WC fends off top challenger, Penn State, in weekend
flurry of Facebook posts.
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Members of WC's Habitat for Humanity ring the Victory Bell Monday after hearing news of their successful Facebook campaign. |
CHESTERTOWN, MD—In a David-versus-Goliath
contest played out on campus bookstore Facebook pages across the country,
Washington College has shown, as one Shorewoman’s posting put it, “how powerful
a small population with a big heart can be.”
For
six weeks, the College bookstore has rallied the campus community to fill its
Facebook page with activity to show support for Habitat for Humanity in the
“Build a Future” contest that Barnes & Noble College sponsored for all its campus
stores. And the community responded with wave after wave of postings—creative
photos of people (and pets) posing with signs, along with thousands of comments,
likes and shares—right up to the finish line at midnight September 30.
From the get-go, WC was a strong contender, keeping up
with schools such as Louisiana State, Central Connecticut State College, and
Penn State. But in the end, it came down to the Goose Nation versus the Nittany
Lions. ![]() |
Bookstore manager Wyble awaits official word on the winner Monday. |
Bookstore
manager Shannon Wyble had continued posting for the store’s Facebook page all
weekend despite a case of bronchitis and a fever of 102. She was exhausted but
elated Monday when she announced the outcome: The Washington College flock had indeed triumphed and the
campus Habitat chapter would receive a check for $1,000. (Barnes & Noble College is donating an additional $25,000 to Habitat International.)
As
Wyble likes to emphasize for anyone who fails to do the math, we beat our
closest competitor, Penn State, “straight out” in accumulated points, with no
adjustments for the size of the student body. Washington College has 1,450
students enrolled, compared to Penn State, whose enrollment reaches closer to 44,000, including graduate
students.
Wyble is pretty pumped, as is the Washington College Habitat for Humanity chapter led by student president Billie Ricketts ’13, staff advisor Maria
Hynson and co-advisor Dave Wharton. Ricketts, who has been involved with Habitat since
freshman year, says she never doubted WC would win. “Our Habitat chapter is a
really tight, hard-working group. I’m so proud of us,” she said minutes after
hearing the good news. “It was wonderful to see so much support from the
community—President and Mrs. Reiss, Jerry Roderick in Public Safety, all the
professors—it’s been an incredible experience.”
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Debbie '88 and Pat '87 McMenamin show their support in a post. |
The supportive Facebook posts, likes and comments have
come from beyond campus, too. Parents, alums, community members and even
strangers were drawn into the effort. “We had people from the churches in
Chestertown becoming fans of bookstore,” says Wyble. “And alumni support really ramped up over the
final weekend.”
Wyble’s
running timelime posts, often in all caps with plenty of exclamation points,
were heartfelt and entertaining as she urged people to keep posting. On
September 21 she was defiant:
“CALLING
ALL MEMBERS OF THE GOOSE NATION!!! … THE LIONS OF PENN STATE HAVE WOKEN UP.
THEY ARE ONLY 26 POINTS BEHIND US AND WE WANT TO KEEP THEM OFF OUR TAIL FEATHERS!!!!
THEY CAN YELL WE ARE PENN STATE ALL THEY WANT BUT WE ARE THE GOOSE NATION!!!!
WE
ARE THE FIRST COLLEGE FOUNDED AFTER THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR AND WE WILL NOT LET
SOME UP START YOUNG COLLEGE STOP US FROM WINNING. IT'S A NEW REVOLUTION AND
JUST LIKE GEORGE WASHINGTON LED THE WAY TO VICTORY OVER THE MUCH LARGER FOE IN
1776 WASHINGTON COLLEGE WILL LEAD THE WAY TO A HABITAT FOR HUMANITY VICTORY!”

Tamara Vostok, the manager of consumer and social marketing at Barnes & Noble College, says her company is proud to support Habitat for Humanity and impressed by what Wyble and the campus Habitat chapter accomplished . “Manager Shannon Wyble’s ingenuity
and tenacity helped propel Washington College to victory, and the school’s
impressive win illustrates how deeply committed they are to giving back and
helping to build a place where everyone has a decent place to live.”
In
a Facebook post back in mid September, Wyble turned downright philosophical in
explaining how Washington College could possibly win against bigger campuses
across the country:
“This question has rolled through my head for
a while and my response is, look to our history. We take our name from a major
benefactor who took a smaller, untrained, ill-equipped, and under-manned army
against the war power of their time and won. Too far back you say? Look to the
Lit House walls and see authors like Ginsberg and Morrison who were told time
again to stop writing and stood strong.
“Still
too far back? How about President Reiss who helped to broker the Irish peace
accords even though a counterpart took a swing at him? Still more recent? Look
to our field hockey team that twice this year has come back from defeat to win
in overtime or our women's soccer team that stared down a bus fire! We have a
history of not just facing adversity but overcoming it.
“You
ask how we could think we could win? I ask how you think we could lose?”
Fear the flock.
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Biology Professor Martin Connaughton was one of many in Toll Science Center who had some fun showing their support. |