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June 30, 2025, Adrian, Michigan – It breaks our hearts to join in the wise but painful decision of the University Board of Trustees to close our beloved Siena Heights University at the end of the 2026 academic year. Founded by our Congregation more than a century ago as a college for women, this Catholic Dominican institution has expanded over the years to give people of all faith traditions, socio-economic backgrounds, ethnicities, nationalities, racial identities and genders a top notch, values-based education. We are so proud of all the students, faculty, staff, leaders and trustees who are now or have been a part of the Siena community since 1919 and have lived competent, purposeful, ethical lives – contributing their God-given gifts for the common good of our world and Earth home. We extend deep gratitude to President Douglas Palmer, PhD, and the members of his Cabinet – as well as Board Chairman Harry “Dusty” Steele, and the University Trustees – for their faithful and dedicated efforts to find a pathway forward through the formidable financial and demographic challenges that Siena Heights University, like many other small private higher education institutions in our country, has been facing for a number of years. These leaders, faculty and staff envisioned and began to pursue some promising ideas for the future of Siena Heights University that aimed to provide students with educational opportunities that would meet both current and anticipated needs of rural communities like our own. We are grateful to the benefactors who shared the vision. Sadly, the challenges Siena faced finally proved insurmountable.
We are painfully aware of and lament the profound impact that this closure has on Siena Heights students, faculty, and staff. We also lament the significant cultural and economic loss for our region of the closing of our century-old educational institution and its impact on our cherished Lenawee County community. A high priority for us Adrian Dominican Sisters, as the religious sponsors of the institution, is that the University closes honorably – attending, especially, to the needs and concerns of all members of the Siena Heights community. It means providing students, faculty and staff with this yearlong notice of the closing and assurances that every effort will be made to support them in their transitions to other educational and employment opportunities. It also means providing a vibrant final academic year, especially for the Siena Class of 2026. The leaders of Siena Heights University intend to do just this, and we stand by them in prayerful support.
All Adrian Dominican Sisters – especially those who have dedicated years of their lives in loving service to the institution and the many proud graduates – join with us in extending our hands to offer with great love and gratitude our Dominican blessing on every member of the Siena Heights University community. We join with our Dominican Sister Catherine of Siena, patron saint of the University, in encouraging everyone at Siena Heights, as you step into the unknown future, to “be who God meant you to be, and you will set the world on fire.”
June 24, 2025, Notre Dame, Indiana – Sister Geneal Kramer, OP, was featured in a recent article published by Saint Mary College. A member of the Class of 1950, she graduated from Saint Mary with a bachelor’s degree in social science and a minor in education.
The article focuses on the experiences of Sister Geneal and her classmate, Anne Reynolds Pyron, during their time at Saint Mary College and later in life. Sister Geneal was greatly influenced by Sister Madeleva Wolff, CSC, College President, through whom she met Dorothy Day, the Catholic convert who spent her life serving people who are poor and marginalized.
In the article, Sister Geneal recalls her experience of weekly dinners with Sister Madeleva. Discussions during dinner “were just marvelous openings out to a broader world,” she recalls in the article.
Sister Geneal taught at Catholic schools in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, entered the Sisters of Mary of Reparatrix, and ultimately transferred to the Adrian Dominican Sisters. She has ministered in South Africa and New Mexico and now, residing in Adrian, as a retreat leader and spiritual director.
Read the entire article here.