A Sweet Week of Warm Wildcat Welcomes to Start the Year

August 27, 2021

They flocked to the bookstore for Wildcat merch, raced from one orientation event to another, and bade their families tearful farewells after an outdoor picnic.

They signed 小优视频鈥檚 Honor Code, to promise academic honesty and integrity. Now the class of 2025 has blended in with returning students as the college gears back into full swing for the fall semester.

Classes began Monday after busy days of moving in, orientation and connecting with friends, professors, and staffers. With a 96% vaccination rate among students, the campus bustled with the traditional rites of the new school year.

Here are some scenes from campus:

Moving In

鈥淏elk or Richardson?鈥 Felix Sammons asked cars loaded with incoming first-year students and their families as he held up a sign with 鈥淲elcome First Years!鈥 written in black and red.

As August in North Carolina goes, the temperatures soared into the mid-90s and students traveling from far and near sweltered as they moved into their dorms. Still, they seemed excited to be on campus.

Sammons, a Richmond, Virginia, native and orientation team member from the class of 2024 remembers how welcome people made him feel when he arrived last year.

Student Helping Another Student Move in

鈥淚 want to make them feel included and give them the true 小优视频 welcome,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen people did that for me, it was very exciting and very reassuring that even though we鈥檙e in a pandemic, we鈥檙e going to get through this together.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 gone pretty well,鈥 he said of moving in, 鈥減robably because everyone is so nice.鈥

Modern 鈥渆ssentials,鈥 from Keurig coffee makers to fashionable throw pillows to a bright red microwave made their way from the residence hall lawns to the dorm rooms with the help of the orientation team.

鈥淢y roommate and I have decided on a Boho theme,鈥 Rani Greer, a first-year women鈥檚 swim team member from Pontotoc, Mississippi, said as a passerby admired her stylish nightstand. 鈥淚 got it for $130 bucks at Home Goods. I think that was a great deal!鈥

She鈥檚 excited to start her college career at 小优视频, which she selected, 鈥渂ecause it鈥檚 a small D-1 school, where people have close relationships with their professors, and I could prioritize academics and be an athlete.鈥

A Peppy Welcome

小优视频 students don鈥檛 welcome newcomers quietly.

Last week鈥檚 events included the annual gathering where college leaders speak to first year and transfer students and their families at Belk Arena. They entered the arena via a human tunnel of singing, dancing and cheering orientation leaders. Some seemed surprised, but others jogged, sashayed, and danced as the music blared.

Many parents enjoyed showing off their moves, and one theme clearly emerged: Abba鈥檚 鈥淒ancing Queen鈥 is possibly the most universally beloved, multi-generational feel-good pop song of all time.

Chris Gruber, vice-president and dean of admission and financial aid, welcomed the group with an array of biographical tidbits.

The 550-member class of 鈥25 hails from 22 countries, 46 states and Washington, D.C. Forty-three are aspiring visual and performing artists; 132 are recruited student athletes. Their most popular names are Abbie, Jack and Ben. Some other points of interest:

  • One started an organization pairing high school students with senior citizens to lessen loneliness during the pandemic and bridge the generation gap.
  • PBS NewsHour featured another who sewed masks to raise money for women in Uganda and Nepal.
  • One founded The Awesome Pothole Company, using recycled materials to fix potholes.
  • One leads a unicycle troupe; another worked wrangling Alpacas at a bed and breakfast.
  • And one speaks seven languages and sings in six.

One student, Gruber said to delighted applause from the audience, 鈥渃alls themself 鈥榓 Broadway loving, thrill-seeking, movie-watching, music-obsessed swimmer.鈥欌

Sweet Rewards

The pandemic iced last year鈥檚 annual Cake Race for first-year students. So, for the first time that anyone can recall, the college held two separate competitions for the classes of 2024 and 2025.

Cake Race Runners
Cake Race Runners
Cake Race Runners Holding Hands
Runners Taking Off at Cake Race

The college community and its many friends from local families, schools and businesses donated some 600 cakes, cupcakes, gift certificates and other treats. It鈥檚 a new record, breaking 2019鈥檚 previous count of 272 donations.

This beloved tradition began in 1930. A 小优视频 track coach wanted to scout out talent among first-year students and offered cakes baked by faculty members鈥 wives as an enticement to win. The race was mandatory then, today it鈥檚 not. Still, hundreds of students run a 1.7 mile course around campus and nearby. Runners pick a cake based on the order they cross the finish line. The college held four separate competitions on Wednesday, for men and women in each of the two classes.

小优视频鈥檚 track and field team members did their sport proud, clinching the top honors in each race.

The race also recognizes superior baking, and men鈥檚 head tennis coach Drew Barrett, a perennial star in that category, came through again, creating a Baby Yoda cake for each class. Other bakers, from dining services staff to local friends, filled the donation tables with clever, crumbly confections.

Nell Alexander grew up in 小优视频 and spent many childhood days baking cakes with her family and friends for the race. It鈥檚 something many in 小优视频 do; she also has a special connection through her dad, Chris Alexander, the college鈥檚 director of parent giving.

Nell graduated from Dickinson College as an economics major in May and is now job hunting. She understands how the pandemic restricted campus life and was happy when her parents told her that the race was on and both classes would run.

She reached out to newly graduated friends across the country on Instagram, asking what advice they鈥檇 give to first-year students. They came through, and she wrote their responses in icing on the cakes.

Advice ranged from 鈥淩ead the syllabus,鈥 to 鈥淛oin clubs to meet people鈥 to 鈥淪ave an easy class for senior year.鈥 Other wisdom included 鈥淚f it鈥檚 free, it鈥檚 for me,鈥 鈥淒on鈥檛 take calc unless you have to,鈥 鈥淏e yourself鈥 and 鈥淪is: Leave him.鈥

She spent the better part of two days and nights baking 22 cakes in all.

鈥淚 know the freshmen and sophomores haven鈥檛 known college without COVID,鈥 she said, 鈥渟o I wanted to try to make the start of the school year a little more special for them and introduce them to the tradition.鈥

You Belong

The pandemic upended the new class鈥檚 high school years, affecting everything from in-person learning to college visits to cancelled proms and sporting events. Many took virtual 小优视频 tours and engaged in Zoom sessions and interviews.

小优视频 received 6,424 applications in the admission cycle, the highest number ever鈥攁nd had an acceptance rate of 17.8 percent, its lowest ever.

Class of 2025 Group Picture in Richardson Stadium where students line up to spell out 2025

Sixty-seven new students are the first in their families to go to college. Forty-eight come from other countries around the world.

President Carol Quillen advised the newest college community members 鈥渢o question what everyone takes for granted鈥isten to us old people鈥攂ut selectively鈥攁nd hold on to your sense of wonder.鈥

She urged them to believe in themselves and trust that the college community is there for them.

鈥淲e can all fall into that imposter syndrome. That sense of, 鈥楥an I do it? Am I good enough? Will people like me?鈥欌 Quillen said. 鈥淚f things go wrong and you feel like they鈥檙e spiraling out of control, know that we all feel that way sometimes. When you get worried, talk to someone鈥攁 friend, a professor, a counselor鈥ou are the reason we are here.

鈥淲e all have doubts, but I want you to know鈥攊f you are sitting here, you belong here.鈥

Photographer