Share Your Stories!

Please join us and share your stories about Sue.Tell us about the ways in which she lived her life, and shared her intelligence and love with you!
Please send your submissions for posting to Shelley Sump

Sunday, January 30, 2011

The Master Plan

S.W.A.K.

The plan was that as several of us along with Sue, as we reached our more advanced years, would live together in some sort of retirement community for aging boomers. As Sue said, “It would be a place where you could pick up a pinochle game or have a discussion on current events or the latest book you were reading 24/7”. Perhaps it would have been called something like “The Pinochle Hills Gaming and Literary Society”. That was plan.

Who is up for Spirit Mountain?

This concept grew from discussions that took place for over 25 years during our almost monthly pinochle games. Sue was very much the catalyst for these gatherings. She had regaled her friends with stories about playing pinochle with the Rauch family. Several of us had played pinochle growing up. However, those who were interested in good conversation and books, Sue taught to play the game. We would often jockey to be Sue’s partner. Partnering with Sue often increased your chances of winning because she actually paid attention to the game!


Sue loved to read!

These afternoon gatherings were spent playing cards and discussing topics such as “How do dogs tell time?” “If you were a color, what color would you be?” “What would it be like to travel through a black hole in the universe?” We also spent time trying out various recipes, trading books and celebrating birthdays, holidays and personal accomplishments. One afternoon, inspired by reading something in “Under the Tuscan Sun”, we dipped strawberries in eight different varieties of balsamic vinegar and rated the results. Oddly enough, the Safeway private label vinegar received our highest ratings.

Sue always brought the latest news about the university, her family and other friends to these gatherings. It provided a continuum to our ties with Willamette and the many people Sue had introduced us to over time. I will miss these news updates, stories of others and access to her opinions. I still reach for the phone when I think of something to share with her, or when I think, “I wonder what Sue would think about this?”

When I was a child, whenever someone in our family passed away, my mother use to say, “ The pinochle game in heaven just got another player!” For years my vision of the afterlife has included catching up with those who have passed before you and joining them at that big table in the sky.

"There's no place like home!"
I have no doubt that Sue has reached that place. And after greeting and reuniting with her Grandma Rauch, Granddad Charlie, Grandma Lena, uncle Bud and others, she has settled into a game. I am more than sure she has taken time to verify the rules and to make sure they are all playing out of the same rulebook.  And has insisted on “no table talk”.

I do know that the monthly pinochle games will continue. However, there will be a really big void in the space Sue filled.  With her absence, the conversations are likely to be less lively, less opinionated and probably less imaginative. I will miss her so much.

Shelley Sump
Friend and Former Colleague

With Love From Singapore

Sue and Hank - 1998

Here's one of the pictures I have of Sue (and Hank) when my husband Allen and I visited her in 1998. She generously let us stay at her house for a week or so, and as usual made us feel welcomed by being her unassuming, open-hearted, humorous self. I realised as I spoke with my husband to come up with some stories of Sue that she was kind and generous and funny in so many little ways that it was difficult to pinpoint a story in particular.

When I was a student at UW she would always open her home to me during the holidays and took me to rent tons of movies and let me watch as many as I wanted and eat as many cookies as I wished. Her home was a haven to me, a place of rest and rejuvenation.

When my mother and two sisters visited, Sue invited us for a night's stay (or two?) and was so good natured about us crowding her house and making so much noise. My family as well was fond of Sue.

Sue would conscientiously collect books I have written and anthologies in which my stories or plays have appeared. She told me she wanted to collect everything I wrote. I am touched and honored by this genuine gesture of friendship, support and encouragement.

Sue was really a wonderful person.


Mei Ching Tan
Willamette Graduate and Friend

Thoughts about Sue

Sue and Laura - Hawaii 2006
I am attaching a few photos from a trip to Hawaii that several of us went on in 2006 - I am grateful to have memories from that trip that include Sue. 

Surrounded by friends and fun!
Look what is for dinner! Oink!

If I could tell the girls something about Sue I would say that she never did anything half-way.  Sue laughed hard, cried without hesitation, played fully and worked unceasingly.  She is an inspiration to me to stop holding back.  Sue loved to have a good time and didn't put off doing things.  Her commitment to work is unmatched.

Sue was always honest - you never had to wonder where you stood with her.  She did not put up with insincerity but was deeply committed to the people she trusted.  Sue was thoughtful and generous in ways that were tangible.  When someone needed a place to stay she was always the first to offer a bed - never hesitating to consider whether or not it would be convenient for her.  When my daughter graduated from college Sue said that if she didn't have a place to live and didn't want to go back home, she could live with her.

Sue adored her grand-nieces and delighted in sharing cute stories about something they had done or said.  I hope they will remember her but if they ever want to be reminded of her there are many people who loved Sue who will welcome the opportunity to talk about her.

This past year Sue and I never missed a chance to say "I love you" to each other.  When I saw her on Saturday the 15th of January, that is the last thing we said.  I will always treasure that.  I am so blessed to have known Sue and I am honored to say that she was my friend.


Laura Collins
Friend and Colleague

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Susan Jean Rauch - 1953 to 2011


SUE RAUCH
April 2, 1953- January 15, 2011

Susan Jean Rauch, Associate Vice President for Admission and Financial Aid, passed away on the evening of January 15, 2011, after a long and courageous struggle with ocular melanoma and its complications.  She died peacefully in her home with her family by her side, having seen many friends, family and dogs during the previous week.

Sue was born to Loren and Carol Rauch in Vallejo, California, on April 2, 1953, and grew up in Napa, California.  She attended St. Helena High School where she was Student Body President and worked at the local A&W.  Luckily for Willamette University, Sue turned down an offer from Stanford University and enrolled at Willamette in the fall of 1971 where she began a lifelong commitment to the Willamette campus and to Salem, Oregon.  Sue’s student years included such highlights as her major in history, her service as a Residence Hall Assistant, and her semester in France at the Universite de Caen in Normandy with a group of 20 students led by Professor Bill Duvall.

 After graduating from Willamette in 1975, Sue was hired as an Admission Counselor for two years.  She spent the following two years in the Carroll University Admission Office in Waukesha, Wisconsin, before returning to Willamette as Assistant Director of Admission.  Little did she know that she would become one of the change agents for Willamette at a time when the university was, in the words of one of Sue’s favorite professors, “…comfortable, a little self-satisfied, but not hopeless I think.”  Sue played a major role in moving Willamette from a non-computerized institution to a leader in technology.  Sue’s gift for mathematics propelled her and her colleagues into designing the university database, still used today.  In addition to her organizational and technological skills, Sue was a gifted writer and for many years wrote all of Willamette’s admission publications.  Sue’s leadership skills were appreciated throughout her career, but especially from Aug. 1, 2006 through June of 2007 when she served as Interim Vice President.  Among Sue’s many interests were the Willamette University music programs (she loved everything from Mick Jagger to Puccini) and Bearcat athletics.  Having been a member of “The Rockets” in the girls’ softball league of Napa County, she appreciated the art and science of athletic endeavors and took a special interest in Willamette’s student athletes and coaches.  She was especially thrilled to do the coin toss at several Bearcat football games. As her illness progressed, Sue became an expert in medical terminology.  She was an eager participant in a clinical trial at Providence Cancer Center in Portland, OR, and appreciated the good care and friendship of all of the doctors and medical staff there.

Sue is survived by her parents; her brother Ivan of Ukiah, CA; sister Mindy Harding (Nelson) of Walnut Grove, CA; sister Laurie of Salem, OR; favorite nephew Dylan,  (Jessie),   and beautiful grandnieces Elizabeth and Alexandra, of Kelseyville, CA; her enthusiastic dog, Rex, and a multitude of family and friends throughout the world.  Sue is often described as “a force of nature,” a woman of great intellect, strong opinions, many talents, compassion, with “a heart the size of Texas.”  She will be sorely missed and her contributions appreciated for a very long time.

A service celebrating Sue’s life will be held on Sunday, February 13, at 1:00 p.m., at Hudson Hall in the Mary Stuart Rogers Music Center on the Willamette University campus.  In lieu of flowers, Sue asked that contributions be made to the Sue Rauch Scholarship Fund at Willamette University, or to the Providence Cancer Center in Portland, OR. 

Sue Rauch Scholarship
Willamette University
900 State St
Salem, OR  97301

In Memory of Sue Rauch
Cancer Research/Providence Portland Medical Foundation
4805 NE Glisan Street
Portland, OR  97213