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Susquehanna welcomes new students to campus

A group of young people gathered outdoors, with a smiling woman and a man making a peace sign in the center of the image. The atmosphere appears lively and friendly.

The newest members of the Susquehanna community were welcomed with a challenge: to use their college years to shape not just their futures, but the world around them.

At Susquehanna University’s Opening Convocation ceremony, university President Jonathan Green defined for them the role higher education will play in their lives.

A person in academic regalia stands at a podium decorated with the Susquehanna University seal and flowers, speaking at a commencement ceremony.
Susquehanna University President Jonathan Green

“Students, we are here, faculty, staff and trustees to help you to become the best citizens, best neighbors and best people you can become,” President Green said. “We are here to help you to develop and expand your personal philosophies, to affirm those things that are most important to you and to give you the tools to pursue and advocate for them. That is our mission.”

He also encouraged Susquehanna’s newest students to be courageous as they come of age in a world of increasing discord.

“Doing the right thing is always the better choice,” he said. “The right thing requires us to explore our richly varied histories and life experiences openly and to recognize our moral obligations to meet each other where we are on the tragically uneven playing fields of our respective lives and to do something about it.”

Susquehanna’s new students total 578, which includes the Class of 2029 and students who have transferred to Susquehanna from community colleges or other four-year institutions.

The incoming class has an average grade point average of 3.6 and includes 68 students who have enrolled in Susquehanna’s Honors Program.

A young woman holding a convocation program sings during a ceremony. She has long brown hair, wears a dark green shirt, and is surrounded by other participants in a busy indoor setting.

The Class of 2029 hails from 15 states, from the shores of New Jersey to the deserts of Arizona. Among Susquehanna’s newest enrollees, a diversity of 17 countries from six of the world’s seven continents comprises their origins.

Twenty-three percent of Susquehanna’s incoming students are from historically underrepresented groups (racial and ethnic populations that are disproportionately represented in higher education), 31% are the first members of their families to attend a four-year college and 33% will participate on one of Susquehanna’s NCAA athletics teams.

Kyra Keenan ’26, a graphic design major from Wayne, Pennsylvania, and executive president of the Student Government Association, welcomed the Class of 2029 to their new home by offering some advice for their next four years — be present, get involved and take care of themselves.

“In a time where education can go under-valued, Susquehanna is a sanctuary for learning, diversity and community. I was lucky enough to find many sanctuaries here on campus: through student government, being a graphic design major and my friends,” Keenan said. “I’m sure you all will find your own sanctuary here at Susquehanna University.”

Inside Susquehanna