Dear Friends of the Honors College, One goal of a good education should be to help students become friends. As I read the interviews with Claire Wilkerson, Joel Stanulonis, and Tamara Matthew in this edition of the newsletter, I was struck by the centrality of friendship in each of their stories. I’m grateful that in the Honors College we are able to keep this goal central to our educational endeavors. For what does it profit an honors program if it places all its graduates in prestigious jobs and schools but makes them friendless loners? Recently, the Honors College lecture series has presented current Honors Scholars with a feast of lectures on friendship. Drawing from the wisdom of the Bible, of Aristotle, Faulkner, Lewis, and even noted philosopher Ted Lasso, we have listened to faculty speak about what friendship is and how it enriches our lives. I trust that as a friend of the Honors College, you have friends that enrich your life. Perhaps, hopefully, you are friends even with that friend Plato described as “the first friend,” the one friend for the sake of which all other friends are friends. In the past few years, the American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) has become one of the institutional friends of the Honors College. ACTA is committed to promoting robust liberal-arts education at the university level, and we are grateful that they have recently designated the Honors College as an ACTA Hidden Gem, which indicates that the Honors College is committed to guiding students through a high-quality and coherent interdisciplinary education across the liberal arts. You can read more about the Hidden Gems program at HCU’s website. Sincerely, Gary Hartenburg Director, The Honors College Houston Christian University Featured in this issue of News & Notes