OLLU celebrates commencement with more than 300 graduates

Confetti cannons erupted, spraying colorful paper over more than 300 graduates at the conclusion of spring commencement May 9 at Freeman Coliseum.

Graduates turned their tassels, exchanged hugs and posed for photos with family and friends to celebrate the occasion.

Former San Antonio mayor Henry Cisneros delivered the commencement address. Mariachis played. A jazz quartet performed. OLLU President Abel Chávez awarded diplomas to more than 300 students who earned bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees.

Screenshot

Former HUD secretary to deliver spring commencement address

Former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and San Antonio mayor Henry Cisneros will deliver the spring commencement address on Thursday at Freeman Coliseum, marking 50 years of service to the city and the nation. 

Since he was first elected to public office in 1975, Cisneros has served San Antonio as a city councilman, mayor, entrepreneur, trailblazing business leader and chairman of the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce. He has served his country as an infantry officer in the U.S. Army and as Secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. 

Cisneros’ connections to OLLU run long and deep. His late sister, Pauline Cisneros Polette, was a graduate (BA 1971) and married in Sacred Heart Conventual Chapel. When Pauline passed away in 2018, Cisneros delivered the eulogy in the chapel. His mother, Elvira, was active with the Sisters of Divine Providence, the founding order of OLLU. When Elvira died, Cisneros leased his childhood home on Monterey Street to the Sisters. 

“Our house, our family is tied to Our Lady of the Lake and not just in abstract ways,” Cisneros said during an interview in the chapel. “But we’re literally part of the life of the campus.” 

President Chávez visits National Center for Civil and Human Rights

OLLU President Abel Chávez and a delegation of West Side leaders, which included former mayor Henry Cisneros, visited the National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta on Jan. 15, Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The trip was organized by ESTAR West — Entrepreneurs and Small Businesses Thriving Alongside Residents on the West Side. This coalition of leaders met with neighborhood advocates, private investors, housing developers and city leaders who are shaping Atlanta’s West Side community development and revitalization.

ESTAR West is an initiative that emerged from the Aspen Institute Latinos and Society program’s inaugural City Learning and Action Lab.