In memoriam: Dan Saracino, retired assistant provost for enrollment

Daniel J. Saracino, retired assistant provost for enrollment at the University of Notre Dame and a national leader in college admissions, died Sunday (April 7) in South Bend. He was 77.
“Dan exuded the spirit of Notre Dame and was a great representative of Notre Dame’s special nature throughout his leadership years,” Don Bishop, his successor at the University, said. “He was a great man of faith with a deep sense of Notre Dame.”
Micki Kidder, Notre Dame’s vice president for undergraduate enrollment, added: “Dan will be deeply missed, both in the Notre Dame family and the enrollment industry as a whole. He was a dear friend and mentor who shared his knowledge, kindness and passion to help others. He was a trusted steward of the mission of Our Lady’s University and an admired leader of enrollment.”
After earning his bachelor’s degree in government and international relations from Notre Dame in 1969, Saracino stayed on campus to serve as assistant director of admissions from 1969 to 1975 and associate director from 1975 to 1977. He earned a master’s degree in education administration from the University in 1975.
Saracino then spent the next 20 years at Santa Clara University as director of admissions, dean of undergraduate admissions and dean of enrollment management.
He returned to Notre Dame in 1997 and, during his 13-year tenure, the University experienced a significant increase in the academic quality and diversity of applicants, admitted students and enrollees, all while maintaining its longstanding commitment to students who bring multiple talents to campus and value its mission as a Catholic institution of higher learning. The average SAT score of enrolled students at Notre Dame from 1997 to 2010 increased from 1325 to 1410, and diversity enrollment improved from 14 percent to 23 percent.
“Working with Dan Saracino was a special pleasure — he had a way of making you feel like you were working with him, not for him,” Bob Mundy, a retired director of admissions, said. “His deep affection for Notre Dame was fuel for his belief that it could be an ever-better place, in large part due to the incredible students who could and would call the University home under his tenure.
“Dan had a personality of thoughtful kindness and good humor, and he understood that good will was often best generated at a very personal level. His lasting legacy for me is in the many professional colleagues and personal friends who spoke so very fondly of him, usually around a meaningful act of kindness that he directed their way. The world is a little quieter, a little less spirited without Dan, and I am among the many colleagues who called him a friend, and will miss him greatly.”
Saracino played leadership roles in numerous national professional organizations, including the College Board, National Catholic College Admission Association, National Association for College Admission Counseling (serving as president in 1992), Conference of Jesuit Admissions Directors, Association of Independent California Colleges and Universities, and the National Merit Scholarship and Lilly Foundation Scholarship committees. He also traveled extensively to international schools and military bases on behalf of the U.S. State Department and the Department of Defense.
“Speaking as an alum, a Notre Dame parent and an admissions colleague at the national level, I knew Dan to be a consummate professional and a man devoted to Notre Dame’s mission,” Jeffrey Brenzel, the retired dean of undergraduate admissions at Yale University, said. “Thoughtful and generous, he inspired others to be likewise.”
After retiring from the University in 2010, Saracino continued to work with the State Department as a representative of U.S. higher education. He also maintained his passion for painting, creating watercolor scenes of the Notre Dame campus that the admissions office would send as Christmas gifts to high school guidance counselors nationwide during and after his tenure.
Saracino is survived by his wife, Marcia; three children, Christina Saracino Blakey (Jack), Gena Saracino and Danny Saracino, all Notre Dame graduates; and six grandchildren.
Visitation will be from 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday (April 14) at McGann Hay Funeral Home, 2313 Edison Road, South Bend. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 2:30 p.m. Monday (April 15) at Notre Dame’s Basilica of the Sacred Heart.
Latest ND News Wire
- Notre Dame opens new Washington Office to expand service and impact in nation’s capitalThe University of Notre Dame marked the opening of its new Washington, D.C., office with a blessing and dedication ceremony, highlighting the University’s growing presence in the nation’s capital.
- Notre Dame rising senior Rocío Colón Cotto named 2025 Beinecke ScholarUniversity of Notre Dame rising senior Rocío Colón Cotto has been awarded a Beinecke Scholarship worth $35,000 in support of her graduate education. She is Notre Dame’s 10th Beinecke Scholar overall and second since 2023.
- Santiago Schnell, dean of Notre Dame’s College of Science, appointed as provost of DartmouthSantiago Schnell, the William K. Warren Foundation Dean of the College of Science at the University of Notre Dame, has accepted an appointment as provost at Dartmouth College. He will depart Notre Dame at the end of June and begin his new role in July.
- The Commencement of the class of 2025The University of Notre Dame celebrated its 180th Commencement Ceremony on Sunday (May 18) at Notre Dame Stadium. An audience of some 20,000 graduates, family members, friends and faculty attended, and 2,084 degrees were conferred on undergraduate students, with a total of 3,099 degrees being conferred over the course of Commencement Weekend activities.
- The Commencement of the Graduate School class of 2025Teresa Lambe, a world-renowned vaccine scientist who played a critical role in the fight against COVID-19, delivered the keynote address Saturday (May 17) during the Graduate School’s annual commencement ceremony.
- Kenneth Scheve appointed dean of the University of Notre Dame’s College of Arts and LettersKenneth Scheve, the Dean Acheson Professor of Political Science and Global Affairs and the dean of social science at Yale University, has been appointed the I.A. O’Shaughnessy Dean of the College of Arts and Letters by University of Notre Dame President Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C. Scheve, who will also hold a tenured faculty position in the Department of Political Science, begins a five-year term as dean on July 1.