91快活林

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Coming Together

Two people in graduation gowns next to a ceremonial banner.

Two people in graduation gowns next to a ceremonial banner.

 

Alumni procession entering Julie Sullivan's inauguration. 

 

A person speaking at a podium, dressed in academic regalia, with colorful banners in the background.

History often brings to mind big moments of bold change. It thrives on the public stage, but it also lives in the details鈥攖hose small instances when key things happen in the shadow of the main event.

On Friday, Oct. 7, 2022, 91快活林 celebrated a historic day with the inauguration of Julie Sullivan as its 30th president. The first woman and first lay person to lead Santa Clara, President Sullivan ushers in a new chapter for SCU. With fresh ideas, unmatched experience, and enviable energy, she takes the helm of our 171-year-old institution, poised to steer it forward. 

Two thousand guests from across the University and throughout the community were on hand  to extend their . Representatives from SCU鈥檚 students, faculty, staff, and alumni shared well wishes, while key members of the local community joined prominent alumni like Janet Napolitano 鈥79,  and Leon Panetta 鈥60, J.D. 鈥63, to offer words of wisdom and experience. Leaders of the church invoked the University鈥檚 rich Jesuit traditions and offered blessings to President Sullivan for the journey ahead.

It was a day to be remembered with inspiring speeches, bold dreams, and broad smiles. While attention rightfully focused on the new president, another moment of significance unfolded in the background. For the first time in University history, 70 alumni representing nearly every class since 1950 joined the inaugural procession. Among the esteemed group were former student leaders; two married couples; a mother and her daughter; members of the Alumni Association Board of Directors, both past and present; Alumni Relations staff and former Alumni Association executive director Jerry Kerr 鈥61 as well as SCU鈥檚 first Black graduate, Mel Lewis 鈥53 and Mary Somers Edmunds 鈥62, the first undergraduate woman to graduate from Santa Clara. 

 

A person in a wheelchair is pushed by another during a graduation event.

First Impressions

Lewis, both a star athlete and student body president during high school, entered Santa Clara in the late 1940s as a football recruit. Though he鈥檇 originally set his sights on the University of California, Los Angeles, his prowess as a player prompted Santa Clara to offer him a full athletic scholarship. 鈥淚 always wanted to go to UCLA, but when they offered me a scholarship to Santa Clara, I said, 鈥極kay! Well, let me go out and look at it.鈥欌

Lewis was impressed by the size and location of the school, and his high school football coach encouraged him to accept the scholarship. He knew he would be the first Black person to attend SCU, but  that didn鈥檛 intimidate him. Growing up in an integrated community in Santa Monica, California, he was often the only Black student in his classes.

Lewis still recalls that first exploratory visit to SCU with fondness, noting that he received 鈥渁 very warm reception.鈥 The players were kind and welcoming, and over the years, they would prove themselves to be quality teammates, both on and off the field. 

The relationships he made at SCU propelled Lewis to return to campus for President Sullivan鈥檚 inauguration. In the moments leading up to the start of the inaugural ceremony, Lewis says he reconnected with his fellow Broncos adding, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a grand thing to be here.鈥

 

A person wearing a black robe with a red stole, outdoor background.

Carrying the Torch

In the decade following Lewis鈥 graduation in 1953, Santa Clara changed in other ways. In 1961, the all-male college opened its doors to women for the first time. Seventy-five female undergraduates were admitted, making SCU the first Catholic coeducational university in California. Mary Somers Edmunds 鈥62 and her sister were among them.

Edmunds, who had been studying at the University of Nevada in Reno, entered SCU as a senior. She recalled that when her father, who was a friend of then-SCU President Thomas Terry, S.J., learned that Santa Clara was admitting women, he encouraged his daughters to attend. 鈥淲hen my dad heard 鈥楥atholic university education鈥 he said, 鈥楪ood! The girls are going!鈥欌

Though Edmunds began Santa Clara with a small cohort of female classmates, she was the only one to complete her studies in one year. In doing so, she became the first undergraduate woman to graduate from 91快活林. It is not a position she takes lightly. Edmunds is proud of her achievement and honored to be the first in a long line of accomplished female alumni at SCU.

It鈥檚 this understanding of her legacy at the University that brought Edmunds to Julie Sullivan鈥檚 inauguration. 鈥淚 represent the women. And every year women have something to celebrate,鈥 said a proud Edmunds. 鈥淭his [inauguration] just shows the tenacity, the ability to believe in higher goals and be able to achieve them.鈥

 

Four graduates in caps and gowns holding diplomas, smiling, titled 'Mary Somers Edmunds Historic Picture'.

The Story Continues

Like President Sullivan, Lewis and Edmunds are celebrated firsts at Santa Clara. Their stories are part of the fabric of the University and its long, rich history. Yet they had no way of knowing, as they crossed the graduation stage decades ago, that they would one day be invited back to SCU to not only honor, but participate in, the inauguration of the University鈥檚 first woman president. 

Over the years, countless moments have unfolded in Santa Clara鈥檚 story. Some have been big and bold, others quiet and understated. Yet they have all helped to shape SCU. 

On Oct. 7, we not only celebrated the inauguration of Julie Sullivan, we also witnessed a coming together of the alumni family in a new and inspiring way. Seventy alumni class representatives gathered together with a shared purpose, the threads of all their stories intersecting for the first time.

 

 

Nov 1, 2022
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