Boston College Chronicle

Page 1

The Boston College

Chronicle Published by the Boston College Office of News & Public Affairs september 15, 2016 VOL. 24 no. 2

Strategic Plan Initiative In Next Phase

INSIDE Career Center holds 2 •BC first Careerfest

By Sean Smith Chronicle Editor

•ALC is game •C21 fall schedule Services happy 3 •Health in its new home •Reaccreditation process continues •CSON professor is a Sojourns Scholar

4

•Schlozman honored by APSA •Photo: Archbishop Gomez at C21

5

6

•ESPN’s Rinaldi pens book on Welles Crowther

•Park Street Series kicks off tonight •Photo: T-shirt for a special BC fan

7 •BC Law aids ABA

resolution on Turkey •Islam scholar to speak Sept. 21

8 •Lowell Humanities Series fall slate

•Photos: Student Involvement Fair

Last Thursday saw two of Boston College’s most high-profile annual community events: The Mass of the Holy Spirit, held at the Plaza at O’Neill Library (above), and the First Flight procession for freshmen (right), the prelude to the First Year Academic Convention. See below for a Q&A with this year’s convocation speaker, Steve Pemberton ’89, H’15.

Photos by Lee Pellegrini

Summit on Catholic Schools, Hispanic Families By Ed Hayward Staff Writer

The Lynch School of Education’s Roche Center for Catholic Education will host the first-ever “National Summit on Catholic Schools and Hispanic Families” next week, where Catholic school leaders, clergy, researchers, advocates and philanthropists

will engage in strategic conversations to examine opportunities for Catholic schools to adopt alternative practices in service to Hispanic families. The three-day summit, which starts Monday, will bring together approximately 200 thought leaders to examine the issues highlighted in the March report Catholic Schools in an In-

Q&A: STEVE PEMBERTON

creasingly Hispanic Church [http:// bit.ly/2c68CEf], co-authored by School of Theology of Ministry Assistant Professor of Theology and Religious Education Hosffman Ospino and Roche Center Executive Director Patricia Weitzel-O’Neill. “The report inspired the call to invite Catholic thought leadContinued on page 6

‘Believe It Is Possible to Create a New Beginning’ Steve Pemberton ’89, H’15, vice president of diversity and inclusion and chief diversity officer for Walgreens Boots Alliance, spoke to the Class of 2020 last Thursday as part of the Boston College First Year Academic Convocation. Over the summer, members of the freshman class were given Pemberton’s memoir, A Chance in the World: An Orphan Boy, a Mysterious Past, and How He Found a Place Called Home, to read. The book recounts his struggle to overcome his childhood in the Massachusetts foster care system, where he was abused and neglected for years, and find success in business and family life. Prior to his talk, Pemberton spoke with the Chronicle’s Sean Hennessey; the interview has been edited for space and clarity; for a fuller version, go to http://bit.ly/2cR1VqM.

the freshman class. But to be the first alumnus, given the University’s long and storied history, is a very humbling thing. It’s also illustrative of how things come full circle. I arrived on this campus as a freshman still trying to figure out some things that most 18-year-olds had figured out: Where’s home, family, faith, identity? I came here still trying to figure out where I stood in the world. I remember how vivid those experiences were – and questions that were on my mind I suspect are also on the minds of the first-year students. Chronicle: What lessons did you Steve Pemberton at last Thursday’s learn at Boston College that you First Year Academic Convocation. still use today? The sense of a greater collective, Chronicle: What does it mean to that despite everything I had lost, I you to be the first alumnus to speak still had a responsibility and ability to to students at First Year Convocachange the arc of others’ lives. I was tion? never able to feel sorry for myself. What an honor just to address

Continued on page 4

QUOTE:

The University Strategic Planning Initiative (USPI) – Boston College’s comprehensive effort to craft a vision and set institutional priorities for the future – will advance its work this semester through a series of meetings, including a pair of town hall-style conversations on Oct. 5. The USPI, which began last December with the Steering Committee’s appointment, completed an intensive period of assessment during the spring semester. Between February and May, 24 teams around the University undertook the self-assessments, evaluating BC’s strengths and weaknesses, and discerning the challenges and opportunities it faces. These assessment teams included more than 200 members of the University community – faculty, staff, and students – and represented each of BC’s eight schools and other academic areas as well as most v​ice-presidential administrative divisions, including Student Affairs, Facilities Management, Finance, Human Resources, and Information Technology. Other self-assessment teams looked at initiatives or areas of focus – such as undergraduate liberal arts or international programs — involving multiple schools, departments, or divisions. The teams in turn sought additional insights by inviting comments and perspectives from elsewhere within the University community, among faculty, staff and students. “Since most teams had between eight and 15 members, and they consulted with many others in their particular area, this self-assessment phase involved literally hundreds of people from across BC,” said Executive Vice President Michael Lochhead, who is co-chairing the USPI Continued on page 5

“In a time of great division and loud discord in our country, where so much separates us, the bandanna exists, as does [Welles Crowther’s] life and its final hour, as symbols of what might bind us together — in our caring for one another.” –ESPN correspondent Tom Rinaldi, author of The Red Bandanna, page 5


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.