Reflections Magazine Issue #78 - Spring 2013 | Page 28
Column
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from the alumni association
Be Part of this Incredible
Time at Siena Heights!
The night before I planned to write this
column, I came home to my New York City
apartment and found a card in the mail from
SHU English professor Sr. Pat Schnapp, reflecting on what it meant to her to become an
Honorary Alumna of Siena Heights at last
year’s Homecoming.
Nothing in recent memory has brought
such a smile to my face. How appropriate it
was—since I was already planning to write about
Siena’s effect on me over the past 13 years—to
find this card from a long-time faculty member
and recent alumni award winner in my mail.
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Reflections Spring ’13
It says so much about the Siena community that, almost 10 years after my graduation,
I received a letter from Sister Pat. And that I had
dinner recently with Doug Miller ‘74, another
recent alumni award winner and chair of the theatre department, while he was in New York. And
that, for the past few years I have had a constant
online Scrabble game going with my acting mentor, professor and friend Mark DiPietro ’83.
In New York, I meet many people who have
had great training in whatever they studied; but
when I tell them about my experience at Siena,
they grow jealous. Siena Heights is unique in the
sense of community it provides, even long after
graduation. Years, or decades, after you walked
across the commencement stage, you still have
a home at Siena. Even if the faces in the halls
have changed, you can always stop in or pick
up the phone and find someone ready to welcome you with open arms. No matter when
you enter Siena, you will, for life, be a member
of the community.
In May, I spoke to one of the largest graduating classes Siena has ever seen. I quoted, as I
have before in this magazine, the words to our
Alma Mater. Siena choirs—under the current
direction of Dr. Beth Tibbs, and the decades
of direction of Sue Matych-Hager ’68, and the
direction of Sr. Maura Phillips ‘39 before that—
have sung about our “long laughter-studded
hours, with classmates fond and true.” Each
time I hear or sing those words, memories come
flooding back for me, as I’m sure they do for
many other alumni.
I have been lucky: Through my role on the
Alumni Association Board of Directors, I have
never been away from the love and support of
the Siena community. If you had told me when
I first walked onto campus in 2001 to register for
classes that a decade later I’d be president of the
Alumni Association and writing this article, I
probably would have laughed at you. Just one or
two years into my Siena experience, though,
I would have said it made perfect sense.
As I prepare to turn the reins of the Alumni
Association over to my dear friend and colleague Mary Small Poore ’76 at Homecoming,
I know that I leave you a stronger Alumni Board
than the one I joined right after graduation. As
a group, we have been on a drive for the past
few years to engage our current students and
alumni in a stronger way. I am eager to see where
Mary and future leaders will take us all. Because
whether or not we realized it when we crossed
the stage to receive our degrees, we are all lifetime members of an exclusive club: The Siena
Heights University Alumni Association.
Thank you for trusting in me as your president for the past two years. I look forward to
seeing you at Homecoming October 4-6—
and at many Homecomings in the future.
Hail Siena and go Saints!
Michael Kirk Lane ’05
President
Alumni Association Board of Directors
[email protected]