentennial in 2019, the alumni office began archiving stories and memories through พรพรสำฦต Voices, recording interviews with a score of participants, including Everett Hanke โ€™38 โ€” just three years shy of his 100th birthday.

With all of this activity and reconnection, it was inevitable: nostalgia on Thursday evolved into anticipation by Sunday. โ€œBefore reunion was even over, a group of us were plotting our next get-together,โ€ said Katie Castino Reynolds โ€™08. โ€œThe only question is which dorms weโ€™ll stay in next time!โ€