With a touch of sadness in her voice, Dean Sandy Richtermeyer delivered the news during a late-fall Manning School of Business faculty meeting: Senior聽business administration聽major Roma Aurora would be graduating in the spring, and the school would have to carry on without her.

That won鈥檛 be easy.

Aurora has become a strong and valued presence on campus, from her roles as president of both the Manning Leaders Council and Marketing Society, to her ambassador work for both international students and student alumni, to her participation in the DifferenceMaker Program.

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 be where I am if I didn鈥檛 get involved early on and if I didn鈥檛 have professors and faculty who believed in me,鈥 says Aurora, an Honors College student from North Andover whose concentrations are in聽marketing听补苍诲 management information systems.

As a freshman, Aurora鈥檚 poise and leadership skills caught the attention of lecturer Deb Finch, who recommended her for a spot on the Dean鈥檚 Student Leadership Council (DSLC) 鈥 a high honor for a first-year student.

鈥淚t felt good to be recognized and gave me a lot of confidence,鈥 says Aurora, who was born and raised in India and moved to the United States with her family just before high school.

When the Manning School revamped the DSLC and rebranded it as the Manning Leaders Council, Aurora was voted its first president heading into her senior year. She has worked to create a more collaborative environment and improve the communication between the Manning School鈥檚 14 different student organizations.

Outside the classroom, Aurora has spent summers working as a marketing and business development intern at a tutoring company, a marketing associate for a software developer and, most recently, as a recruitment operations coordinator in the university鈥檚 Graduate Admissions office.

And then there鈥檚 her volunteer work with the Lowell Association for the Blind, Habitat for Humanity and the International Medical Equipment Collaborative.

鈥淚 learned to always be on the lookout for networking opportunities,鈥 says Aurora, who was among 10 students chosen by the dean to represent at the Manning School at this fall鈥檚 Forbes Under 30 Summit in Boston.

Of all her experiences at 51视频, Aurora says participating in DifferenceMakers her junior year may prove to be the most valuable. Working with mechanical, computer and electrical engineering students on 鈥Project Starfish,鈥 a prosthetic hand that uses a combination of 3-D printing and advanced machine learning software, Aurora鈥檚 team won the Innovative Technology Solution category (and a $4,500 prize) at the 2017 $50K Idea Challenge.

鈥淟earning about muscle movements, machine learning software and how to market prosthetics to help patients isn鈥檛 something I ever thought I鈥檇 do in college,鈥 says Aurora, whose team is exploring how to take the software to market. 鈥淎s a business student, being part of a startup is the best experience I could get. I鈥檝e learned how to collaborate in a cross-functional team.鈥

While the Manning School will be sad to see Aurora graduate in the spring, she may not be gone completely. She鈥檚 interested in coming back part-time to earn her master鈥檚 in business analytics.

鈥淚 do want to get out there and start working,鈥 Aurora says. 鈥淚鈥檓 very excited to see what鈥檚 in store.鈥