Reflections Magazine Issue #76 - Spring 2012 | Page 21
Column
visit our alumni website at www.sienaheights.edu
from the alumni office
Landmarks, Milestones
and Alumni Stories
What a spring of new beginnings and milestone anniversaries:
• On a brisk April afternoon, SHU fans
cheered the Saints to a 10-4 season-opening
victory over Adrian College on Siena’s sparkling new baseball field near the Fieldhouse.
• Three days later, Siena Heights—whose past
track teams captured so many honors but always competed “away”—hosted our first-ever
home track meet in O’Laughlin Stadium.
• Behind the stadium bleachers, the Mary
and Sash Spencer Athletic Complex takes
shape with each passing day.
• Next to Dominican Hall, construction is
underway on the McLaughlin University
Center, due to open in 2013.
As I write, we prepare for a landmark
Commencement, bringing all sites and degree
programs together for the first time. We’ll
welcome many graduates for their first visit to
campus—and encourage all grads to come back
soon. We’ll also celebrate the 20th anniversary
of the Kente ceremony, started by a handful of
African-American students and today involving
60+ graduates.
Across the University, soon-to-be alumni are
celebrating degrees completed and opportunities ahead. Just a few examples:
• Theater students Meghan Van Arsdalen
and Paul Karle are two of 18 actors nationwide heading to NYC for graduate study at
the New School.
• The 18 future nurses graduating in Siena’s
first-ever pre-licensure nursing class volunteered at six area hospitals this spring, earning
accolades for top-notch critical thinking
and reasoning.
• Metro Detroit graduate LaVon McLeod
is already in St. Louis starting his “dream
job” with General Motors. “Might this
promotion have anything to do with Siena
Heights?” I asked him. “It has everything
to do with Siena Heights!”
As these new grads go out into the world,
alumni bring memories back to campus.
“I had a pet fox in my dorm room,” Mary
Embach Mapes ’64 told me when I found her
gazing at the old class photos in Sacred Heart
Hall. “A baby fox, a kit—I called him Dammit.
When he made noise at night, I pushed him under my bed and lay there saying ‘Shush, Dammit.’
If a Sister came to investigate, she quickly forgot
the noise and focused on me!”
I was delighted with Mary’s stories of the
fox she kept in Archangelus, the horse she kept
at the fairgrounds, and the late nights she spent
making art on the fifth floor of Sacred Heart
Hall. “See you at your 50th reunion in a couple
years,” I told her as she headed out.
I heard another good story from Terry
Bucciarelli ’82 and his wife Diana, who made
a special effort to visit Terry’s old dorm room
while on campus for the spring production:
In his student days, Terry once opened his door
to an alum, a previous resident of the same room,
who “gave me $20 just because I let him see his
old room. That made a big impression on me,”
Terry said. “Now I do the same thing whenever
I get to campus.
“See you at your 30th reunion this fall,” I said,
as we left the Performing Arts Center.
Whether you are approaching a landmark
reunion, or you’d like to see the new beginnings
at Siena, or you’ve simply got your own stories to
tell, come back soon. The welcome mat is always
out at Siena Heights.
Jennifer A. Hamlin Church
Associate VP for Advancement &
Director of Alumni Relations
(517) 264-7143
[email protected]
Reflections Spring ’12
21