In Part 1 of this interview, Lucile K. Wawzonek discusses changing attitudes towards formal gender divisions on campus during the Pembroke-Brown merger. She begins by reflecting on the regulations at Brown in the late 1960s, including the male caller system and curfews. She speaks on the housing lottery and the advent of coed dorms, which she feels led to a looser social structure, especially in terms of dating. Also in Part 1, Wawzonek considers the academic challenges at Brown, political awareness and the atmosphere of activism on campus, and planning a professional career as a woman.
In Part 2, Wawzonek discusses balancing higher education, a professional career, and motherhood, also reflecting on gender discrimination in the workplace and academia. With her husband Steve Thompson '73, Wawzonek expands on the experience of living in Brown’s first coed dorm and experimentation with the boundaries of formal gender divisions and regulations. She also speaks on obtaining contraception on campus and the anachronism of some Pembroke traditions in the early 70s.
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania