Office of the President

 

Presidential Communication

December 7, 2007

Dear Susquehanna Parent/Guardian:

As we bring the fall semester at Susquehanna to a close, I know you are eagerly anticipating the return home of your Susquehannan. Classes end this Friday and finals begin the following Monday. I hope that your student arrives home feeling a great sense of accomplishment from a successful semester.

Finals are a time of great intensity. I know how valuable your support will be as your students finish papers, study for exams, and prepare final presentations and performances. As you talk with your Susquehanna student, many of whom will be feeling a great amount of stress, please be sure to encourage them to get enough rest, quality nutrition and a healthy amount of exercise as they manage this time of the year.

Taken together, cultural events, lectures and performances contribute to a rich learning environment that extends from the classroom to virtually every campus location. I wanted to take this opportunity to offer a recap of some of the learning and cultural opportunities your students have experienced this semester and to forecast an exciting spring event.

Over the last three months, we have welcomed to campus renowned speakers; explored our university theme, Water, in varied and creative ways; celebrated the musical and artistic talents of student, faculty and invited guests; and competed in two new athletics conferences. I share with you a summary of some of our latest happenings, which occurred in a variety of settings, large and small.

  • Fred Pearce, author of When the Rivers Run Dry, the university's common reading for 2007–08, visited campus in September to discuss the importance of conserving the precious resource.
  • Kevin Quigley, president of the International Peace Corps Association and Susquehanna's 2007 Woodrow Wilson Fellow, delivered a keynote lecture Peace Corps and the 21st Century: How Expanding Peace Corps Can Help Restore U.S. Standing in the World
  • Professor of Philosophy Jeff Whitman led a panel discussion on the limits of forgiveness, using Simon Wiesenthal's The Sunflower to focus the conversation
  • The Martha Graham Dance Company visited Susquehanna for our fall Artist Series event. The sold out crowd was wowed by the talent of the dancers, who performed several of the legendary choreographer's most innovative works
  • The Arlin M. Adams Center for Law and Society presented Defining Judicial Independence and Accountability in the Context of Controversial Cases. Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Cynthia Baldwin, U.S. District Court Judge John E. Jones and University of Pennsylvania Law Professor Stephen B. Burbank discussed the controversial Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District case.
  • The Department of Theatre presented The Pajama Game over Family Weekend to rave reviews.

In a truly special learning laboratory, it was a great thrill for me to join nearly two dozen students for a visit to the U.S. Supreme Court, where we heard oral arguments and later had a private tour followed by a session with Justice Anthony Kennedy. This off-campus opportunity like other study-away-from-campus opportunities in which approximately 100 other students have been engaged, is an incredibly important part of the Susquehanna experience. I encourage you to be talking with your Susquehannan about his or her plans for such off-campus experiences.

As many of you already know, this fall we began a new relationship with the Liberty League for football competition and the Landmark Conference for our additional 22 intercollegiate sports. Because we are known by the company we keep, we are lining up against formidable competition with schools we want to have in our inner circle. Outstanding performances by our fall sports teams and promising beginnings by our winter sports teams forecast a rich future for our athletics programs.

Looking ahead, we are deep into the planning of the ceremonial kick-off of Susquehanna University's Sesquicentennial – a March 7 concert at Carnegie Hall! The program, to be held in the Isaac Stern Auditorium at 8 p.m., will showcase our music faculty and alumni soloists. It will feature the following:

  • Susquehanna University Masterworks Chorus, which includes the Susquehanna University Choir, select members of the Susquehanna University Chorale, approximately 100 choral alumni, and 10 additional Susquehanna faculty and staff. The chorus will be conducted by Professor Cyril Stretansky on the eve of his retirement from Susquehanna.
  • Susquehanna University Orchestra, including students, faculty and alumni. Associate Professor of Music Jennifer Sacher Wiley will conduct.
  • A commissioned Sesquicentennial fanfare by Associate Professor of Music Patrick Long that can be used on state occasions as we begin the next 150 years.

I hope that you will mark your calendars to be with us in New York City for this momentous event and for others planned to commemorate our 150 years. Tickets will be available beginning Jan. 7 through the Carnegie Hall box office. More information will be forthcoming next month on the specifics of the Carnegie Hall concert, as well as other events that will be held on campus.

A full calendar of events at Susquehanna is available on our Web site at www.susqu.edu/pr/calendars.htm. You are invited to join us for any and all events that pique your interest and fit your schedule. The spring schedule already includes noteworthy events, some of which are listed below.

  • James McBride, author of The Color of Water, will keynote the Winter Convocation in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day on Jan. 21. His afternoon address will be followed by an evening concert by Mr. McBride's jazz band.
  • A symposium on the death penalty will continue the Adams Center's tradition of productive dialogue on controversial issues.
  • The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra kicks off the Artist Series spring schedule in mid-January.
  • Dan Doyle, founder and executive director of the Institute for International Sport, will visit campus in March.

I invite you to follow developments at Susquehanna University in these and other communications. You will hear from me again during the spring semester on a range of topics including Susquehanna's new science building and residence halls, green initiatives, the new central curriculum and diversity.

Lastly, I encourage you to visit the Parents page on the Susquehanna Web site at www.susqu.edu/parents/info/ for more information about SU and to update your e-mail address if necessary to enable us to communicate as needed when events demand.

I wish you and yours a wonderful holiday season.

Sincerely,

L. Jay Lemons
President