Class of 2020 Arrives on Wofford’s Campus Aug. 31st

As a newcomer himself, Wofford College’s new provost, Dr. Mike Sosulski, plans to welcome the Class of 2020 with open arms as they move onto campus to begin their college careers.

Sosulski will be joined by President Nayef Samhat, along with members of the Wofford Orientation Staff and athletics teams, faculty and staff as they swarm the new students’ cars, vans and U-Hauls to help them unload and move into their residence halls.

“I have been welcomed with open arms myself since I officially started my position on July 1, so I want to be here to greet these eager new students to the Wofford campus so they can feel the warmth of friendship and acceptance I have found already,” Sosulski says.

Members of the Class of 2020 will check in and begin moving into their residence halls starting at 8:30 a.m. on Aug. 31. The day will be full of hustle and bustle, meeting new friends – maybe even a roommate they’ve never met before – and getting a lay of the land at Wofford.

Classes for the 2016-17 academic year begin on Monday, Sept. 5.

Opening orientation session for the first-year students and their parents will be at 3:30 p.m. Aug. 31 on the front lawn of Main Building. The students also will meet with their academic advisers, enjoy a picnic dinner with their fellow newcomers and families, and sample dessert with the president and his wife before saying goodbye to their parents.

On Thursday, Sept. 1, first-year students will travel to Camp Greystone in Tuxedo, N.C., for the annual Summit adventure orientation, where there will be swimming, canoeing and other activities. Other orientation activities will continue throughout the week on campus.

The Class of 2020 photograph will be made at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Sept. 4, and the students will participate in the annual Stop Hunger Now service project beginning at 1:30 p.m. in Benjamin Johnson Arena. The students will package some 25,000 nutritionally supplemented meals to go to high-need locations around the world, such as Haiti. This is the sixth year the incoming class has participated in this project.

Here are some important dates for the opening of the fall 2016 semester:

Wednesday, Aug. 31
8:30-11 a.m. – First-year and transfer resident students move in (check-in is at The Commons in the Campus Life Building; move-in is along Campus Drive at the Greene and Marsh Residence Halls. Please note that traffic on Campus Drive will be ONE WAY, from North Church Street.)

3:30 p.m. – Opening session, front lawn of Main Building

Thursday, Sept. 1
First-year student orientation continues

10:30 a.m. – First-year students board buses for The Summit at Camp Greystone in Tuxedo, N.C. (buses load on Campus Drive in front of Marsh and Greene Halls)

Friday, Sept. 2
First-year student orientation continues

2:30 p.m. – Field Day Competition for first-year students, front lawn of Main Building

7:30 p.m. – Men’s soccer game vs. Gardner-Webb, Snyder Field

Saturday, Sept. 3
First-year student orientation continues

Sunday, Sept. 4
10:30 a.m. – Class of 2020 photograph, steps of Main Building, followed by the First Service of Worship, Leonard Auditorium, Main Building

1:30-4 p.m. – Class of 2020 Service Project, Stop Hunger Now, Benjamin Johnson Arena

Monday, Sept. 5
8:30 a.m. – Classes begin

Tuesday, Sept. 6
11 a.m. – Opening Convocation, Leonard Auditorium, Main Building. Featured speaker, Thomas Pierce, 2006 Wofford graduate and noted author

Last year, the New York Times called author Pierce’s short story collection “Hall of Small Mammals” “beautifully built” and said Pierce “has an especially deft way of finding just the right final flourish.” His “originality, inventiveness, questing spiritual intelligence and animal fixation aren’t easy to do justice to in the limited space here,” wrote Books of The Times reviewer Janet Maslin. “But they’re irrefutably good reasons to discover him for yourself.” Pierce’s short stories have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Oxford American, Subtropics and elsewhere. He has reported for National Geographic and for NPR programs, including “Morning Edition” and “All Things Considered.” Born and raised in South Carolina, he received history and English degrees from Wofford and earned his M.F.A. from the University of Virginia as a Poe/Faulkner Fellow. While at Wofford, Pierce was the 2004-05 Presidential International Scholar and authored “said the dark fishes,” winner of the Benjamin Wofford Prize for fiction writing. He also received NPR’s prestigious Joan B. Kroc Fellowship, an intensive training program designed to bring exceptional graduates into public radio and journalism. Following the fellowship, he stayed on as a producer, blogger and reporter. “Hall of Small Mammals” was published in 2015 by Riverhead Books. Pierce and his wife and daughter live in Charlottesville, Va. The event is free and open to the public.

Tuesday, Sept. 13

11 a.m. – Topping Out Ceremony, Rosalind Sallenger Richardson Center for the Arts. Lunch on the lawn to follow.

Tuesday, Sept. 27
11 a.m. – Topping Out Ceremony, Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium. Lunch at construction site to follow.