Class of 1984 Reunion

Official Registration for Homecoming 2009 has begun! Those names marked with an asterik (*) have registered and paid in full.
Registration Options: (online, by mail, or by phone)
Class Reunion on The Point: 11:30 a.m.
--Jazz band
--Class Reunion Photo
--Kid's Activities
--Cash Bar
1984 Memory Book College Life in 1984 Enrollment was 999 with a faculty and staff of over 125 on a campus of 600 acres with 34 buildings. The Campus Cabin was sold to Hanover College and was razed shortly after. Tuition was $3,640, room was $735, board was $1,205, and fees were $160 per year. Linen service cost $20 and insurance was $70. There were laboratory fees for certain courses. Each individual had possession of a key to the side and main doors of his or her living unit at all times. Each student was responsible for checking his or her exterior key with the appropriate Student Advisor or House Manager on the first Monday of each month. Room keys were issued for the protection of personal property. The front door of each living unit was secured Sunday through Thursday at midnight and on Friday and Saturday at 1:30 a.m. All side doors were secured no later than 7:00 p.m. and unlocked no earlier than 7:00 a.m. Twenty visitation hours in individual rooms were available on weekends during the following hours: on Friday from 7:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m., on Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to noon, 1:00 to 5:00 p.m., and 7:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m., and on Sunday from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. Six hours of visitation could be utilized during two week nights, 6:00 to 10:00 p.m. All guests of the opposite sex had to register in a booklet and sign out. Each unit voted at the start of the term to determine their visitation hours for the next term. Smoking was allowed in the library only in the after hours study roon, the restrooms, and the smoking lounges on the first and second floors. Typing rooms were available during library hours on a first-come, first-served basis. Students were not to have pets, firearms, intoxicating beverages, drugs, or perishable food in the room. Electrical appliances had to be cleared with the Residence Director. Sunlamps, portable heaters, refrigerators, or weight lifting equipment were not allowed in the residence halls. Students were not to own platforms, bunk beds, or water beds. Lofts and painting of rooms that met college guidelines were permitted. The volume of stereos had to be kept at a minimum out of consideration for others. No tape, tacks, screws, or nails were to be put on or in the walls. In addition to the television sets provided in public areas, students could use solid-state sets in their rooms. All students could have cars on campus, but freshmen had to park either in L.S. Ayres lot or the Fine Arts lot. Cars were not to be driven or parked on lawns or walks. Bicycles were to be stored in racks provided outside living units. Hanover Traditions: There was no smoking on campus. There was no athletic activity on Sunday nor on the lawns of the campus. 1984--Memories of Hanover The copper of the fall hills as the sun sets in fall, and in spring, myriad trees in bloom. The quiet walks and talks with friends and the challenges our professors gave us to learn and grow. Mark Fearnow and the theater. Dr Curtis and Dr Trout in History, Dr Ferguson in English, always supportive, always pushing to do better. Living in "The Zoo" during my Freshman year; Serving as an RA with the residents of Wiley and Crowe Halls as a Junior and Senior; Challenging and inspiring classes throughout the four years of college; Life lessons under the guidance of Coaches Mike Kovalchik and Dan Allen and Professors Roger Terry (Psychology) and Gordon Campbell (Theology); Long runs up and down "The Backbone" and along the Ohio River; Late night study sessions in the basement of the old Faculty Office Building; Road trips to Hinkles; The serenity and beauty of the campus. The beauty, the chance to grow up, a great education, the challenges of college life, making some lifelong friends, and (best of all) meeting my future wife. Hinkles Hamburgers,Fiji Island,(Sorority)Rush and road trips to Cincinnati,OH. Hanging out at the Lambda Chi House with my "big brother". Campus Center Food. Living at the Theta House. Knowing Woody Harrleson."The Point". Friends made through choir and theatre; Trip to Romania and Greece; Sleep deprivation; How much friends could make me laugh til I cried. Wonderful, caring, and inspiring professors! That creepy WWII bunker under Classic Hall; sleeping out under the stars; the Goodwill Prom at Hanover House; quad dogs; the phone ringing down the hall; backpacking in Europe; ordering toasted cheese. The women, being in The Madwoman of Challot, the women, deepening my Christian & conservative roots while being challenged to eliminate the deadwood, the women, discovering Walker Percy's novels, and the women. Meeting my husband, Vespers, Dr, King and Dr. Keller, sociology classes, friends, late nights studying or playing euchre or backgammon, yearbook photography and darkroom work, walking around the Point, rainy spring days, Spring Term, Crime and Corrections Class, Marriage and the Family Class Walks around the point, Vespers, spending time with friends, Dr. Hill, Dr. Trimble, Dr. Garvey, and Dr. Shorr Third floor Donner Hall group : 22 girls with 1 phone! All of us enthusiastically singing the meatloaf song..."Like a Bat out of Hell," and playing euchre. Watching "Dallas" at the Sigma Chi house, serenades, rush, Becky driving her jeep around the qua Midnight coffee @ the Waffle House w/Dr. Fox novels & Spring a Firenze Choir tours and spring term in Romania and Greece; J. David Wagner as a fabuous role model; walks around the Point; socializing in the library; peanut butter and crackers in KP; ADPi songs with "microphones"; sleeping in the rack room and rack room raids Trips to Europe, field hockey, friendships that still exist, laughing with friends, intramural flag football, class discussions, Dr. Ferguson, Dr. Keller... Spring evenings walking around the point Places we drive through trigger memories of all the weekends the choir toured. We spent alot of time together and on the road;including our Greece and Romainia trip. I will be forever grateful to Dr.JD.Wagner. Studying in the library. FCA time. ADs playing around and good friendships developed. Long walks. Spring semester.
-Tim Anderson
-Joe Biggs
-Mark Bolyard
-Cynthia Fortner Fortner
-Rebecca Henry `84
-Rita Stone Horn
-Cedric Klein
-Paula Brutsche Kutcher
-Vickie Resler Lazaga
-Jill O'Brien Miles
-Cynthia Ritter Parker `84
-Jamieson Wehmeyer `84
-Anne Trowbridge Weinberg
-Kara Wools Wools-Kaloustian
-Katrina Hawkins Wright