Compliments of the Dean, february 2021
After an extended winter holiday break due to Valpo’s pandemic adjusted calendar, spring term commenced on Jan. 25, with all students, faculty, and staff reporting a negative Covid-test before returning to campus.  Mueller Hall is back to life again.

CC Honors Visit Day


Christ College had a highly successful albeit unusual Honors Visit Day on Feb. 6, with forty prospective students visiting in-person—in two separate sessions of 20 students each, with a separate track for one additional family member.  Registration for the on-campus HVD filled quickly, but 40 additional prospective students signed up for the first-ever virtual HVD held later that afternoon.  Students and parents heard from the Deans and a current student panel, and prospective students participated in a sample CC seminar discussion.  Proper social distancing and masking were followed by all—even President OP Kretzman, whose bust presides over the Commons.
Production in a Pandemic

This year’s First-Year Production will be CC’s first virtual original musical, with a live streaming release date of March 26.   The Drama Workshop extended this year over two semesters to allow students to research new modes of theatre production emerging during the pandemic and then to craft their own show in a new media.  FY student Caitlynn Shipe reports, “The same committees (front of house, costumes and makeup, art and design, etc.) from previous years will remain with each playing an integral part in completing the production, but the responsibilities and duties for each have been altered to accurately reflect the new considerations and obstacles for COVID-19.”  Watch for more information regarding free Eventbrite tickets for the live event and how to view the Production after its debut.
On Liberty, John Stuart Mill

One of CC’s long-standing First-Year Program texts has been John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty (1859), and lively discussions arose recently in seminars concerning the tensions of respecting others’ individual liberty and personal freedom.  Mill asserts, “the sole end for which mankind are warranted, individually or collectively, in interfering with the liberty of action of any of their number is self-protection. . . . [T]he only purpose for which power can be rightly exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant.” 
Here Mill articulates a basic commitment of liberal society.  A competent adult’s individual freedom is justifiably overridden only in cases where one’s actions (for example, speech acts) harm others.  Harms to one’s own person are not justifiably interfered with, according to Mill, but only harms to others.  Here’s one of CC’s big questions:  How does Mill’s way of coordinating not harming others, individual liberty, and beneficence map onto your own judgments?  Consider, for example, mandates regarding masks, dining restrictions, or vaccinations.  
Stay safe and breathe!
With compliments,


Susan VanZanten, Ph.D.
Dean, Christ College
Valparaiso University
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Christ College, The Honors College

219.464.5022 - Mueller Hall, 1300 Chapel Drive, Valparaiso, IN 46383-6493 USA - valpo.edu/christ-college
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