Paws rides on a float during the 2024 Homecoming parade in downtown Sylva
By Bill Studenc
A packed slate of weekend events is on tap as ĢƵ rolls out the welcome mat for alumni and friends to return to campus Nov. 7-8 for Homecoming 2025, including a parade and party in the university’s adopted hometown of Sylva.
Activities will kick off Friday, Nov. 7, as WCU’s annual Homecoming Parade will march through downtown Sylva starting at 5:30 p.m., with an associated parade watch party and after-party continuing until 9 p.m.
“We invite all ĢƵalumni, friends, students, faculty, staff and members of the community to join us in downtown Sylva as we bring Catamount pride to life,” said Stacey Miller, director of alumni engagement. “From vibrant floats created by student organizations to spirited displays from our local partners, the parade is a celebration of everything that makes ĢƵspecial.”
The Friday parade party will begin at 5 p.m. The registration fee is $5, with social district cups for the first 500 registered attendees to arrive at the check-in site at the location formerly known as Martha’s Place. Sylva’s social district allows adults over the age of 21 to carry beer or wine in specially marked cups within a designated area of downtown.
“The parade party will transform downtown Sylva into a vibrant Catamount celebration with live music across multiple venues, a sea of purple and gold, and the lively energy that only Homecoming can bring,” Miller said.
Saturday’s happenings will get underway at 10 a.m. with the Alumni Awards Pre-Tailgate Brunch honoring distinguished members of the university family. The event, which continues until 11:30 a.m., includes a festive brunch menu with chicken and waffles, a biscuit bar, mimosas and bloody marys.
The event will be held in the Liston B. Ramsey Regional Activity Center with doors opening at 9:30 a.m. Tickets are $15 per person.
During the brunch, ĢƵChancellor Kelli R. Brown will present the university’s Distinguished Service Award to Raleigh resident Donna Winbon, a financial adviser with the Edward Jones firm and longtime supporter of the university who earned her bachelor's degree in 1980.
John Connet, president of the ĢƵAlumni Association and a 1992 graduate, will present two alumni awards in recognition of professional accomplishments and academic achievements, and he will introduce the inaugural recipients of a new award designed to acknowledge the success of several of the university’s most recently minted alumni.
A 1987 graduate who resides in Milton, Georgia, John Davis will receive the Professional Achievement Award. Davis is chief commercial officer at Artivion, which specializes in technologies to treat aortic disease. The Academic Achievement Award will go to William “Bill” Barfield, who earned bachelor's and master’s degrees at ĢƵin 1974 before going on to a distinguished career in exercise science at the College of Charleston.
New this year, the Catamount 10 accolade replaces the former Young Alumnus/Alumna Award. It recognizes 10 distinguished alumni who graduated within the last decade and who have already made major contributions to their professions, their communities and their alma mater.
Inaugural members of the Catamount 10 are:
* 2014 graduate Cayela Bauknecht, ĢƵpurchasing card administrator who has given back to her alma mater in numerous ways.
* Abigail Bentley, who earned her master’s degree in 2023 and was named the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching Empower Beginning Teacher of the Year in February 2024.
* Preston Blakely, who earned his master’s degree in 2019 and currently serves as mayor of the town of Fletcher.
* 2016 graduate Emily Glesias, director of prospect development at the Medical University of South Carolina.
* Samir Hafiz, who earned his bachelor’s degree in 2014 and master’s degree in 2016 and now serves as vice president of development for the Pi Kappa Alpha Foundation.
* 2015 graduate Hank Hodge, vice president of commercial banking at ServisFirst Bank.
* Aaron Speyer, who earned bachelor’s degrees in 2021 and 2022 before becoming a systems engineer at Stellar Solutions supporting NASA’s human landing system program.
* 2016 graduate Drew Starkey, a rising film and television actor whose credits include a starring role in the TV series “The Outer Banks.”
* 2021 graduate Daniel Tizon, field leadership policy and operations adviser at the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
* 2014 graduate Rena Wakama, head coach of D’Tigress (Nigeria’s national women’s basketball team) and assistant coach for the WNBA’s Chicago Sky.
After the awards brunch, the Catamount Alumni Tailgate will begin at 11 a.m. in the Fieldhouse Lot adjacent to E.J. Whitmire Stadium, where the ĢƵCatamounts will take on Southern Conference rival the Mercer Bears in a football game with a kickoff at 2:30 p.m.
In other pregame activities, 1978 graduate Frank Wilson and the ĢƵFootball Club will host Frank’s Famous Fish Fry from 11 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. in the Fieldhouse Lot.
After the game, members of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority will celebrate the chapter’s 50th anniversary with an evening of dinner, dancing and drinks from 8 until 11 p.m. in the Grandroom of A.K. Hinds University Center.
For more information about Homecoming activities for alumni including registration, visit , email alumni@wcu.edu or call 828-227-7335.
For information about Homecoming activities for students, visit .