SEPTEMBER 12, 2019 VOL. 27 NO. 2
PUBLISHED BY THE BOSTON COLLEGE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
New PhD Program
INSIDE 2x Affinity Headline Groups
The University’s Affinity Groups will xxxxx. hold a luncheon as they reach out xforHeadline new members. xxx.
Earth and Environmental Sciences Dept. to welcome first candidates in 2020
3 New Vanderslice Chair x Headline Dunwei Wang succeeds T. Ross Kelly as Margaret and Thomas xxxxx. Vanderslice Prof. of Chemistry.
BY ED HAYWARD STAFF WRITER
8 BC Global
Graduate student Zainabu Mohamed seeks to apply what she learns at BC to help the school she founded in a small Kenyan village.
Counseling Services Offers Drop-In Discussions in Wake of Recent Deaths
Igniting the Ignatian Spirit
First-year students gathered on Linden Lane last Thursday for the First Flight procession, at which they were encouraged to follow St. Ignatius’ call to “Go set the world aflame.” The procession preceded the First Year Academic Convocation, where they listened to Chris Wilson, one-time prisoner turned entrepreneur. More photos on page 8. photo by peter julian
‘A Place to Gather and Play’ University dedicates Margot Connell Recreation Center BY KATHLEEN SULLIVAN STAFF WRITER
Boston College officially dedicated the Margot Connell Recreation Center in a ceremony attended by the Connell family and In response to the deaths of five Boston other members of the University commuCollege undergraduates since March, nity last Friday outside the building’s main University Counseling Services (UCS) is entrance. offering drop-in group conversations for The 244,000-square foot facility—locatmembers of the BC community who want ed on St. Thomas More Road, near the now to talk and share any feelings regarding demolished Flynn Recreation Complex—is these recent losses. named for Margot Connell, a trustee associTwo sessions have been held so far, and ate, honorary degree recipient, wife of the two more are scheduled for Sept. 19 and late William (Bill) F. Connell ’59, mother 27 at noon in Gasson 001. Lunch will be of six Boston College graduates, and grandprovided. mother of three BC graduates and three unAll members of the BC community are dergraduates, whose $50 million leadership welcome to join these conversations, even gift made the state-of-the-art center a reality. if they were not acquainted with any of the “I know how important a place to gather students who died, said Senior Staff Psyand play can be,” said Margot Connell, an chologist Emily Kates. avid golfer who is part of a sports-minded “A lot of people feel that if they did family, at the ceremony. “A place that offers not personally know the deceased, they something for everyone. A place where all Continued on page 4 students could come [to] work out, exercise, BY CHRISTINE BALQUIST STAFF WRITER
BC President William P. Leahy, S.J., with Margot Connell last week. photo by rose lincoln
and participate in all kinds of athletic activities. “Athletics and academics go hand in hand. Both are so important in the development of young adults. Athletic participation relieves stress, builds character as well as bodies, and promotes friendships.”
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The Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences will offer a new PhD program that will welcome its first doctoral candidates in the fall of 2020, a move that will further expand the capacity and expertise of the department, according to EES Professor and Chairman Ethan Baxter. The new doctoral program was approved by the Board of Trustees in June and recruitment of the first cohort of approximately five PhD candidates is underway, Baxter said. Between the existing EES master’s degree program and the new doctoral program, Baxter said the department anticipates its total number of graduate students will ultimately be about 21, with approximately 15 doctoral students. “It was just the right time for Earth and Environmental Sciences to launch our doctoral program,” said Baxter. “We have world-renowned faculty who helped to establish BC’s excellence in the geosciences. We’ve grown through many exciting faculty hires in the past few years, along with strategic improvements in our laboratory facilities. Our doctoral students will find a department with broad capacity to develop them as leading-edge scholars of the Earth and its environment.” Baxter said the program will focus on three interrelated sub-disciplines at the center of faculty expertise: environmental and climate change, tectonics and dynamics of the Earth’s interior, and water throughout the Earth system. The doctoral program will support a deeper exploration of the ways in which these areas intersect and interact, including interwoven human dimensions. The addition of doctoral students will
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REMINDER: EARLY CLOSING FRIDAY
Boston College administrative offices will close at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow, Sept. 13, due to the BC-Kansas football game beginning at 7:30 p.m. To help with the preparations, and to ease potential traffic and parking congestion, the University asks that all vehicles be removed from campus as close to 3:30 p.m. as possible.