Message Board
Return to Selinsgrove for Homecoming 2005!
The Classes of 1990, 1995 and 2000 will be back in full force to celebrate reunions under the tent at the pre-game reunion party. The complete Homecoming schedule is online at www.sualum.com. We hope to see you on campus, September 17!
With over 5000 registered users on the Online Alumni Community, we’re looking for new ideas to make the SU alumni site a great one. If you have any suggestions about including new tools or information on the Web site, please let us know at alumni@susqu.edu. We’ll be remodeling the site over the next several months so check back often for improvements at www.sualum.com!
Have you ever wanted to help a current student with real life wisdom? If yes, sign up for Career Day 2006 on February 11. This third annual Career Day will provide a unique opportunity for alumni and students to make connections in a conference-type setting where alumni work with students on mock interviews, resumé critiques, and other real world issues. If you’re interested please contact Shari Mangels at mangels@susqu.edu.
Check out the upcoming alumni events. If we’re coming to your area, we hope to see you! If not, do you have an idea for an event in your area? Give us an idea and we’d be happy to investigate the possibility of an SU alumni event at that location. Looking forward to seeing you!
Best wishes to all alumni, parents, friends and students. We hope you’ve had a great summer! And here’s to a happy, healthy fall season.
Shari Trembulak ’93 Mangels, Stephanie Young ’03 Galloway and Jodi Swartz

|
A Closer Look:
The Alumni Award Medal
Susquehanna’s bronze Alumni Award medal depicts our alma mater represented as a Susquehannock Native American woman whose tribe – and the mighty, scenic Susquehanna River – gave the university its name. The river is expressed in the lower arc of the medal.
The Susquehannocks, noted for their tall and handsome stature, inhabited the river valley at the time of Captain John Smith’s explorations and became extinct during the 18th century.
The sculptor is George Tamke, assistant to the president emeritus for university relations. |