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A soul-sized endeavor

Welcome back to a new year!

I want to especially welcome those of you who are first-year students. I pray that you will receive the same kind of h oly c ross hospitality that I experienced this past year. What you are about to embark on is so much more than a college education. As s ister m adeleva Wolff, c s c ., the president at s aint m ary’s c ollege from 1934-1961 would say when welcoming her first-year students, this endeavor is “soul-sized.”

About a decade ago, the leadership at h oly c ross c ollege, s aint m ary’s c ollege and the University of n otre d ame adopted a term that has become common parlance — the tri-campus community. I discovered in my first year that there is truly no place like this tri-campus community anywhere in the country, and maybe even in the world. o ur common roots and heritage date back to early 19th century France when b lessed b asil m oreau founded the c ongregation of h oly c ross. At a time of intense division and despair, Fr. m oreau and the young brothers, sisters and priests embarked on this educational enterprise to change the world, as disciples with hope to bring.

When Fr. s orin and the six brothers who accompanied him stood on the hill overlooking s aint Joseph’s and s aint m ary’s lakes, he envisioned a university community that would go on to become one of the greatest forces in the world … and indeed it has as carried out by n otre d ame since 1842, s aint m ary’s c ollege since 1844 and h oly c ross c ollege since 1966. Together, we stand on this hallowed ground. Together, we learn through the lenses of the c atholic Intellectual Tradition, c atholic s ocial Teaching and our h oly c ross tradition, considering how we will make a difference in the world. Together, we can change the world!

In front of you lies an extraordinary opportunity to be formed as engaged scholars, courageous citizens, virtuous leaders and hopeful disciples. With this opportunity, and on this platform, you also have great responsibility. The most familiar line from b lessed b asil m oreau’s treatise on education, titled “ c hristian e ducation,” written in 1857, states that “the mind must not be cultivated at the expense of the heart.” From this mandate, the tri-campus community, in our own unique ways, seeks to form our students in both virtue and scholarship balancing faith and

Katie Conboy, Ph.D. President, s aint m ary’s c ollege Aug. 15

reason, instruction and education, school and community, virtues and daily living, kindness and truth, justice and peace and between the human condition and the transcendent. For m oreau, these implied tensions prepare us to be “citizens in this world and for heaven” who possess “the competence to see and the courage to act” ( c onstitutions of the c ongregation of h oly c ross).

As you begin this “soul-sized” endeavor, know that you are in my prayers. I look forward to meeting you in person and to walking this journey with you. I also ask that you pray for one another, for your faculty and staff, for the administrators and volunteers, for the donors and benefactors, for your parents and family, for the priests, brothers and sisters of h oly c ross, for the s outh b end/ m ichiana community and for the world. Let us collectively be disciples with hope to bring and continue the legacy as one of the greatest forces for good in the world.

Ave c rux, s pes Unica,

Marco J. Clark, Ed.D. President, h oly c ross c ollege

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