The Sixty-Fourth Annual GRADUATION
May 14 , 2023
May 14 , 2023
The charter of the University of Dallas dates from 1910, when the Vincentian fathers took that name for the Holy Trinity College they had founded five years earlier. This charter became dormant in 1929 and was placed in the chancery office of the Catholic Diocese of Dallas. In 1954, the Sisters of St. Mary of Namur obtained the charter for the purpose of operating a new institution in Dallas, which would absorb their junior college, Our Lady of Victory, in Fort Worth. The sisters, together with laymen Eugene Constantin Jr. and Edward R. Maher Sr., who directed the drive for funds, induced Bishop Thomas K. Gorman to have the diocese assume sponsorship of the new institution with ownership by its board of trustees.
Gorman announced that the University of Dallas would be a four-year coeducational institution welcoming students of all faiths and races, with a graduate school to be added as soon as practicable. The new University of Dallas opened its doors to 175 students in September 1956, on a 1,000-acre tract of rolling hills located northwest of the city of Dallas. The first president, F. Kenneth Brasted, served until 1959; the second, Robert Morris, from 1960-62; and the third, Donald A. Cowan, from 1962-77. The fourth president, John Sommerfeldt, served from 1978-80; the fifth, Robert F. Sasseen, from 1981-95; and the sixth, Monsignor Milam J. Joseph, from 1996-2003. The seventh president, Francis Lazarus, served from 2004-09, and the eighth, Thomas W. Keefe, from 2010-18. John G. Plotts served as interim president through June 2019. The eighth president (and first alumnus), Thomas S. Hibbs, served from 2019-2021. Jonathan J. Sanford became the 10th president on March 8, 2021.
Members of the Order of Cistercians and the Sisters of St. Mary of Namur, together with three Franciscan fathers and a number of laymen, composed the original faculty of the university. The Franciscan fathers departed after three years. Dominican priests joined the faculty in 1958 and established the St. Albert the Great Priory. The School Sisters of Notre Dame came in 1962. The Cistercians now have a permanent abbey church and college preparatory school for boys adjacent to the main campus.
In time, the faculty has become largely lay people of many faiths, and it counts distinguished scholars among its members. Accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools came in 1963 and was reaffirmed in 1973, 1984, 1994, 2004 and 2014. Significant honors have
been won by university graduates since the first class in 1960, which earned the university’s first Fulbright and Woodrow Wilson awards for graduate studies.
Bishop Thomas Tschoepe succeeded Bishop Gorman and served as grand chancellor of the university until his retirement as bishop in 1990, when Bishop Charles Grahmann assumed this position. The seventh bishop of Dallas, Bishop Kevin J. Farrell, succeeded Grahmann upon Grahmann’s retirement in 2007 and served as chancellor of the university until 2016. Bishop Edward J. Burns succeeded Farrell as bishop of Dallas and currently serves as chancellor of the university.
A gift of $7.5 million from the Blakley-Braniff Foundation established the Braniff Graduate School of Liberal Arts in 1966 and allowed the construction of the Braniff Graduate Building, the Braniff Memorial Tower and the Mall. The Constantin Foundation similarly endowed the undergraduate college with gifts in 1967 and 1969. In 1970, the board of trustees named the undergraduate college the Constantin College of Liberal Arts.
Gorman Lecture Center and the Maher Athletic Center were completed in 1965. Holy Trinity Seminary was founded in 1965 and occupied its present facilities adjacent to the main campus by 1967. The Graduate School of Management (GSM) began in 1966, offering what was at the time the largest MBA program in the Southwest. Influential graduate programs in art and English also began in 1966. A legacy from the estate of Mrs. John B. O’Hara established the Summer Science Institute in 1973. In 1973, the Institute of Philosophic Studies, the doctoral program of the Braniff Graduate School and an outgrowth of the Kendall Politics and Literature Program, was initiated. The Institute for Religious and Pastoral Studies (IRPS) began in 1987. In 2007, the IRPS was renamed the School of Ministry and in 2016 the Ann and Joe O. Neuhoff School of Ministry. It is now the Neuhoff Institute for Ministry and Evangelization. The College of Business, incorporating GSM and undergraduate business, opened in 2003. In 2012, the College of Business earned accreditation from the highly selective Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB International). In 2013, the university honored alumni Satish and Yasmin Gupta for their gift of $12 million; the Satish & Yasmin Gupta College of Business now proudly bears their names. In 2021, the undergraduate business program was united with Constantin College.
In 1975, the university’s student center was doubled in size and named for J.M. Haggar Sr., and an addition was made to the Haggerty Art Center. The University Apartments, a facility for upperclassmen, opened in 1980. 1985 saw the completion of the Patrick E. Haggerty Science Center and the Chapel of the Incarnation. A chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the prestigious honor society, was granted in 1988. In 1992, Anselm Hall, the first residence hall, was renovated, and the Father Thomas Cain Courtyard adjoining it was dedicated.
On June 11, 1994, the university dedicated permanent facilities for its Rome Program, begun in 1970. The 14acre Eugene Constantin Campus, affectionately known as Due Santi, near Albano, Italy, is 12.5 miles from the heart of Rome. The early 2000s saw the Haggerty Art Village,
A new student residence hall, West Hall, was dedicated on January 19, 2010, and renamed Clark Hall on May 14, 2016, in memory of deceased Class of 2016 member Zachary Clark. SB Hall was dedicated on Jan. 15, 2016, to house the Satish & Yasmin Gupta College of Business. Cardinal Farrell Hall, the new student services and administration building, opened in spring 2018. In 2019, thanks to generous donors, the Rome campus expanded its mensa, extended the residence hall, and bought land to allow a safe pathway for students to the Via Appia.
Today the university enrolls over 2,300 students from all over the United States and the world, divided roughly into 1,453 full-time undergraduates; 495 largely part-time graduate Gupta College of Business students; and over 380
The decorative outer circle indicates the date the university was chartered and the motto, “Veritatem, Justitiam Diligite.” The quotation, taken from Zechariah VIII, 19, “Love Ye Truth and Justice,” emphasizes the university’s purpose of advancing the search for truth and encouraging the pursuit of the good.
Enclosed within the band that bears the motto, in an octagonal field of green, are several emblems associated with the traditions of the university. The central figure of the triquetra interwoven with the triangle is a double symbol of the Holy Trinity, to whom the university is dedicated. The circle is a symbol of eternity and of the unity of the Godhead.
Sisters of St. Mary of Namur were founded in Belgium in 1819 by a Cistercian monk.
A crusader’s shield, emblematic of faith, stands within the green field on either side of the central device. The shield on the left contains a star, a traditional emblem of Mary, as well as the chosen emblem of Texas, the Lone Star State. The shield on the right presents the torch of liberty and learning. The branches of the live oak and olive trees, taken from the Seal of Texas, make further reference to the state.
The Trinity River, on which the university is located, is represented by the heraldic device of the wavy lines centered beneath the emblem of the Blessed Trinity.
The undergraduate college bears the name of one of its founders and principal benefactors, the late Eugene Constantin Jr. He was chairman of the first fund drive and served the university as a trustee from its beginning. Ruth and Eugene Constantin established a significant undergraduate endowment in memory of their son and took as their principal interest the welfare of the undergraduate college, an interest that is continued through the Constantin Foundation. Fittingly, in 1970 the board of trustees named the college in their honor.
curriculum is based on the supposition that truth and virtue exist and are the proper objects of search in an education.
The specific mission of Constantin College is to provide undergraduate education through baccalaureate degree programs that include a substantial and coherent Core Curriculum common to all undergraduates, as well as major studies in the humanities and sciences proper to liberal learning. The Core emphasizes the study of the great deeds and works of Western civilization, both ancient and
The history of the University of Dallas is closely linked with the names of Braniff and Blakley. These are permanently enshrined in the Cowan-Blakley Memorial Library, the Braniff Graduate Building and Tower, and the Braniff Graduate School. Senator William A. Blakley, lawyer, statesman and industrialist, was a member of the first advisory board of the university. Both Senator Blakley and Tom Braniff were vitally interested in private higher education. Before their deaths in 1954, Tom and Bess Braniff had known of plans for a proposed University of Dallas and had expressed hope that it would become a reality. Efforts to found the university also captured the interest and support of Senator Blakley.
The Blakley-Braniff Foundation was dissolved in 1964. Senator Blakley and the other directors of the foundation chose the University of Dallas for the site of the Braniff Graduate School as the highest and best tribute to the memory of Tom and Bess Braniff in perpetuity.
The graduate school offered its first courses in 1966. The Braniff Graduate Building was completed in 1968, along with the Mall and the Braniff Memorial Tower. The Braniff Graduate School supports master’s degrees in select liberal and fine arts disciplines, the doctoral program of the
theological studies, pastoral ministry, pastoral ministry with a youth ministry focus, and catechetical ministry. The graduate and undergraduate portion are now merged with the Braniff Graduate School of Liberal Arts and Constantin College. They provide a program of formation that prepares graduates to engage in the church’s life and mission in a manner that is full, conscious, active and effective. This formation is theological, pastoral and spiritual in its orientation. The Neuhoff Institute for Ministry and Evangelization sponsors a Catholic Biblical School, which teaches in parishes throughout the Dallas/Fort Worth area. The Neuhoff Institute also teaches courses that fulfill the academic requirements of deacon formation.
and formation that will specifically permit them to serve the church in a variety of capacities — as catechists, teachers, Catholic school administrators, pastoral leaders, lay ecclesial ministers and deacons.
Joe O. Neuhoff was an early member of the board of trustees. In the years shortly after the founding of the university in 1956, he and his wife, Ann, helped strengthen and sustain its Catholic mission. On May 14, 2016, the institute was named in honor of Ann and Joe O. Neuhoff’s legacy of faith and service to the University of Dallas.
The Gupta Excellence Award is given to a graduating Master’s student who has demonstrated taking action and showing leadership towards making a societal impact using the knowledge and skills acquired in their Master’s degree program.
Faculty Medals, First Honors and Second Honors, are presented to the two graduating seniors who have earned the highest cumulative grade point averages in the class.
The baccalaureate degree with distinction is awarded to students who have maintained a high degree of scholastic excellence. It is of three grades: cum laude, which requires a cumulative average of 3.40 on a 4.0 point scale; magna cum laude, an average of 3.70; and summa cum laude, an average of 3.90. To be eligible for honors at graduation, students must have earned 60 credits at the University of Dallas. The average, however, is computed on the basis of the four-year program including dual and transfer credits.
The Cardinal Spellman Award is named in honor of the late Cardinal Francis Spellman, who presided at the university’s first commencement in 1960. It recognizes a senior who is a model of the highest ideals of the university by awarding a stipend to assist the student in further studies.
The Helen Corbitt Awards for Excellence recognize a senior woman and man who have produced outstanding bodies of work during their time at the university. Students nominated demonstrate excellence in academic pursuits, in student activities and in service to the university. Helen Corbitt was a gifted chef and nutritionist, the recipient of national awards and the head of the Neiman-Marcus restaurants. Her commitment to excellence is continued through an endowment that supports these awards and also provides for special Rome Program activities.
The Ann Heller Maberry Award is presented annually to an outstanding senior woman. It is named in memory of the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Heller, longtime friends and patrons of the university.
Valedictory. The “farewell address” is given at Senior Convocation by a senior elected by his or her peers to speak for the class. Chosen from a list of candidates who have earned cumulative averages of 3.5 and above, this senior is also invited to speak at Commencement.
Doctor of Philosophy in Literature
Esther Elizabeth Moon
“Poverte a spectacle is”: Reading the Canterbury Tales Through the Lens of Poverty and Wealth
Master of Arts in English
Joseph Xavier Boyle
Matthew Jacob Henry
Master of Arts in Philosophy
Patrick Jonathan Gordon
Master of English
Therese Catherine Eby
Master of Humanities
Madeline Teresa Betz
Paul Daniel Boyer
Lauren Demianiuk Grudem
Samuel John Wesley Heisman
Amy Lynn Kratz
Jennifer N. Martin
Chase Benjamin Mendoza
Benjamin David Montedonico
Bachelor of Arts
Olga Lidia Alvarado Zarazua
Eden Elizabeth Brubaker
Owen R. Cole
Marie-Gabrielle Delahoussaye
Jeanine Faye Dorrough
Athena Monique Garnica
Paul James Hudson
Mona Caroline Ahmad Kurdi
Justin Alphonsus Manson
Joanna Judith Márquez-Espinoza
Thomas Edward Rezendes II
Suzanne Rose Robertson
Kai Devante Warner
Uniikye Truth Washington
Laura Rhealyn Womack
Bachelor of Science
Elora Sophia Zucha
Braniff Graduate School
Doctor of Philosophy in Literature
Andrew Charles Gregg
The Final Wisdom of Love in the Poetry of Edmund Spenser
Doctor of Philosophy
Jordan Richard Cruz Matteoli
Albert the Great’s “On Universals”: An Introduction and a Translation of the First Four Treatises
Doctor of Philosophy in Politics
Angela Rose Lill
Aristotle and Hobbes on the Passions
Nicolas Donald McAfee
The Political Wisdom of Shakespeare’s Late Plays
Master of Arts in Art – Painting
Michael P. Hernandez
Master of Arts in Art – Sculpture
Elizabeth Ann Johnson
Victoria Alexis Morales Walters
Breanne Schwarz
Joel Manuel Tineo
Master of Arts in Teaching
BreAnn Salina Brunelle
Master of Catholic School Leadership
Augumn Courtney Helland
Weston Micah Stratman
Master of Humanities
John Davis Bascom
Julie Ann Higby
Erin Anne Leahy
Master of Leadership
Haitham Nabil Al-Zoubi
Gina Marie Fenwick
Master of Pastoral Ministry
Jeronimo Espinosa Olarte
Master of Philosophy
John Peter Kaisersatt
Master of Psychology
Angela Simon Ponce
MaryGrace Williams
Master of Theological Studies
Monica Aguilar Devo
Jonathan Frederick Erickson
Lindee McNutt Greer
Gregory Robert Leitheiser
Annette Marie O’Driscoll
Master of Theology
Dylan Thomas McBryde
Bachelor of Arts
Beth Ann Arcement
Leila Irene Boucher
Jonathan Joseph Coxon
Sarah Marie deKay
Claire Muriel Delaplace
John Paul Dostalik
Corey Lynn Gunter
John Matthew Holloway
Samual C. Jager
Charlotte Noelle LeBlanc
Raissa Anh Ly
Nathaniel D. Metts
Sophia Fajardo Olomi
Nicholas James Opsahl
Merit Sloane Paramo
MariaJose Posada
Ashley Cristina Rivera
Madeline Marie Rodriguez
Luke Xavier Seidman
Nishant Shah
Katherine T Spencer
Shannon Burke Thompson
Benjamin Gregory Tutt
Michael Edward Wilhelm Ullrich
Francisco Javier Valenzuela
Maura Louise Van Bogaert
Yen Nhu Nguyen Vo
Brionna Semone Walker
Garrett Matthew Young
Bachelor of Science
Mariana Corona
Julia Marie Krause
Trinity Haitien Ngo
Kenneth Martin Schneider III
Emily Joselyn Vengalil
Andriella Elizabeth Wagner
Doctor of Philosophy in Literature
Adam D. Cooper
Caroline Gordon’s “The Women on the Porch” as Marriage Epic
Master of Fine Arts – Ceramics
Daniela Maria Ferreira
Cabeza-Vanegas
Entre-Tejidos: Perennial
Master of Arts in Classics
Laird Owen Cantrell
Zhikai Wang
Master of Arts in English
Ashley Elizabeth Haan
Rachel Marie Dugan Wood
Master of Arts in Humanities
Grant Christian Klembara
Tobey Natalie Linhart
Master of Arts in Philosophy
Juraj Nevjestic
Michael Maxwell Potts
Master of Arts in Teaching
Natalie Ann Lett
Arianna Leigh Rudorf
Master of Arts in Teaching
Joanna Judith Márquez-Espinoza
Master of Arts in Theology
Lucas Niño
Master of Catechetical Ministry
Elsa Hernandez
Huong Thi Thu Mai
Master of Catholic School Leadership
Amy Suzanne Vaverka-Felton
Master of Divinity
Juan Esteban Rojas Navarro
Master of English
Sarah Marie Baker
Aisha Dominique Diva Espinosa
Christopher Paul Patterson
Master of Humanities
Salwa George Gebara
Michael Boudreaux Johnson
Christine Marie McIntire
Alayna Leigh Osborn
Emily Plummer
John Randolph Snow
Adrian Michael Thompson
Victoria Anne Voyles
Master of Pastoral Ministry
Joseph Benjamin Bionat
Jessica Bosso Larson
Phung Nguyen Hien Tran
Master of Philosophy
Peter David Burleigh
Emmanuel B. Simon
Master of Politics
Cameran Emmanuel
Aaron Michael Grubbs
Marie Alma Marcalus
Isabelle Morgan Melendez-Smith
Master of Theological Studies
Sister Yolanda Martinez
James Richard Ranieri
Christopher Edward Schraeder
Julie Eliza Stark
Master of Theology
Anne Belli Perez
Master of Business Administration
Hope Vertrice Askew
Eranya Attanayake
Cindy (Xueqing) Bai
Kalei Brown
Katrine Sophie Christensen
Garrett Ethan Cook
Zachary Gerard Evans
Ebram Farhataziz
Phillip Joseph Alexander Fisher
Dishary Khondaker Hossain
Serge M. Ilunga
Chadwick Lamar James II
Ganawa James-Juanah
Nolan Michael Kipp
Mitchell William Larson
Blake Garrett Lee
Samantha Jane Levine
Jiehui Li
Angela Faye Liberatore
John Joseph Marsh
Crystal Shanelle Mason
Danzoh Leticia Mea
Lisette Ann Medina
Shivam Ashok Naik
Quan Le Anh Nguyen
Ikechukwu Vincent Okonji
Shalonda E. Olige
Sanjita Parajuli
Veronica Lee Pena
Katrina Grace Prendergast
Chase Jason Reynolds
Ylluz De Los Angeles Santamaria
Jose Antonio Santoyo
Dionne Mycenae Schuman
Anderson Chase Sellers
Jacquelyn Sepulveda
Juan Manuel Vega
Drew Wooten
Master of Science
Accounting
Christopher John Stevens
Business Analytics
Mohammad Khan
Carley Mance
Newton Zacchaeus Makeni Namenge
Francine Saurelle Nzubu
Derek Pyburn
Cybersecurity
Diplov Bhurtel
Michael Brown
Zachary Chase Caver
Rickey Lenell Fergerson
Winfred Gbedemah
Robert Holmes
Cindy Siteyian Kishoyian
Virginia Jackson Mahl
Kayle McNulty
Oluwatosin Samuel Olubode
Joel Adam Rasinski
Gaurav Sapkota
Zachary Elsworth Stahl
Alexandra Uptmore
Cybersecurity Intelligence
Lily Roberta Ashidam
Mohssine Daghghar
Allamyrat Tuyliyev
Finance
Diego Arias
LaDarius Clark
Eric Michaud
Philippe Yao
Financial Analytics
Akia T. Davis
Kaybreon D. Edwards
Guillermo Torres
Information & Technology Management
Alejandro Rodriguez Escalante
Kishori Yashawant Powar
Bhavita Thakore
Technology Management
Aimanehi Theodora Iyamu
Onyekachukwu Anthony Okoh
Master of Science, Master of Business Administration Dual Degree
Business Analytics
Ricardo Steveen Fernandez Montalvo
Technology Management
Adegboyega Tokunbo Faminu
Bachelor of Arts
Grace Marie Allen
Bridgette Claire Alpar
Emily Alvarado
John Henry Felix Ambuul
Bianca Pamela Aridjis-Olivos
Joseph John Francis Athas
Charles Gary Atkins
Paiten H. Baesa
Cristina Maria Bahena
Emily Elizabeth Baker
Bonnie Tyler Baldwin
Sophia Bannerot
Izabelle Beyonce Barajas
Gabriel Z. Barba
Nathaniel Barnard
Rebecca E. Barry
Joseph William Bartke
Mary Edith Barvick
Nicholas Robert Beatty
Laurance Kristjan Bell
Victoria Bernard
William Everett Berry III
Anna Francesca Berumen
Liliana Bitter
John Henry Blonigen
Loretta Ann Bond
Miriam Elizabeth Boronczyk
Gabriella Andrea Borrello
John Keller Boulet
Katherine Marie Bowling
Katelyn Brady
Patrick Breen
Elisabeth Joan Christine Brehany
Joseph Thomas Bremer
Therese Faustina Burch
Gerardo Javier Canedo Cauazos
Gabriella Rose Devlin Capizzi
Vincent Philip Cavanna
Elias I. Cervera
Paula Pei-lan Chang
Anna Catherine Christianson
Caleb Manning Clayton
John-Paul Milnes Collins
Sara Angelica Conde
Maximilian Kolbe Costello
Charles Edward Crisman
Alexandria Nicole Cristan
Hannah Faith Curtis
Anne Marie Davis
Marie Therese Lisieux Depew
Gabrielle Bernadette Dixon
Samuel D. Dixon
Kelly Dougherty
Blake Joseph Dwyer
Audrie Genevieve Earle
Elizabeth Anne Elfelt
Clare Regina English
Joseph Augustine Farley
Gabriel Francis Corrigan Farrell
Elsa Sophia Feltl
Romali Catherine Fernando
Isabella Marie Flynn
Julia Maria Fojut
Vera Patricia Fontenot
Katherine Frances Frediani
Mary Eleanor Freund
Alan Manelic Galicia
Mary Catharine Geddie
Josh Chirayil George
Luke Sabastian Gerami
Elizabeth Grace Germany
Jacob Giunta
Lynley Glickler
Sarah Grace Goodykoontz
Isabella Marie Grice
Elena Marie Grutter
Arthur Kenneth Guin
Thomas Hall
Claire Hamilton
Tayloir Hampton
Anna Marguerite Harrington
Alexa Layne Hassell
Patrick Seamus Joseph Hasson
Maison Michael Hazelton
Grace Nichole Hedges
Alexander Matthew Hentze
William Francis Hebert
Antonio Ruiz Hernández
John Mason Hitt
Mary Catherine Hochberg
Nicholas Augustine Hoff
Charles Oleson Hughes
David Joseph Huner
Gilbert Thomas Irlbeck
Melanie Marion Jehu
Anthony Stephen Jones
Phoebe Briar Jones
Jillian Elaine Josefsberg
Sean Thomas Jurek
Annette Lucia Kaehler
Anna Rose Kaminski
Michael Ignatius Loyola Kaufman
Patrick Edwin Kearney
Rachel Maria Kelly
Virginia Grace Kendall
Maire Isabel Kennedy
Claire Edith Marie Keupen
John Augustine Kheriaty
Claire Rita Kirby
Elizabeth Rose Kirby
Shane Joseph Kliethermes
Matthew Gregory LaCour
Veronica Anne Lang
Maximillian Bernard Lange
Charlotte Julia Lannon
Michael John Le
Kate Marie Lester
Vincent Samuel LiMandri
Elizabeth Lively
Josef Alexander López
Jude Anthony Lugari
Isabella Luna
Sebastian Alejandro Luzondo
Henry Thomas Lynch
Bridget Taylor Macaulay
John Anthony Maldonado
Karley Kay Malone
Maria Agnes Maloney
Kyla Ranee Mangham
Kameron Marc Manning
Wendy Rose McDonald
Melanie McGonigle
Carson Andrew McNamara
Susanna Christine McNichol
Yesica Mejia
Alyssa Mencacci
Olivia Eileen Moore
Sara Sofia Mora Benitez
Jonathan Morales
Richard V. Morin
Annelise Mary Mosley
Huzeifa Mustafa
Marcos Narvaez III
Michelle Rose Narvaez
Nicole Phuong Van Nguyen
Sandra Mai-Vy Nguyen
Eoin O’Grady
Sabrina Fajardo Olomi
Emma Marguerite Palmer
Wyatt Luke Parlow
Theresa Marie Paschall
Dayne Mara Patillo
Rebekah Ann Peak
Grace Elizabeth Peitsch
Bernadette Mariella Pennell
Athalia Christianne Gabriel-Peralta
Gabrielle Anne Peters
Jane Morgan Powell
Monnica Marie-Thérèse Prudlo
Morgan Alexandra Puglisi
Laura Catherine Purcell
Jessica Quiroz
Klemens Alexander Raab
Athena Isabella Ralles Martinez
Emanuel J. Rame
Jessica Faith Ramirez
Bianca Pamela Aridjis-Olivos
Joseph Edward Beam
Emmanuelle Beatrice Bergman
Elizabeth Ann Chouinard
Madeline Grace Clements
Alvaro John Directo
Andrew John Paul Ferguson
Mary Catharine Geddie
Josh Chirayil George
Isaac James Gerard Hellerman
Sara Veronica Hey
Larissa Elena Ramirez
Alexis Restrepo Agudelo
John Brady Reynolds
Joseph Bernard Rice
Kaylei Shay Richardson
Timothy Joseph Rindone
Thomas Gerard Ringel
Mary Angela Roberts
Magda Caroline Rogg
Samantha Lynn Ronge
Ashley Valentina Ruel
Ann Margaret Rushing
Noelle Mary Alicia Salgado
Benjamin Peter Sanford
Carlo Antonio Scarmardo
Megan Catherine Scott
Katherine Anne Sharafinski
Anna Frances Sidorenko
Caleb Anthony Skinner
Ross Lafayette Snider
Rocio Ixchele Soria
Charles Walker Spurgin
Ingrid Catherine Stading
Cecilia Ann Stariha
Jacob Shajin Sullivan
Jonathan Samuel James Telander
Rebecca Jean Telander
Jessica Megan Temminck-Dos Santos
Mary Catherine Hochberg
Mariah Brooke Houser
Claire Marie Hughes
Jacob Tyler Humble
Jisoo Suzie Hwang
Chloe Grace Ilagan
Maria Elizabeth Kaiser
Amelia Jeanne Knapp
John Joseph Krewet
Thomas Maximilian Lagarde
Isabela Prezotto de Lima
Samantha Grace Tieman
Kiet G Tran
Taylor Huynh Le Tran
Mary Elizabeth Traylor
Rylee Kay Tyers Sundberg
Mary Grace Urbanczyk
John Charles Urbanski
Erin Ann Vance
Emma Louise Vaske
Harrison John Vetter
An Thien Vu
Teagan Marie Walsh
Anna Marie Walters
Jacob Oliver Warila
Seth Abraham Weinberg
Zachary Joseph Weiss
Catherine Marie Wells
Claire Katherine Weston
Michael White
Sylvan Shae Wiebe
Elise Alžbéta Matilda Williams
Graeme Allen Williams
Hannah Isabelle Wilmes
Rose Jubilee Wingert
Catherine Thérèse Winston
Mary Clare Witter
Mariana Toro Yehya
Joseph Xavier Mastandrea
Rylan Xavier Mazarello
Maria Margarita Pecha
Zachary Dietrich Reding
Jana Clara Rocha
Magda Caroline Rogg
James Warren Sanford
Karen Guadalupe Sierra
Carolina Soto
Lavang Emmanuel Vu
Asa Waterman, IV
Richard Husseini, BS ’88 Chair
The Most Reverend Edward J. Burns Chancellor
Randall Muck Vice Chair
Bridgett Wagner, BA ’81 Secretary Jean White, BA ’86 Treasurer
Joe Armes
Charles E. Baumann, BA ’88
Win Bell
Louis Brown
Mary Devlin Capizzi, BA ’88 MBA ’90
J. Barry Clark
Hon. Tom Craddick
Emmet Flood, BA ’78
The Most Reverend Daniel Flores, BA ’83 MDiv ’87
Louis J. Grabowsky
Patrick E. Haggerty Jr., BA ’67 MBA ’68
Mary Rice Hasson
Cary Hyden, BA ’80
William Keffler
Annmarie Kelly, BA ’91
The Most Reverend Gregory Kelly, BA ’78 MDiv ’82
Charles LiMandri
Mike Magusiak
Daniel Milligan, BA ’91
Thomas M. Nealon, MBA ’87
Joseph O. Neuhoff Jr.
Hon. Nathaniel “Tan” Parker, BA ’93
Mary Ritter, BA ’85
President Jonathan J. Sanford
The Most Reverend Mark Seitz, BA ’76 MA ’80 MDiv ’82
Nicholas T. Serafy Jr.
Megan Smith, BS ’02 MBA ’18
Patrick V. Stark
Regina Uhl, BA ’00
Julie Weber, BS ’91
Hon. Albert Zapanta
Thomas Zellers, BS ’79
Administration
Jonathan J. Sanford President
Matthias Vorwerk Provost
John Norris Associate Provost
Cherie Hohertz Assistant Provost
John G. Plotts
Executive Vice President
Heather Lachenauer
Vice President for Board and Legal Services and General Counsel
Richard Dougherty
Interim Dean of the Braniff Graduate School of Liberal Arts
Philip Harold Dean of the Constantin College of Liberal Arts
Ryan Reedy, BA ’05 MH ’10 Chief of Staff
Clare Venegas Vice President for Marketing and Communications
Ronald Scrogham
Dean of the Cowan-Blakley Memorial Library
Susan Rhame
Interim Dean of the Satish & Yasmin Gupta College of Business
Kris Muñoz Vetter
Vice President for Development and University Relations
Robert Watling
Vice President for Finance and Administration and CFO
Oh beautiful for spacious skies, For amber waves of grain
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain. America! America!
God shed His grace on thee, And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea.
Oh beautiful for pilgrim feet
Whose stern impassioned stress
A thoroughfare for freedom beat
Across the wilderness America! America!
God mend thine ev’ry flaw. Confirm thy soul in self-control, Thy liberty in law.
Procession
Macebearer, Chair of the Faculty Senate Kyle Lemieux
Flag Bearers | Marshals | Students | Faculty
Members of the Board of Trustees
Executive Vice President John G. Plotts
Vice President for Board and Legal Services and General Counsel Heather Lachenauer
Chief of Staff Ryan Reedy
Vice President for Marketing and Communications Clare Venegas
Vice President for Development and University Relations Kris Muñoz Vetter
Vice President for Finance and Administration and CFO Robert Watling
Interim Dean of the Braniff Graduate School of Liberal Arts Richard Dougherty
Dean of the Constantin College of Liberal Arts Philip Harold
Dean of the Cowan-Blakley Memorial Library Ronald Scrogham
Interim Dean of the Satish & Yasmin Gupta College of Business Susan Rhame
Assistant Provost Cherie Hohertz
Associate Provost John Norris
Provost Matthias Vorwerk
National Alumni Board President Daniel Milligan
Trustee Emmet Flood
Chair of the Board of Trustees Richard Husseini
Commencement Speaker Paul Clement
President Jonathan J. Sanford
Chancellor, The Most Reverend Edward J. Burns, Bishop of the Diocese of Dallas
Invocation
Bishop Burns
Greetings
Provost Vorwerk | Daniel Milligan | Richard Husseini | President Sanford
Presentation of Honorary Degree
President Sanford
Introduction of the Commencement Speaker
Emmet Flood
Commencement Address
Paul Clement
Awarding of Undergraduate Academic Honors
Dean Harold | Interim Dean Rhame
Awarding of Gupta Graduate Honors
Interim Dean Rhame For the Class of 2023
Paula Chang
Presentation of Candidates for Braniff Graduate School of Liberal Arts, Satish & Yasmin Gupta College of Business Degrees
President Sanford | Associate Provost Norris | Michael Leshner
Conferral of Graduate Degrees
President Sanford | Bishop Burns | Interim Dean Rhame | Interim Dean Dougherty
Presentation of Candidates for Constantin College of Liberal Arts
President Sanford | Associate Provost Norris
Conferral of Undergraduate Degrees
President Sanford | Dean Harold | Interim Dean Rhame
Benediction
Bishop Burns
“America the Beautiful”
The Assembly