Welcome home, Lawrentians.
More than 600 ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ University alumni, family, and friends were back on campus June 19-22 for a festive Reunion bursting with enthusiastic reconnections, nostalgia, new opportunities to learn, and pledges to support current and future students.
The weekend included dinner gatherings, receptions, beer gardens, a 5K run, Alumni College presentations, the annual Parade of Classes, and a convocation in Memorial Chapel that featured the traditional presentation of class gifts. A gathering in Wriston Art Center celebrated more than five decades of London Centre experiences, something organizers hope to make an annual part of Reunion.
Despite temperatures pushing into the 90s, alumni showed up with enthusiasm.
βWe are blessed with phenomenal talent and commitment throughout our ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ family,β President Laurie A. Carter said at the Reunion Convocation. βThank you for being part of that. Thank you for lifting current and future students. And thank you for being here to celebrate the bonds that keep Lawrentians connected across the disciplines and through the generations.β
Class gifts
Alumni gather in Memorial Chapel for the Reunion Convocation.
The Reunion Convocation included the annual presentation of class gifts. The Class of 1975, celebrating its 50th reunion, led the way as its members announced gifts to ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ of $6.2 million. The Class of 1985 announced gifts totaling $3.4 million, the cluster of 1989-90-91 $724,849, the Class of 2000 $171,626, the cluster of 2009-10-11 $68,647, and the Class of 2015 $13,876.
In all, more than $10.5 million was pledged to ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊβsome of it for the ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ Fund, which supports operating expenses in everything from academics and study abroad to facilities maintenance and athletics, and some of it earmarked for specific uses.
βOne of the most rewarding aspects of my role is thanking Lawrentians for their investment in this university,β Carter said. βYour time, talent, and resources make this university truly extraordinary. ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ thrives because of your leadership and support. On behalf of our entire community, thank you for these very generous class gifts.β
New LUAA president
Margaret βMaggieβ Schmidt β12: "Whether you share your story in the classroom, as a volunteer, or through your philanthropy, there is a role for everyone.β
Margaret βMaggieβ Schmidt β12 was meeting with alumni throughout the weekend as the new president of the ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ University Alumni Association (LUAA). She leads an LUAA Board that represents an alumni community more than 22,000 strong. She encouraged her fellow Lawrentians to look forward as much as backwards as they reconnect with campus.
βRenew connections with classmates, with friends, and with ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ, too,β Schmidt said. βΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ has physically changed since many of us were students. Take the time to embrace how ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ is continuing to evolve as higher education evolves. Make time to build new connections with alumni outside your class, with current students, and with faculty. I guarantee you will meet some amazing people and learn something new, and maybe even unexpected.β
Schmidt, a civil rights attorney and educator, succeeded Matt Murphy β06 as LUAA president.
She encouraged alumni to pay it forward, supporting the university in ways that make enrollment more affordable for future students and the ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ experience more vibrant, enriching, and vital. It comes at a time when the higher education landscape is rapidly changing.
βGreat things are happening at ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊβhave you seen Fox Commons and West Campus?βand our investments are critical to the continued success and vitality of the college and our community,β Schmidt said. βThe moral of the storyβconnect, engage, pay it forward, and celebrate. Whether you share your story in the classroom, as a volunteer, or through your philanthropy, there is a role for everyone.β
Parade of Classes
Ted Katzoff β65 leads the Parade of Classes heading into Memorial Chapel.
The Convocation was preceded by the annual Parade of Classes, one of the great traditions of Reunion. Members of each celebrating class walk the sidewalk together as they approach Memorial Chapel, stopping to have their group photo taken.
Ted Katzoff β65, celebrating his 60th reunion, led this yearβs parade.
Ode to Minoo Adenwalla
Glen Johnson β85 returned for his 40th reunion. He did so still thinking of Minoo Adenwalla, the longtime ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ professor who died Jan. 5, 2025.
Johnson, a former reporter for the Associated Press and Boston Globe who wrote a book about his time serving as Secretary of State John Kerryβs senior communications advisor from 2013 to 2017, calls Adenwalla his βfavorite professor.β He maintained a close relationship with him to the end. Shortly before returning for Reunion, .
βItβs fair to say I never had a better or more impactful teacher,β Johnson wrote. βAnd itβs also without doubt I was extremely lucky to have him remain interested in my life and career until almost the day he died at age 97.β
Johnson would maintain a friendship with his former professor that spanned 45 years: βMinoo helped me through my studies, time overseas, career advancement, and development as a reporter and writer. He taught me much about friendship and loyalty, including the simple act of staying in touch and the loosening effect of single-malt Scotch.β
Tours of old and new
Plenty of photos were taken as alumni reconnected with classmates and campus.
Tours were part of the weekend experience. In the full campus tour, alumni got a chance to revisit old haunts while getting up-to-speed on all thatβs changed since they walked the campus as undergraduates.
There also were guided tours of two new developmentsβFox Commons and West Campus.
Fox Commons is a downtown Appleton redevelopment project thatβs been ongoing since 2023. ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ is a long-term tenant in Darkhorse Developmentβs reimagining of the former City Center Plaza. ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ joins gener8tor, a business startup accelerator, Mosaic Family Health, and Prevea Health in the redeveloped mixed-use space that is now a centerpiece of the cityβs rapidly evolving downtown. The third floor of the development, featuring a Pre-Health Commons and student apartments, will be open when students return for Fall Term 2025. The opening follows the unveiling last fall of the Business and Entrepreneurship Center and the first grouping of student apartments, all on the second level.
West Campus, meanwhile, is a four-story building at the corner of E. College Avenue and Drew Street on the western edge of ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊβs campusβhousing the Trout Museum of Art on the first floor, ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ academic spaces on the second floor, and apartments on the upper two floors. It is set to open in time for Fall Term. The teaching spaces and technologies on the second floor will elevate collaboration across campus and with the wider community and will strengthen the humanities curriculum, Conservatory programming, and the teaching in math, computer science, and data science.
Alumni Awards
Seven Lawrentians were honored with LUAAβs annual Alumni AwardsβKatherine (Wroblewski) Diop β00, Rebecca Doyle-Morin β00, Michael Johnson β75, Marjorie Liu β00, Steven Wereley β89, and Charles β75 and Janice β75 Woodward. Read more about the recipients here.
Diop, who was unable to attend, was presented with the inaugural Joseph F. Patterson Jr. β69 Service to Society Award, honoring the legacy of the late Joseph F. Patterson Jr. β69, whose leadership and advocacy led to the establishment of the LU Black Alumni Network (LUBAN). Patterson family members were in attendance.
Each of the honorees received a special medallion designed by Lexi Ames β17, a studio art and biology double degree graduate. The design was inspired by the original medallion presented in 1956 and celebrates the rich history and tradition of the awards.
βAlumni Awards reflect the collegeβs deepest held values and are given to alumni who have made outstanding contributions and achievements in a career field, provided exceptional service to their alma mater, and have gone above and beyond to serve their communities on the local, national, and international level,β Schmidt told the gathered alumni. βRecipients are nominated by you and selected by the Alumni Association Board of Directors.β
Alumni College
It was back to the classroom for many of the alumni as they sat in on Alumni College presentations delivered by ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ faculty or fellow alumni.
Timothy X. Troy β85, the J. Thomas and Julie Esch Hurvis Professor of Theatre and Drama and professor of theatre arts, presented a session that detailed how he used a Fulbright Scholar Award in 2022-23 to research and write a play in Ireland about Dan Stapleton, an Irish revolutionary whose covert actions before and during the Irish War of Independence (1919-21) are mostly unknown outside of his family.
He told those gathered in the Warch Cinema that during an earlier teaching assignment in Ireland he struck up a friendship with Stapletonβs great-granddaughter, Lucy. She eventually shared the family stories of Stapletonβs heroicsβa mild-mannered pharmacist by day and an explosives operative by night. Itβs a story that hadnβt been told in any significant way, and Troy set out to tell the story, researching it during the first half of his year-long stay in Kilkenny, then writing it and eventually bringing it to a staged reading after returning to ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ.
The title, Run with the Hare (β¦and Hunt with a Hound), Troy said, is a reference to Stapletonβs double life.
He called the Fulbright Scholar experience one of the most fulfilling adventures of his academic career. In addition to teaching and developing the play, the year in Ireland delivered new insights on his own familyβs Irish history.
Other faculty who presented Alumni College sessions included Kurt Wilson, assistant professor of anthropology, on the relationship between humans and their environment in the Central Andes, Greg Milano, assistant professor of history, on global history explored through coffee, and Allison Fleshman, associate professor of chemistry and co-owner of McFleshmanβs Brewing Co., on the wonders of the craft beer industry in Wisconsin.
Alumni presenters included Brienne Colston β15 on being a values-driven leader; Megan Walsh β00, a visiting assistant professor of law and director of the Gun Violence Prevention Law Clinic at the University of Minnesota Law School, on the Second Amendment; Najja Gay β15, a quality control microbiologist, on microbial contamination; and Terry Holt β75, an emeritus professor of geriatric medicine and teaching professor of social medicine at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill School of Medicine, on narrative medicine.