NSTAURARE
The Christendom College Update Instaurare (vt. to restore, strengthen, renew)
September 2003 Volume XI, Number III
INSIDE THIS ISSUE . . . The Mysteries of Light – page 2
High School Summer Program page 3
Library Project Overview page 4
Trip to Cameroon page 7
Cultural Traditions at Christendom – page 3 Dr. Cuddeback’s New Book – page 6 Financial Update – page 7 Alumni Give Anniversary Gift to College – page 8
Tenth Consecutive Record Enrollment at College
Students and faculty anticipate events and challenges during 2003-04 year
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Christendom College began its 27th academic year on August 24, with its tenth record enrollment in as many years. Undergraduate enrollment has grown astonishingly from 140 in 1993 to the current 370.
College President Timothy O’Donnell kneels at the Communion rail in Christendom’s Chapel of Christ the King as he leads his fellow faculty members in reciting the Oath of Fidelity to the Magisterium. Bishop Paul Loverde celebrated the Mass and accepted the Oath on behalf of the Church.
Among the number of new students are several children of alumni (Monica Briggs, Thomas Hambleton, Clare O’Reilly, and Bryan Scrivener) and approximately 30 siblings of returning students. Also swelling the freshmen ranks are a number who attended last year’s High School Summer Program and are happy to be back in the Shenandoah Valley. The year to come for this promising class and the upperclassmen is full of the enlivening, the edifying, and the inspiring. A few highlights follow. Last year’s graduation ceremony, which honored Senator Rick Santorum, Avery Cardinal Dulles, SJ,
and the College’s largest-ever graduating class, cast a happy glow that extended even into the beginning of this year. The closing ceremonies of last year and the opening of this were equally joyful. As has been his custom, His Excellency Paul S. Loverde, Bishop of the Diocese of Arlington, kindly visited the College to celebrate the Mass of the Holy Spirit and preside over the Christendom faculty’s oath of fidelity to the Church’s Magisterium. The celebration, festivity and business of opening weekend over, those students on campus began to settle into a routine as classes began on August 26. The group of juniors anticipating departure for the Christendom Semester in Rome Program had to wait another month for the beginning of their academic ventures. There has see TWENTY-SEVENTH, page 4
Notre Dame Graduate School Sends Forth Sixteen Graduates
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Sixteen students from Christendom’s Graduate School received their Master of Arts in Theological Studies degrees on Saturday, August 2, in a beautiful ceremony in the Chapel of Christ the King on the Front Royal campus. Like the NDGS student body as a whole, this year’s graduates come from near and far and represent a variety of careers and backgrounds. Californian Joseph Arias has worked as a catechist and substitute teacher in the parish school at Queen of Apostles in Alexandria, VA, while studying at NDGS. He hopes to continue studying in theology and philosophy for a doctorate in preparation for a teaching career. James Atkinson is a high school teacher at Tempe Preparatory Academy in Tempe, AZ. He teaches physics and a special English course that includes philosophy, theology, and Scripture studies. He also has plans for further study in Scripture and hopes for a career as a
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college professor. Geovani Flores, a native of El Salvador, is a Network Senior Specialist at US Inspect. He is very active in the Arlington Diocese Spanish Apostolate, where he teaches theology and directs the seven Spanish Leadership Schools in the diocese. He also plans on further philosophy and theology studies, and hopes for work in academia. Richard Gill is a retired Chief Warrant Officer of the U.S. Coast Guard. He is married with 5 children and 7 grandchildren, and is a long-time parish catechist who works with and teaches troubled youth at the Prince William County Group Home for Boys and Girls. Sister Mary Joseph Heisler is a Carmelite Sister of the Divine Heart of Jesus in St.
Louis, MO. For most of the years she was attending the NDGS Summer Program, Sr. Mary Joseph lived in Holland, where she was Novice Mistress and Vocations see NDGS GRADUATION, page 6
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