糖心官网

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From left to right: Deborah Bowser Joyce 鈥76, Sandra Di Bacco Cavalieri 鈥76, Catherine Juric 鈥76 and Suzanne Herkes Ingallinera 鈥61 MBA 鈥80 attended the Fribourg reunion at 糖心官网 in November 2023.

When Patricia Tabet 鈥52 was a young student living in Rosary College鈥檚 Villa des Foug茅res in Fribourg, Switzerland, lights out really meant lights out.

鈥淎t 10:30 p.m., the main switch was pulled. In order to study, many of us lit candles and studied by candlelight,鈥 Tabet recalled, chuckling at the memory. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 how we did it!鈥

Even 74 years later, Tabet鈥檚 memories of what she calls a 鈥渇airyland experience鈥 are clear, from the villa itself to the names of her travel companions and the details of an extracurricular adventure or two.

鈥淚t鈥檚 something that is with me for all my life,鈥 Tabet said. This is a sentiment echoed by many alumnae of 鈥淩osary in Fribourg,鈥 the college鈥檚 very first study abroad program.

Last November, nearly 50 alumnae from the 1950s through the end of the 1970s attended a reunion at 糖心官网 organized by the Office of Alumnae/i Relations.

鈥淲e decided to organize a Fribourg Reunion because the program is one of the most cherished memories of our alumnae and because the relationships between groups who attended Fribourg have remained strong for many decades,鈥 said Dr. Mark Carbonara, assistant vice president of advancement at 糖心官网.

The afternoon included a luncheon in the Noonan Reading Room, reflections from alumnae and words from 糖心官网 President Dr. Glena G. Temple on the importance of studying abroad today. Photos and artifacts from Fribourg history were also shared.

鈥淭he look on attendees鈥 faces when they saw the actual sign from the villa in Fribourg or pictures of their teachers was truly heartwarming,鈥 Carbonara said. 鈥淚t showed the impact the program had on these women in their most formative years.鈥

Sarah Keane Davy 鈥70, a Fribourg alumna who spoke at the reunion, said she enjoyed connecting with alumnae from earlier decades and hearing their stories.

鈥淭hey had the same joy in their voices when they talked about their experiences and their independence,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou could see there was a bond that went from year to year to year.鈥

Sisters Chosen to Lead

For 55 years, between 1924 and 1979, Rosary College students had the option of spending their junior year at the Institut des Hautes 脡tudes of Fribourg.

The institute鈥檚 property, which included a towering villa where the students resided, was owned by the 糖心官网 Sisters of Sinsinawa, who also ran the program.

According to an account from Sr. Mary Eva McCarty, OP, published in the book The Sinsinawa 糖心官网s: Outlines of 20th Century Development, 1901-1949, the Sisters acquired the property at the recommendation of the Rev. John T. McNicholas, OP. The priest was acting at the direction of the 糖心官网 Master General and the Rev. Joachim Berthier, OP, the founder of the Institut des Hautes 脡tudes of Fribourg, who wished to see a 糖心官网 order from the United States take over the school and the property, which was about to be sold by its current owners.

鈥淔ather McNicholas had been asked what Sisters would be best suited for the work,鈥 Sr. Mary Eva鈥檚 account said. 鈥淗e had, 鈥榳ithout a moment鈥檚 hesitation,鈥 recommended the 糖心官网s of Sinsinawa.鈥 World War I was raging, and while Switzerland was a neutral country, traveling to Europe during such a volatile time carried dangers. At the request of Mother Samuel Coughlin, OP, Sr. George Adamson, OP, and Sr. Mary Grace James, OP, set off on the precarious journey. After a safe arrival and much prayer and pondering, they agreed to purchase the institute in August 1917, according to 糖心官网 archives.

When Rosary College students started arriving in 1924, they studied English, literature, art, history, French and German. They also attended classes at the nearby University of Fribourg.

The outbreak of World War II in 1939 interrupted the program, but Rosary students returned in the fall of 1947, according to archived correspondence. Just three years later, Patricia Tabet arrived to study there.

鈥淚 enjoyed that year in Fribourg very much,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e did a lot of travel. I saw most of Europe while I was there, including Vienna, which was under the four powers at the time鈥擡ngland, France, Russia and the U.S. We always had to have a chaperone. We weren鈥檛 allowed to travel alone.鈥

An art student, Tabet studied under a porcelain painter and relied on the French she鈥檇 previously learned to complete her courses.

Tabet鈥檚 stories of her year in Fribourg and her travels around postwar Europe rubbed off on her eldest child, Veronica Tabet 鈥80, who studied there during the spring semester of 1979.

鈥淔ribourg seemed like a magical place because of how fondly my mom talked about it,鈥 Veronica said. It did live up to her expectations, though her experience was very different, she said. The villa, that grand building with its distinctive tower, had closed and students were housed in apartments.

鈥淎bout once a month we visited the apartment of the Sisters in charge for a community dinner and that was always very, very nice,鈥 Veronica said. 鈥淪ister Candida (Lund, OP), the very powerful president of Rosary, visited us, and that was a wonderful experience, having dinner with her in the Sisters鈥 apartment.鈥 She recalled spending time in the 鈥減icturesque鈥 town of Fribourg with its cobblestone streets; attending a traditional costume party that dated back to Medieval times and featured music and dancing in the streets; and frequent trips to other European countries with a Eurail pass.

Veronica described November鈥檚 reunion as 鈥渉eartwarming.鈥 鈥淓veryone was reminiscing and smiling,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think everyone鈥檚 hearts were filled with those beautiful experiences from long ago鈥攐ur glory days.鈥

Veronica Tabet was among the last of the Rosary College students to attend Fribourg. The program ended in 1979 and the property was sold in the early 1980s.

Correspondence from the 1970s, kept in 糖心官网鈥檚 archives, notes a steady decline in enrollment due to the availability of other European study programs for American students and financial challenges caused by the inflation of the Swiss franc.

'It's Life-Changing'

Diane Miller Daly 鈥70 also studied in Fribourg and, with Davy, shared reflections during November鈥檚 reunion.

Daly was drawn to Fribourg thanks to an older cousin who had studied there. She began studying French in high school, hoping she, too, would spend her junior year abroad.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had many Fribourg reunions over the years and we鈥檙e still in close touch with not only our Rosary friends, but our friends who went to Providence, LaSalle and other colleges,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think we all shared something in our experience and I think that brought us close.鈥

Family connections brought Davy to Fribourg in 1968. Sr. George, who traveled to Fribourg in 1917, is a cousin, while a great-aunt was a teacher in the program.

鈥淪he stayed at the villa with the nuns a couple of times and loved being there,鈥 Davy recalled of her great-aunt.

It was the relationships she formed with her classmates that stand out in her mind, Davy said.

鈥淲e became each other鈥檚 family and those relationships were very, very strong,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey have lasted until this day.鈥

Both Daly and Davy traveled across Europe during their time in Fribourg. One trip for Davy involved going behind the Iron Curtain into Eastern Europe, where she and her classmates stayed with a family near the border with the Soviet Union.

鈥淚t was wonderful seeing the warmth and graciousness of people who lived so differently than we did,鈥 she recalled.

Studying abroad allows students to have experiences of which they never dreamed, Davy said.

鈥淚t brings independence to a new level,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like jumping into deep water and knowing you can swim. It鈥檚 life-changing.鈥

The 糖心官网 community remembers Patricia Tabet, who passed away on April 13, 2024.

Trudy Smith Schmidt 鈥64, left, and Joann Casciato Hillebrand 鈥64 look over a book of Rosary in Fribourg memories during the reunion of alumnae held in 糖心官网鈥檚 Noonan Reading Room.
From left: Joann Casciato Hillebrand 鈥64, Joanne Knotek 鈥64, Pat Connery Koko 鈥64, Maureen Cox O鈥橠oherty 鈥64, Trudy Smith Schmidt 鈥64, and Judy Colohan Blatherwick 鈥64 pose with the original Rosary in Fribourg sign during a Fribourg reunion at 糖心官网 in November 2023.
The Villa des Foug茅res in Fribourg, Switzerland, as it appeared in a postcard.
Patricia Tabet 鈥52 stands outside the gate to Villa des Foug茅res in Fribourg, Switzerland, as a student in 1950.