
{"articleDetail":{"publishDateDisplay":"March 19, 2026","summary":"For at least fifty years, Geneva'apos;s Women'apos;s Student Association (WSA) contributed to campus life through annual social gatherings, the Famous Women Series, and fundraising events.","image":"site://geneva.edu/stories/_assets/wsa-1972-header.jpg","tagItems":"[]","articleText":"The 2026 Women&#8217;s History Month theme, &#8220;Leading the Change: Women Shaping a Sustainable Future&#8221; celebrates those whose work has laid a foundation for future generations. The Women&#8217;s Student Association (WSA) at Geneva, a club that spanned five decades in the 1900s, presented a framework for student events, scholarship, and thought leadership.\nThe WSA was a thriving organization at Geneva College throughout&#160;much&#160;of the&#160;20th&#160;century. Every undergraduate female student at Geneva was automatically a member of the&#160;WSA.&#160;&#160;In addition, female faculty, wives of faculty, and alumni who wished to do so could become members. Through a variety of programming that ranged from&#160;notable&#160;guest&#160;speakers to parties and teas for all occasions, the WSA promoted a campus culture of hospitable community and growth-oriented friendships.&#160;\n\nThe WSA club photo in the 1932 yearbook, The Genevan.\n\nThe earliest&#160;documentation&#160;of the&#160;WSA&#160;appears&#160;in&#160;their 1932-1933 Handbook and&#160;the 1932&#160;Genevan&#160;&#8212;&#160;although the text&#160;implies&#160;that the organization&#160;was&#160;in existence&#160;for at least several years&#160;before that date.&#160;The purpose of the&#160;WSA&#160;as&#160;stated&#160;in their&#160;constitution&#160;was&#160;&#8220;to foster a spirit of unity and loyalty to Geneva and womanhood.&#8221;&#160;The foreword&#160;of the 1932 Handbook further explains that &#8220;the association sponsors many enjoyable social functions, which contribute to the happy and wholesome development of the student&#160;&#8230;&#160;and train [the women of Geneva] to live harmoniously and companionably.&#8221;&#160;The WSA was last featured in the&#160;Genevan&#160;in 1982.\nJust a few of the events&#160;that the&#160;WSA&#160;sponsored&#160;regularly&#160;from&#160;about 1932 to 1976&#160;included&#160;a&#160;Christmas Formal Dinner,&#160;a&#160;Spring Formal,&#160;a&#160;Mother&#8217;s Day Tea,&#160;a&#160;Halloween Party,&#160;and&#160;a&#160;Winter Carnival.&#160;The&#160;WSA&#8217;s&#160;annual Sadie Hawkins Hoedown took place in a Metheny Fieldhouse decorated with hay&#160;bales,&#160;with&#160;students&#160;in overalls, peasant dresses, straw hats, and bare feet.&#160;In its earlier years,&#160;it&#160;was a girl-ask-guy dance&#160;inspired&#160;by the cultural phenomenon of Al Capp&#8217;s&#160;comic strip&#160;Li&#8217;l&#160;Abner.&#160;According to the 1946&#160;Cabinet, the evening&#8217;s&#160;risky refreshments included &#8220;Kickapoo Joy Juice and&#160;hog innards.&#8221;&#160;The event was still going strong in 1975,&#160;a year that included game booths at which students could throw a pie at their favorite professor.&#160;\n\nThe 1961 WSA Fashion Show.\n\nAnother&#160;tradition of the&#160;WSA&#160;was&#160;the&#160;sponsored&#160;fashion shows.&#160;Funds from the tickets to these shows were put toward&#160;a&#160;scholarship&#160;that&#160;was awarded every year to a Geneva woman&#160;and described&#160;by the&#160;Cabinet&#160;as one of the most important projects of the&#160;WSA.&#160;An ad for the&#160;1961&#160;show encouraged&#160;students:&#160;&#8220;If you want to be another Jackie Kennedy or Adolphe&#160;Menjou; come one, come all to the&#160;WSA&#160;Fashion Show!&#8221;&#160;Eighteen&#160;students modeled the latest fashions&#160;for men and women, supplied by Taylor&#8217;s Department Store in Beaver Falls&#160;and with running commentary from Mrs.&#160;Gertrude Trobe of local station WBVP.&#160;\nNot everything the&#160;WSA&#160;did was fun and games.&#160;In addition to raising funds for its own scholarship award, the&#160;WSA&#160;sponsored&#160;many charitable events&#160;to&#160;assist&#160;other community&#160;members. They&#160;coordinated an annual Christmas project, meant to gather money and nonperishable food items for needy families in the Beaver Valley area.&#160;\nDuring the 1940s, the association hosted its Famous Women Series, inviting prominent female speakers to campus&#160;to give lectures on a variety of topics.&#160;Two&#160;of the most notable&#160;were&#160;famed&#160;pilot&#160;Amelia Earhart&#160;and&#160;Eve Curie, daughter of Marie Curie. Eve&#160;visited&#160;campus to&#160;lecture on &#8220;The Magic of Radium&#8221;&#160;in 1939, and&#160;also authored the book&#160;Madame Curie, which was sold for just $1.39 at the time at Reeder&#8217;s Book Store in Beaver Falls.&#160;\nOther speakers&#160;were invited to discuss current world events around and after the time of WWII. These includes Mai Mai Sze,&#160;the daughter of&#160;a&#160;Chinese ambassador to the England and the US;&#160;Erika Mann, a foreign correspondent and news analyst who toured war-ravaged Europe in 1947;&#160;and Dr. Margaret Mead, an anthropologist&#160;who lectured on&#160;the reshaping of&#160;culture within Germany and Japan.&#160;\n\nThe WSA club photo in the 1979 yearbook, The Genevan.\n\nPerhaps more&#160;than anything else, the&#160;WSA&#160;was meant to&#160;add to&#160;a welcoming and engaging social&#160;atmosphere on&#160;Geneva&#8217;s campus, especially for female students.&#160;Patty Horn &#8217;75,&#160;an officer in the&#160;WSA&#160;who studied English and French&#160;secondary education&#160;during her time at Geneva, reflects&#160;on&#160;being a&#160;part of the association.&#160;\n&#8220;My time as an officer in the&#160;WSA&#160;led&#160;to&#160;really nice&#160;friendships.&#160;I was a commuter student, so my exposure to other students was in the&#160;classroom&#160;for the most part. The&#160;WSA&#160;gave me a way to get&#160;involved on campus and&#160;get to know other female students better.&#8221;&#160;\nThe&#160;event that the&#160;WSA&#160;hosted that was&#160;most&#160;memorable for Horn&#160;was the&#160;Christmas candlelight service in the chapel of Old Main. The service was held annually&#160;from&#160;at least&#160;1971&#160;to 1973,&#160;with&#160;Horn helping&#160;to direct&#160;a volunteer choir&#160;in 1973.&#160;The service&#160;included&#160;Scripture readings, vocal and instrumental solos, the reading of&#160;creative pieces,&#160;and&#160;&#8212;&#160;in&#160;1972&#160;&#8212;&#160;a short message by J.G. Vos.&#160;Attendees were given a small candle, representative&#160;of Christ as&#160;the&#160;light of the world, which was lit for the singing of Silent Night at the end of the program.&#160;\nHorn summarizes, &#8220;The&#160;takeaway&#160;for me was that&#160;the&#160;WSA&#160;was&#160;trying to make the experience at Geneva a Christ-centered time and a time for individual growth.&#8221;&#160;&#160;\nWhile student organizations like the&#160;WSA&#160;come and go, the contributions of many female students&#160;who were involved&#160;in its work helped to shape the life and culture of Geneva College for&#160;approximately five decades&#160;&#8212;&#160;and well beyond, as this little&#160;piece goes to show.&#160;\nReagan Shields &#8216;26&#160;\nHistorical information sourced by Kae H.&#160;Kirkwood 'apos;83, Geneva College Archival Librarian.&#160;\nHeader image: The WSA club photo from the 1972 yearbook, The Genevan.","author":null,"publishDate":"2026-03-19","type":"Stories","title":"The Women&#8217;s Student Association: Fostering Unity and Loyalty to Geneva and Womanhood","imageDesc":"","url":"/article/womens-student-association","blogCategories":"","id":"d8430e57ac0a24041a1ad3b0c38614ef","detailUrl":"/stories/2026/03/womens-student-association.json","sourcePath":null,"slug":"womens-student-association"}}
