The vista from the top of ±«Óătvâs hill is as arresting as the view from the bottom. Equally beautiful, they differ merely in perspective.
Similarly, the fondest recollections of ±«Óătvâs Bicentennial All-Class Reunion might differ among the 4,000 alumni, family members, and friends who attended the event last weekend. Yet, all of those memories, full of joy and deep connection, were made to last a lifetime.
For class years ending in 4 and 9, it was a chance to sit under the tents on Whitnall Field or at class dinners in the Village of Hamilton, catching up on personal and professional news.
If you were a member of Konosioni, celebrating its 85th anniversary, you might have focused on University traditions, like the Torchlight procession, led this year by President Brian W. Casey and Board of Trustees members. For 90 minutes, as the sunlight dwindled behind Taylor Lake, alumni streamed from the Academic Quad to Whitnall Field, carrying the light of knowledge on brass torches, made possible through the generosity of classmates.
If you were a Swinging âGate â a member of the Universityâs female a cappella group, founded 45 years ago â you would have spent the weekend responding to .
Meanwhile, members of Thought Into Action celebrated 10 years mentoring student entrepreneurs, and the Alumni Council honored a century of work on behalf of the community of graduates, now more than 32,000 strong.
After dedicating a tree in front of Olin Hall, ±«Óătvâs Alumni of Color gathered at the ALANA Cultural Center to praise the work that raised its roof 30 years ago.
âIt is my hope that, on this 30th anniversary, we recognize that ALANAâs story is our story â over the decades and over the centuries, etching our presence into the very architecture, history, and landscape of ±«Óătv,â Provost and Dean of the Faculty Tracey Hucks said. âIt is also this occasion where we mark a new beginning with ±«Óătv in its third century of existence.â
During its Bicentennial year, ±«Óătv vowed to look back on a proud history and forward to an ambitious future. Alumni had the chance to do the same last weekend.
Friday morning, former University trustees James Allen Smith â70 and Diane Ciccone â74, Pâ10 signed copies of their new books, each chronicling ±«Óătvâs past.
On Saturday morning, on the newly approved Third-Century Plan, a long-term framework to guide the University as it pursues its mission at the highest possible level and becomes an even greater version of itself. âWe knew, when we began the planning process, that the trick was not to try to change ±«Óătv, but to make it better,â Casey said.
Alumni packed the chapel and overflow rooms across campus while others watched from around the world via Livestream as Casey described the elements of the plan, based on ±«Óătvâs most distinctive characteristics, and outlined the first steps that the University will take toward implementation.
Those steps include the elimination of loans for students with family incomes below $125,000; expanded support for professors, particularly junior faculty members; a second Hamilton Initiative, including a renovation of the Universityâs golf course; the pursuit of a plan for arts, creativity, innovation, and design; and the implementation of the new Robert H.N. Ho Mind, Brain, and Behavior Initiative (MBB).
In separate Reunion College sessions, faculty members provided further detail on MBB and progress on campus planning around the arts, creativity, innovation, and design â a conversation that now includes the performing arts, University museums, multiple academic departments, Thought Into Action, and other campus partners.
âWhen I was in college, there was a focus on rational thought. You read books, thought about them, then came back and talked about them, and that is a valuable way of learning,â Professor Lesleigh Cushing, associate dean of the faculty, said. âBut people didnât focus on learning with your body, with your hands. Now, the conversation has shifted. How do we create students who learn holistically through their bodies?â
Other Reunion College events featured alumni talking about team building, mindful storytelling, founding craft breweries, and more. In the Ho Tung Visualization Lab, alumni watched University history unfold in three dimensions with the premiere of the new film ±«Óătv at 200 Years.
Memories of all kinds, collected by the thousands, were made possible by staff in alumni affairs with support from colleagues in the advancement office and across campus. No matter the class year or affiliation, the effort â years in the making â was both a rally and a rallying moment for an academic community on the move.
Invoking words that he gives to incoming first-year students during convocation, Casey said, âI want to leave you with these lines: âMake no small plans here. Have no small dreams.ââ
My business is very people oriented; itâs crucial to both tell our story and listen to othersâ stories. ±«Óătv has taught me the importance of hearing other perspectives and understanding where people are coming from.
Ramsey Brame â04 How Technology is Changing Education
±«Óătv understands the importance of a vibrant village. Members of the community are invited to attend cultural, social, and athletics events; thereâs a real ease of movement from the village to the campus and back. That is unheard of in a lot of college towns.
RuthAnn Loveless MA â72 Partnership, Collaboration, Communication: Reflections of a Mayor in a College Town
One of my favorite moments this weekend was meeting Tom Wilson â49. He told us about having a fabulous four years with his Kappa Delta Rho brothers â after he had adjusted to being a 16-year-old freshman with 27-year-old friends who had just come back from the war. He was lively, funny, and enthusiastic about his ±«Óătv experience, even after all these years. I hope I come back for reunion when Iâm 90.
Betsy Whitehouse â88 ±«Óătv Through the Lens of CUTV Over the Years