Reflections Magazine Issue #58 - Summer 2002 | Page 15

So Long, Supergirl 15 The busy life of a student scholar hat does Siena Heights offer a “self-proclaimed nerd” who loves school, loves learning, and keeps all her textbooks instead of selling them at the end of the semester? What, indeed! “I had no idea, coming to Siena Heights, that I would be able to write two plays and see them produced, that I would edit a magazine, that I would sing Renaissance music and perform in four Madrigal Dinners! You can do as much as you want at Siena,” says Jennifer ‘Jen’ Letherer ‘02. A summa cum laude English/theatre double major and co-recipient (with summa cum laude biology major Lacey Wilmot ‘02) of the Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award, Jen is a sterling example of the student scholar. Coming to SHU from a farm in Pittsford, she lived on campus for four years, taking every opportunity she found to extend her education beyond the basics. She participated one way or another, on stage or off, in almost every theatre produc- tion during her time here. She sang with the Cecilian Choristers and the Madrigal Singers. She became a McNair Scholar. She contributed to, then became literary editor of, the literary magazine Eclipse. She wrote, produced and performed a one-person play, “So Long, Supergirl,” for her senior project; and wrote another play, “Dreaming of Sugarplums and Maintenance Men,” for a friend to produce. Still, she says, “I wish I’d had time to take photography, more art, some music theory and more literature.” After graduation, Jen spent the summer working at the Croswell Opera House. She hopes to spend a year in some kind of internship before going on to graduate school in film. She aims to become a filmmaker. “Siena Heights might look like your typical university, but there’s so mu