Honoring Past and Present: Inaugural Founders Day Features the βWomen of the Sixtiesβ
The first ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ graduates returned to campus to share their groundbreaking history with students, faculty, and other alumni.
Sixty years ago, ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ was nothing more than a dirt field, a pile of rocks, and a dream. The founding members inspired generations of students to take ownership of their education and build a transformative community. On February 21, 2023, ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ hosted an inaugural Founders Day event to celebrate its sixtieth anniversary and the people who made that possible.
Dubbed the βWomen of the Sixties,β the first ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ graduates returned to campus to share their groundbreaking history with students, faculty, and other alumni. After watching a βΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ Then and Nowβ slideshow from the 1960s to the present, community members gathered with the original ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ alumnae for interactive table conversations. Afterward, people perused the yearbooks and course catalogs from the Collegeβs early days and left mementos to be placed in the Founders Day Memory Chest.
Later in the afternoon, the Collegeβs early alumnae led a walking tour across campus. They gave insight into a multitude of black-and-white photos in McConnell Center and Scott Hall, including the town hall meetings (the beginnings of shared governance) and the founding faculty portraits. By the end of the tour, they were exchanging contact information with students and promising to see them again at Alumni Weekend.
Members of ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄βs Trailblazers classes talked about how they charted their educational course with eagerness and innovationβa tradition that students continue to this day. Beyond the festivities, Founders Day became an opportunity for bridging generations and honoring the past and present.
Alumna and Trustee Louise Thornton β68 put it best when she said: βWhen I first looked at the campus, it was blank. Dirt, rocks, and sagebrush. I came here because it was a blank page, and it just drew me. It changed my life.β
May ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ continue to change lives for the next 60 years and beyond.
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