The Boston College
Chronicle Published by the Boston College Office of News & Public Affairs february 25, 2016 VOL. 23 no. 12
•Black History Month exhibitions •Time for “Sing It to the Heights” again
3 •University to hold Diver-
sity and Inclusion Summit
•Photos: Walsh, Neal speak on Easter Rising
4 •German consul will speak on refugees
Will enhance intercollegiate, intramural, club sports
Boston College Athletics Director Brad Bates announced plans Monday for three projects to enhance intercollegiate, intramural and club sports at Boston College: a recreational center, athletics playing fields, and an athletics field house. The initiatives, an investment of approximately $200 million, result from a multi-year assessment and planning effort regarding BC Athletics as well as focused fundraising with alumni and friends of Boston College.
The recreational center, a 240,000 square-foot facility that will replace the Flynn Recreation Complex and be located at the site of Edmonds Hall on Thomas More Drive, will benefit all BC students, faculty and staff. Approved by the City of Boston in 2009 as part of the University’s Institutional Master Plan (IMP), the project will begin this summer after permits have been obtained. The center, made possible by a lead gift from University Trustee Margot Connell and her family,
•Advancing Research and Scholarship Day
6 •Paul Mariani on poet Wallace Stevens
•Easter Rising conference, concert in March •Burns Lecture March 2 Additions; 7 •Welcome BC in the Media; Expert
Opinion; Nota Bene; Jobs
8 •Q&A with Fine Arts’ Mary Armstrong
•Photos: BC bOp! shares the love
Brighton Campus, which were also approved in the 2009 IMP. Bates said that fundraising for both projects will continue throughout the process. Continued on page 4
By Jack Dunn Director of News & Public Affairs
Asst. Prof. Jeremy Shakun (Earth and Environmental Sciences)
Long View on Climate Change •Maureen Orth is guest speaker at Laetare Sunday
will require two years for construction. The University will also seek permitting for new baseball, softball and intramural fields on the
Fr. Massa to Succeed Wolfe As Boisi Center Director
•Alumnae to reflect on women and athletics honor goes to 5 •MLK CSON student
An architectural rendering of the University’s proposed new recreational center, to be located at the current site of Edmonds Hall.
John Gillooly
win also a victory 2 •Beanpot for Dining Services
BC Athletics Announces Plans for New Facilities
Lee Pellegrini
INSIDE
BC researcher assists study that calls for new global energy policy to help curb effect of carbon emissions By Ed Hayward Staff Writer
The damaging climate consequences of carbon emissions will grow and persist for millennia without a dramatic new global energy strategy, according to a new set of research-based climate change scenarios developed by an international team of scientists that includes Boston College paleo-climatologist Jeremy Shakun. Rising global temperatures, ice field and glacial melting and rising sea levels are among the climatic changes that could ultimately lead to the submergence of coastal areas that are home to 1.3 billion people today, according to the report, published
online by the journal Nature Climate Change. The findings, Shakun and his co-authors write, hold implications for policy makers because the projections reveal the intractability of a climate change across millennia. This long view, they note, should add urgency to efforts to significantly curb carbon emissions within the next few decades, not gradually across the remainder of the 21st century. “This long-term view shows that the next few decades offer a brief window of opportunity to minimize large-scale and potentially catastrophic climate change that will extend longer than the entire history of human civilizaContinued on page 3
QUOTE:
Mark S. Massa, SJ, dean of the School of Theology and Ministry (STM) since 2010, will leave his current position to become the next director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life beginning the summer of 2017, the University announced last week. He will replace the center’s founding director, Alan Wolfe, who is retiring in early 2017. Fr. Massa, who served as the Karl Rahner Professor of Theology and director of the Curran Center for American Catholic Studies at Fordham University prior to assuming the deanship of STM, is an esteemed theologian and scholar whose research has focused on the Catholic experience in the United States since World War II. In announcing the appointment, Provost and Dean of Faculties David Quigley praised Fr. Massa as an ideal choice to lead the Boisi Center after having elevated STM to national prominence during the past six years. “A leading historian of Catholicism in the United States,
Mark S. Massa, SJ
Mark Massa has successfully led the School of Theology and Ministry since 2010. Under his watch, the school has attracted a community of very talented students and faculty, and Mark has helped sustain a serious-minded conversation about how STM can best serve the contemporary Catholic Church — in Boston, across the nation, and around the world.” Fr. Massa said he was proud of what he has accomplished as dean at STM, including building a superb faculty, one-third of whom he hired. “I came in 2010 with the Continued on page 3
“I thought ‘This is going to be a community of people who are going to be engaged in conversation and are going to set the world aflame.’ I wanted to be one of those people.” –Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarship winner Chiamaka Okorie ’17, page 5