The 11,836 included some 8,600 undergraduates, and other graduate and professional school students.Of the total, 33 students, or 0.28%, tested positive and cannot arrive on campus until they are cleared by medical professionals.
“I commend our students, their families, the University’s COVID Response Unit, University Health Services and our partnerLabCorpin completing this formidable undertaking in a timely manner,” University President, said.“We wanted to make certain our students’ return did not represent a health threat to the South Bend community.”
In addition to the pre-matriculation screening, Notre Dame conducted a detailed analysis of counties across the nation from which students would be arriving to identify students coming from so-called hot spots who may warrant additional screening after they arrive on campus.
“As we begin the academic year, we will continue to make data-based decisions using the latest information in partnership with our local public health officials and in consultation with outside medical experts,” , the Charles and Jill Fischer Provost of the University, said. “We will remain vigilant in our ongoing work to provide a healthy and safe environment for our students, faculty and staff members.”
The campus reopened after months of preparation that included the following:
Reopening by the numbers
The following are among the measures taken to make the campus as safe as possible:
“In this crisis, we must do everything we can to ensure that no accepted or current students fail to enroll or return because they don’t have the money,” Father Jenkins said.
The savings will be deposited in a special Student Emergency Relief Fund, composed of senior employee donations and other private benefaction. It has been established to assist deserving students whose families face unemployment and other hardships stemming from the coronavirus pandemic.
“I commend Father Jenkins andNotre Dame’s other leaders formaking personal sacrifices to address the needs of our students during this crisis,” said John J. Brennan, chair of the . “They epitomize those dedicated individuals who’ve contributed to the greater good throughout the history of Our Lady’s University.”
The University’s three executive officers, the deans, the vice presidents and leaders in the Athletics Department, including certain coaches, have been asked to reduce their salaries along a sliding scale of 5 percent to 20 percent for the highest compensated employees. To accommodate voluntary payroll reductions, the University will establish a special payroll deduction plan tostart July 1and continue through June 30, 2021.
Almost one-half of Notre Dame students received financial assistance last year in the form of need-based scholarships that do not require repayment. The medianamount per student was $40,000or about three-quarters the cost of tuition at Notre Dame.
Student financial aid has been Notre Dame’s top funding priorityfor more than 30 years.Beyond fundraising, onerecent example of the efforts in this regard was putting savings generated by the University’s staff early retirement program last yeartowardstudent aid. Also, one-third ofthe endowment’s spending distribution is dedicated to studentfinancial aid.
]]>“Under Scott’s leadership, the contribution of the endowment to Notre Dame’s mission is difficult to overstate,” Father Jenkins said. “For Scott and his team, it has never been about the dollars, but about providing financial aid to deserving students, the hiring of superb faculty and supporting the University’s service to the Church and the world.”
During his tenure, Notre Dame’s endowment grew to $12.5 billion as of June 30, 2019, from $425 million in 1989, with endowment spending increasing to $425.7 million from $19.5 million over the same period. The endowment supports scholarship and research, academicprograms and institutes, hundreds of faculty chairs, athletics and fully one-third of all student financial aid.
“The University’s average annual endowment returns over the past 30 years have ranked among the best in higher education and beyond,” Executive Vice President said.“However, I believe Scott’s greatest gift to Notre Dame is the outstanding investment team he has assembled to ensure future generations of students, faculty and staff will benefit from the exceptional stewardship of our endowment.”
“It's been an honor to serve myalmamater,which, in three decades, has been able to realize magnificent aspirations that we could onlydream of decades prior,” Malpasssaid. “That was madepossible, in large measure, by thefinancialgenius and devotion toNotreDame of the investmentteam that I was privileged to assembleover the years.”
Malpass is succeeded byMichael Donovan, a 23-year veteran of the Notre Dame Investment Office, where he serves as managing director.
“Mike’s talent as an investment manager is surpassed only by his humility, leadership and commitment to Notre Dame’s mission,” Cullinan said.“He has led our private equity investments since 1997, and delivered impressive returns for that portion of our portfolio. I have complete confidence in Mike and the investment team.”
“I am honored to have the opportunity to lead a wonderful team that is deeply committed to continuing to manage the University’s assets in a splendid manner,” Donovan said.
In 2011,Institutional Investor Magazine named Malpass its Large Endowment Manager of the Year.In bestowingits lifetime achievement award on Malpass in 2014,Chief Investment Officer Magazine praised him as “an investor (who) grew alongside the endowment, both becoming among the most respected in the institutional universe.”The Wall Street Journal once described investing by Malpass, a former high school football player, as “having a year worthy of a Heisman.”
Malpass was one of 12 of America’s leading chief investment officers profiled in the book “Foundation and Endowment Investing: Philosophies and Strategies of Top Investors and Institutions.”
Malpass is a 1984 Notre Dame graduate and received a master of business administration (MBA) degree from the University in 1986. He returned in 1988 from the Wall Street firm Irving Trust Company, and became chief investment officer the following year. Malpass also served as a concurrent assistant professor of finance in the Mendoza College of Business at Notre Dame. In 1995, he helped develop the applied investment management course in the college for outstanding students in finance that has received extensive interest from financial services firms throughout the country.
Like his predecessor, Donovan has been crucial in executing investment strategies behind the University’s success and careful stewardship. He helped recruit and mold a team of Notre Dame graduates who have won plaudits from the nation’s leading financial publications for their outstanding decision-making and distinctive dedication to their alma mater.
Donovan has spent 23 years as a member of the team that manages Notre Dame’s endowment. Previously, he co-founded a successful educational products company and practiced corporate law with Morgan, Lewis & Bockius in Philadelphia. Donovan serves on the advisory boards of numerous private capital firms. He also is a director or advisor to a number of charitable organizations. He holds a bachelor’s degree in finance from Notre Dame, a law degree from the UCLA 91Ƶ of Law and an MBA from Harvard Business 91Ƶ.
As the university’s chief investment officer, Donovan will report directly to the executive vice president.
]]>“Rebuild myChurch,” an allusion to God’s summons to St. Francis of Assisi, will examine the sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church and explore reforms to which it should lead.
“While we must never fail to be honest and forthright about terrible acts of abuse and failures of oversight,” Father Jenkins said, “the forum is designed to be constructive and forward-looking.”
At the same time, Father Jenkins announced the establishment of a committee that will oversee the awarding of up to $1 million in grants toNotreDame faculty forresearch that helps address some aspect of the current crisis.
The first event in the 2019 Notre Dame Forum series,“TheChurch Crisis: Where are We Now?” is scheduled for Sept. 25 and will include the following panelists who have confirmed their participation:
Other panelists likely will be added to the first event. Subsequent Notre Dame Forum events over the course of the year will consider reforms to which the crisis should give rise.
Since its establishment in 2005, the Notre DameForum has featured major talks by leading authorities on issues of importance to the University, the nation and the larger world, including
]]>“Father Olinger has proved a thoughtful, engaged member of our Board of Trustees and a great administrator at Portland,” Father Jenkins said, adding: “We’re grateful and excited to have Gerry steward and deepen Notre Dame’s Catholic and Holy Cross mission, enhance our contributions to the Church and advance ecumenical and interfaith understanding and cooperation at Notre Dame and around the world.”
“I am humbled by Father Jenkins’ invitation to serve the University,” Father Olinger said. “Notre Dame has helped form me academically and spiritually. I am grateful to have served this truly excellent institution for the last four years as a Trustee, and I look forward to continuing to serve the University and its mission by cultivating the Catholic and Holy Cross mission of Notre Dame and catalyzing its service to the Church.”
Father Olinger currently is Portland’s vice president for university relations, responsible for the Offices of Alumni and Parent Relations, Development, Marketing and Communications and University Events. He is a concurrent assistant professor of political science in the university’s College of Arts and Sciences.
Prior to his work in university relations, Father Olinger served as vice president for student affairs at Portland. In that capacity, he had oversight for the Offices of Residence Life, Public Safety, Student Activities, Career Services, Campus Ministry and International Student Services, as well as the University’s Health and Counseling Center and Moreau Center. He assisted with the planning and development of several important campus projects, including the construction of the Beauchamp Recreation and Wellness Center and Lund Family Residence Hall, as well as the renovation of the Pilot House. He also previously served as executive assistant to Portland’s president.
A native of Springfield, Pennsylvania, Father Olinger graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in history and government from Notre Dame. He earned two postgraduate degrees from Notre Dame: a juris doctor cum laude in 2004 and a master of divinity degree in 2009. While in law school he served as executive notes editor for the Journal of Legislation and was a member of the Student Bar Association. After law school, Father Olinger entered formation with the Congregation of Holy Cross, made his final vows in August 2009 and was ordained a priest in April 2010.
A current member of the board of directors for King’s College in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, he also previously served on the board of directors for the Association for Student Affairs at Catholic Colleges and Universities and the board of trustees for De La Salle North Catholic High 91Ƶ in Portland. He is a member of the state bars of Indiana and Pennsylvania.
]]>His brother Troyae Scott, age 20, 2413 Kenwood Ave., was a passenger. Both were charged with weapons and marijuana possession.Troyon Scott was also charged with operating a vehicle, having never been licensed.
The handguns, Glock 19 and Glock 45 semi-automatic pistols, had fully loaded magazines of 17 rounds and 10 rounds respectively, each with an additional round already chambered.The guns were recovered under the front driver’s and front passenger’s seats.
NDSP Officer Jim Buchmann had been monitoring South Bend Police Department radio traffic when he heard the description of the vehicle identified in an earlier incident.A passer-by had called police when she saw the car and its apparently motionless driver stopped on the Angela Boulevard bridge. The passer-by tapped on the driver’s side window, prompting the driver to speed away, eastbound toward the Notre Dame campus.The vehicle passed Buchmann at Angela Boulevard and Notre Dame Avenue, changing lanes near Eddy Street without a turn signal being employed. Buchmann stopped the vehicle as it crested the hill at Edison Road and Harrington Drive, where Buchmann was joined by Officer Tim Reiter. NDSP Lt. Andre Bridges also assisted.
The Scott brothers were handcuffed and taken into custody without incident. The suspects were transported by NDSP to its headquarters at Hammes Mowbray Hall, where they were met by members of the South Bend Police Strategic Focus Unit.The two were then transported to the Metro Homicide Unit, where local and federal law enforcement are continuing the investigation.
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Vice President Mike Pence
Vice President Mike Pence will receive an honorary degree and serve as principal speaker at the University of Notre Dame’s 172nd commencement ceremony May 21 (Sunday). He becomes the first vice president of the United States to deliver the commencement address at Notre Dame.
“It is fitting that in the 175th year of our founding on Indiana soil that Notre Dame recognize a native son who served our state and now the nation with quiet earnestness, moral conviction and a dedication to the common good characteristic of true statesmen,” said Notre Dame President “With his own brand of reserved dignity, Mike Pence instilled confidence on the state level then, and on the world stage now. We are proud to welcome him to represent the new administration.”
Pence was born in Columbus, Indiana, June 7, 1959, one of six children of Edward and Nancy Pence, who established a successful convenience store in their small Indiana city 45 miles south of Indianapolis.
Pence earned a bachelor’s degree in history in 1981 from Hanover College. He later attended Indiana University 91Ƶ of Law, where he met his future wife, Karen. The Pences have three children: Michael, Charlotte and Audrey. After graduating from law school, Pence practiced law, led the Indiana Policy Review Foundation, and began hosting “The Mike Pence Show,” a syndicated talk radio show, and a weekly television public affairs program in Indiana.
In 2000, he launched a successful bid for his local congressional seat, entering the U.S. House of Representatives at the age of 40. The people of East-Central Indiana elected Pence six times to represent them in Congress. He was subsequently elected by his colleagues to serve as chairman of the House Republican Study Committee and House Republican Conference chairman.
In 2013, Pence was elected the 50th governor of Indiana, and served through the end of last year. The Republican Party’s nominees for president and vice president of the United States, Donald Trump and Mike Pence, were elected Nov. 8 and took their oaths of office Jan. 20.
The White House news release can be viewed .
Contact: Paul Browne, vice president for public affairs and communications, 574-631-8696, pbrowne@nd.edu
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University of Notre Dame Vice President and Chief Investment Officer has been named a member of the board of the Vatican Bank.
Known officially as the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), the bank is governed by a seven-member Board of Superintendence. In addition to Malpass, European bankers Javier Marin Romano and Georg Freiherr von Boeselager were named to the board on Thursday by the Cardinals Commission of Vigilance of the IOR.
Malpass has been advising the Holy See on banking reforms initiated by Pope Francis since the first months of his pontificate.
“The appointment comes at a time when Pope Francis is more determined than ever to make the Vatican Bank a financial engine for good works around the world,” Notre Dame President , said. “The pope has placed enormous and well-deserved confidence in Scott’s integrity and investment acumen. Notre Dame could not be prouder.”
“I am honored to serve the Cardinals Commission of the IOR and the Holy Father in this important assignment that assists religious organizations all over the world,” Malpass said. “I am looking forward to meeting my fellow board members in the new year and working with them and the dedicated staff of the IOR on this important ministry for the Church.”
Malpass is responsible for investment of the University’s endowment, working capital, pension and life income assets of some $10.4 billion as of the fiscal year ended June 30, 2016. The Notre Dame endowment is the 12th largest in American higher education and the largest at a Catholic university.
Having served as chief investment officer since 1989, Malpass works closely with the investment committee of the University’s in partnering with the most sophisticated investment management organizations throughout the world. The Notre Dame endowment has achieved top-tier investment performance over both short- and long-term time periods.
Malpass is one of 12 leading chief investment officers profiled in the book “Foundation and Endowment Investing: Philosophies and Strategies of Top Investors and Institutions,” written by Lawrence E. Kochard and Cathleen M. Rittereiser and published by John Wiley and Sons in December 2007. Malpass was the recipient of the Large Endowment Manager of the Year award from Institutional Investor magazine in 2011. In 2012, Malpass was the recipient of the Rodney H. Adams endowment award given annually by Nacubo for contributions to professional development activities in the field of endowment investment management, and was named recipient of Chief Investment Officer magazine’s lifetime achievement award in 2014.
In 2000, Malpass was the recipient of the James E. Armstrong award given annually to an alumnus who is a current employee of Notre Dame and has rendered distinguished service to the University. He is an honorary Monogram winner given by the Notre Dame athletic department, and in 2011 was selected as the MBA Alumnus of the Year for his service to the business school in teaching innovative classes in applied investment management and global portfolio management.
Malpass is a 1984 Notre Dame graduate and received a master of business administration degree from the University in 1986. He returned in 1988 from the Wall Street firm Irving Trust Company, and became chief investment officer the following year when the University’s endowment stood at $425 million.
Malpass is a concurrent assistant professor of finance in the Mendoza College of Business at Notre Dame. In 1995, he helped develop the applied investment management course in the college for outstanding students in finance that has received extensive interest from financial services firms throughout the country. Malpass is a director or advisory council member for several investment and charitable organizations. He serves on the Investment Advisory Committee for Major League Baseball. In 2011, he was elected to the board of directors for TIFF, the investment fund for foundations. In 2012, he was elected to the board of directors for the Vanguard Group Inc.
In 2014, Malpass was part of the founding group for Catholic Investment Services Inc., a not-for-profit offering top-tier investment solutions to Catholic organizations nationally that comply with the USCCB guidelines for socially responsible investing.
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Michael E. Pippenger
, Columbia University’s dean of undergraduate global programs and assistant vice president for international education, has been appointed vice president and associate provost for internationalization at the University of Notre Dame, , Charles and Jill Fischer Provost, announced Friday (April 29). He succeeds , the inaugural occupant of the post, who will retire this summer.
Pippenger, whose appointment is effective Sept. 1, will lead efforts to broaden the University’s global culture, programs, reach and reputation through expanded international research, collaborative projects and strategic relationships with global partners.
“Michael is a recognized leader in the international area whose collaborative approach with faculty and administrators at Columbia and at many other universities throughout the world helped guide Columbia’s ambitious international strategy,” Burish said. “Among many things, he is drawn here by our new and sees it as a major opportunity to expand Notre Dame’s global reach and impact. He is strongly committed to Notre Dame’s distinctive Catholic identity, and understands how it can provide a unique resource for Notre Dame’s future international efforts. The search committee and I are grateful that Michael has agreed to help the University build on the strong foundation that Nick Entrikin helped create to make Notre Dame an even more global university.”
Said Pippenger: “It’s an honor for me to be given this opportunity to serve Notre Dame and its global community. I look forward to supporting faculty, administrators, students, alumni and other partners in their efforts to enrich their lives — and the lives of others — through the work they do in the world. It’s an exciting time at Notre Dame, a time in which so many people are building upon the University’s mission and enhancing its legacy of global engagement to expand its reach internationally. It is my great privilege to be joining those committed to this critical work.”
At Columbia, Pippenger created a centralized office for undergraduate global education, led the administration of 22 study abroad programs worldwide, managed exchange agreements between Columbia and its international partner universities, and assisted faculty in securing funding for global research.
Previously at Columbia, Pippenger established its first office of fellowship programs and study abroad, which in six years helped students win four Rhodes Scholarships, six Marshall Scholarships and 60 Fulbright grants.
Between 2002 and 2005, Pippenger was director of scholarship programs in the College of Arts and Science at New York University, where he ran all major national and international scholarship competitions. He also previously served for three years as senior program officer and world area manager of the Asia/Pacific Fulbright Program at the Institute of International Education.
Early in his career, Pippenger served in admissions at Haverford College and Carleton College, his alma mater, before earning his master’s and doctoral degrees in English literature from Indiana University.
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Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C.
Invited by the Vatican’s to a meeting of Catholic educators from around the world at the papal retreat at Castel Gandolfo near Rome, University of Notre Dame President , on Thursday (Nov. 19) cited Pope Francis and the late , president emeritus of Notre Dame, in urging that Catholic universities serve as “both a beacon for the world, which shows the light of the Gospel, and a crossroads, where genuine seekers of truth can come together in dialogue.”
Excerpts from remarks delivered by Father Jenkins Thursday at the world congress follow.
“Father Theodore Hesburgh, C.S.C., who served as president of Notre Dame for 35 years, once said that a Catholic university is both a beacon for the world, which shows the light of the Gospel, and a crossroads, where genuine seekers of truth can come together in dialogue. This dual role is also identified in the words of Pope Francis who, in an address to me and to other leaders of Notre Dame, called us as a Catholic university to reflect a missionary discipleship, for a Catholic is ‘by its very nature … committed to demonstrating the harmony of faith and reason and the relevance of this Christian message for a full and authentically human life.’ (Address of Pope Francis to the University of Notre Dame, Jan. 30, 2014.)
“At the same time, he reminds us of the importance of dialogue, noting that Jesus began to preach in the ‘Galilee of the Gentiles,’ a crossroads for people of different races, cultures and religions, and he calls us ‘to experience the humility of research, that attitude of silent welcoming of the unknown, of the stranger, of the other and demonstrate one’s openness and willingness to walk with all those who are driven by a restless tension toward the truth, believers and nonbelievers, foreigners and the marginalized.’ (Message of Pope Francis to the Italian Catholic Federation of University Students, Oct. 14, 2014.)
“In our contentious and polarizing times — even, sadly, to homicidal extremes — it is challenging to be both a beacon and a crossroads. But it is a calling full of hope. May this conference be an occasion for the renewal of our institutions and of each of us individually in our mission. Indeed, may it ignite in us a renewing passion.”
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Jake Scanlan, a University of Notre Dame junior from North Potomac, Maryland, died Wednesday (Nov. 11) in his room in Siegfried Hall. He was 20, majoring in mechanical engineering.
“On behalf of the entire University, I extend my deepest condolences and heartfelt prayers to Jake’s family and friends, and to his parents especially. I pray that they may find some solace in God’s grace, and support through Jake’s extended Notre Dame family. We mourn with them on this tragic occasion,” said , president of the University.
Scanlan was discovered unresponsive in bed by his roommate at approximately 7:30 a.m. Immediate attempts to resuscitate by fellow students, including an emergency medical technician, and subsequently by responding emergency personnel were unavailing. There were no signs of trauma or other indications of foul play.
St. Joseph County Coroner Michael O’Connell, who responded to the residence hall this morning, will make a determination as to cause of death.
The and are available to offer their support to members of the Notre Dame community. A memorial Mass will take place at 9 p.m. Thursday (Nov. 12) in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart. Father Jenkins will preside.
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UPDATE: William Meckling, a 21-year-old senior due to graduate Sunday from the University of Notre Dame, died early Saturday morning (May 16) after a fall from the roof of the Joyce Center.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with Billy’s family and friends after this terrible tragedy,” , the University president, said. “It is a profound sadness for all of us, on this graduation weekend, to lose someone so young and brimming with promise.”
A Notre Dame Security Police lieutenant, on patrol near the center at 3:45 a.m., was approached by two students who said they needed his assistance. Upon reaching the east side of the Joyce Center, the officer observed Meckling, unresponsive, on the ground near Gate 7. Emergency medical personnel also responded. CPR and other efforts to resuscitate him were unavailing.
Initial investigation indicates that the victim was among a small group of students who had gained access to the roof, wet from precipitation, at a relatively low point from outside the building. No others sustained injuries.
Meckling was transported by ambulance to Saint Joseph’s Regional Medical Center. The county coroner will determine the cause of death.
A mechanical engineering major, Meckling was from Centennial, Colorado, and was a member of the Notre Dame fencing team.
“When one thinks of the success of Notre Dame fencing, names like Gerek Meinhardt and Lee Kiefer come to mind,” head fencing coach said. “Yet equally integral to our team success are the unsung names, the walk-ons that bring the positive spirit, energy and camaraderie to our practices and competitions to push their teammates and themselves to greater heights. Billy Meckling was one of those teammates — an invaluable member of our sabre squad who left such a massive impact on all of us as a fencer and a human being.
“On the strip, Billy was a talented fencer and a determined worker on a very competitive sabre squad — evidenced by his earned monograms during the 2012 and 2014 seasons. More importantly, he was a great friend to all members of our program. A true Notre Dame man, his kindness and warmth impacted each and every one of us — and makes his loss all the more difficult.”
The and are available to offer their support to members of the Notre Dame community.
A memorial Mass will be celebrated at 11:30 a.m. Monday (May 18) in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart. Father Jenkins will preside and Rev. Pete McCormick, C.S.C., director of , will be the homilist.
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Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C.
Citing the long-held opposition to nuclear arms of newly canonized Popes John XXIII and John Paul II, University of Notre Dame President , called for a “fresh examination of the ethics of nuclear weapons in today’s world” at the Colloquium on Revitalizing Catholic Engagement on Nuclear Disarmament, hosted April 24 to 25 (Thursday to Friday) by former U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz and former Secretary of Defense William Perry at Stanford University’s and .
Shultz said he welcomed “the important moral and religious voice that the Catholic community in the United States contributes to this effort.”
Forty bishops, policy specialists, Catholic scholars and students gathered to explore ways of making a world without nuclear weapons a reality. Former U.S. Sen. Sam Nunn also participated. The project is sponsored by Notre Dame’s in collaboration with the Office of International Justice and Peace; Georgetown University’s Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs; and Boston College.
Noting that Pope John XXIII’s encyclical “Pacem in Terris,” issued 51 years ago and just six months after the Cuban missile crisis, declared that “the arms race should cease” and that “all come to agreement on a fitting program of disarmament,” Father Jenkins said that the canonization of the two pontiffs would encourage the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and others working to revitalize the Church’s engagement in nuclear disarmament. He called the canonizations on Sunday “fortuitous timing, as we can surely use more high-placed opponents of nuclear weapons to hear our prayers and intercede for us.” He added: “As bishops and popes have been saying for decades, nuclear weapons are morally tolerable only for the purpose of nuclear deterrence, and even then, only as a step on the way toward progressive disarmament. This narrow moral justification for nuclear weapons is based, in part, on the belief that deterrence will indeed deter, and that … is an increasingly uncertain assumption.”
Bishop Richard Pates, a co-convenor with Father Jenkins of the colloquium and chairman of the U.S. Bishops’ Committee on International Justice and Peace, said, “The bishops have made the moral case for ultimate nuclear disarmament,” adding: “Shultz, Perry, Kissinger and Nunn have made the case for disarmament as a policy goal, a goal embraced by the U.S. and Russian governments. My hope is that this colloquium will be the beginning of a process to invigorate and refine the voice of the U.S. Catholic community in the debate on nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament.”
“Nuclear weapons present an existential threat to mankind,” Shultz told the group. “We need to reduce the numbers of these weapons, identify and take the steps needed to keep them under better control, and ultimately eliminate them.”
Father Jenkins said, “In revitalizing the Catholic voice on nuclear weapons, there is, I believe, a special role for Catholic universities,” adding that they can, working with the bishops, “combine the richness of the broad ethical framework of Catholicism with scholarly expertise in international relations, political science, physics, peace building and many other areas to contribute to the collaboration among Catholic bishops, academics from non-Catholic universities and national security experts … This cannot be just a single meeting; it must be the launch of a multi-year effort. The University of Notre Dame will be a committed partner in this effort with the bishops’ conference, Boston College, Georgetown, the and distinguished statesmen, such as Secretary Schultz and Secretary Perry.”
Other speakers included former Ambassador James Goodby; Rev. Bryan Hehir of Harvard University; Rev. Kenneth Himes, O.F.M., of Boston College; Rev. Drew Christiansen, S.J., of Georgetown; Scott Sagan and Sidney Drell of Stanford; and Stephen Colecchi of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
The colloquium was the launch of a larger project intended to empower a new generation of Catholic bishops, scholars, professionals and students to address the ethical and policy challenges of reducing and eliminating nuclear weapons. It will convene symposia for ethicists and policy experts, publish articles in scholarly and popular journals and reach out to students and young professionals through a social media site that emphasizes the religious and ethical dimensions of nuclear disarmament.
The project is made possible with the support of the Nuclear Threat Initiative.
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At approximately 10:40 a.m. Thursday (Nov. 21), a man was killed at Twyckenham Drive and Bulla Road on the eastern perimeter of the University of Notre Dame campus, where a crew was clearing trees for a parking lot expansion. He was struck by a tree as it was felled and died at the scene, despite efforts by first responders to resuscitate him. The identity of the victim, who was employed by an area excavating company contracted by the University, is being withheld pending family notification. Work on the site has been suspended.
“We extend our deepest condolences to his family, and to all those involved in this morning’s terrible accident," , Notre Dame’s president, said, adding, “Reminded how precious and fragile life is, we pray for strength and peace for all who are suffering as a result.”
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