MURFREESBORO — Seventy-five
former MTSU students returned to campus and special field trips as part of the
seventh annual Alumni Summer College.
History and the Civil War provided the theme for this year's
summer college, held June 25-27.
To view video from the event, visit http://youtu.be/Wt3hfSQDDT0.
From welcomes provided by university staff and
administrators to a surprise visit by Abraham Lincoln impersonator Dennis Boggs
of Nashville, the event was much anticipated by attendees, who turn it into a
family and friends reunion.
"Everyone is excited to reunite with old friends,"
said Alumni Relations assistant director Rhonda King. "It's like a family
reunion."
First-time attendee Ann Waggoner of Tullahoma, Tennessee,
who earned her master's degree and specialist in education degrees in 1971 and
'94, respectively, said it had been a great experience.
"I've enjoyed meeting people — and a lot of people from
Tullahoma are here," she said.
King, MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee and Vice President for
Advancement Joe Bales provided first-day welcomes. McPhee and Bales met the
group at the Rutherford County Courthouse on the historic public square in
downtown Murfreesboro.
They later visited the Stones River Battlefield before
returning downtown for dinner.
Two of the highlights from Day 2 of Alumni Summer College
were hearing presentations by author and historian Robert Hicks of Franklin,
Tennessee, who wrote “The Widow of the South,” and Murfreesboro physician
George Smith, who discussed the “13th United States Colored Troops
Living History Association.”
The Friday, June 27, agenda included trips to Nashville to
visit the Belle Meade Plantation and to Franklin to tour The Carter House and
Carnton Plantation.
For more alumni events, visit http://www.mtalumni/.
For more on this story and more MTSU news, visit http://mtsunews.com.
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