The Boston College
Chronicle Published by the Boston College Office of News & Public Affairs april 12, 2012 VOL. 20 no. 15
Body Found in Reservoir Likely Franco Garcia The body of a young man discovered yesterday in the Chestnut Hill Reservoir has been preliminarily identified as that of Franco Garcia, a Woods College of Advancing Studies student who had been missing since Feb. 22, Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley said. Garcia, 21, a talented clarinetist who performed with the University marching, pep and symphonic bands, was last seen by friends he was with at a bar in the Cleveland Circle neighborhood. Exhaustive searches by police, family and classmates followed in the days and weeks after Continued on page 2
INSIDE
•Forum on religious liberty, page 3
COMMENCEMENT
Woodruff to Speak at 2012 Commencement Robert W. Woodruff joined ABC News in 1996 and covered major stories such as the 9/11 attacks, US military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq, the 2004 South Asia tsunami and Hurricane Katrina. In December 2005, he was named co-anchor of ABC’s “World News Tonight.” The following month, while reporting on US and Iraqi security forces, Woodruff was nearly killed by a roadside bomb. Just 13 months later, Woodruff returned to ABC News with an
BC to present five with honorary degrees at graduation ceremony
Robert Woodruff, an awardwinning journalist whose recovery from a traumatic brain injury became a compelling survival story, will address the Class of 2012 at the 136th annual Boston College Commencement Exercises on May 21. University President William P. Leahy, SJ, will present Woodruff with an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree at the ceremony, which will begin at 10 a.m. in Alumni Stadium, rain or shine. In addition, Boston College will present honorary degrees to: Joseph A. Appleyard, SJ ’53, former vice president for University Mission and Ministry at BC and now socious (executive assistant) for the New England Province of the Society of Jesus; William V. “Bill” Campbell, chairman of Intuit Inc. and a former
•Center for Social Innovation, page 3 •HEALTHY YOU update, page 4
May 21, 2012
Robert Woodruff
BC football assistant coach; Navyn A. Salem ’94, founder of a nonprofit that manufactures food for treating and preventing malnutrition; and Liz Walker, an award-winning TV news anchor and ordained minister now working in international education and women’s issues. Following the main Commencement event, some 4,413 BC students will receive their undergraduate and graduate diplomas at separate ceremonies held around campus.
Victoria Kennedy to speak at BC Law, page 4 hour-long, primetime documentary that chronicled his traumatic brain injury (TBI), his painstaking recovery, and the plight of thousands of service members returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with similar injuries. Woodruff and his wife, Lee, later co-wrote a best-selling memoir In an Instant, and established the
T AKE F IVE
Season of triumph ends with fifth national title for BC men’s hockey team
•Soares wins Romero Scholarship, page 6 •Fr. Dinneen Award to Rodriguez, page 6
The Boston College community watched (middle photo) University President William P. Leahy, SJ, and Athletics Director Gene DeFilippo, along with players (L-R) Paul Carey, Tommy Cross and Barry Almeida, display BC’s newest trophy. Coach Jerry York (in photo at right with University Chancellor J. Donald Monan, SJ) accepted congratulations from well-wishers. (Photos by Lee Pellegrini) By Reid Oslin Staff Writer
•Dalla Tezza, Buni memorials, page 7 •Preview of BC Arts Festival, page 8
Before assuming his post at the Continued on page 4
Hope, Despair Student’s exhibit seeks to spur reflection on questions raised by the genocide in Rwanda By Sean Smith Chronicle Editor
•BC Talks holds second event, page 6
•Alumnus to head new prep school, page 7
Bob Woodruff Family Foundation for Traumatic Brain Injury. The foundation raises money to assist members of the military with cognitive rehabilitation and care following a TBI suffered in service to their country. Woodruff continues to cover TBIs for all ABC News broadcasts and platforms and was honored with a Peabody Award in 2008 for his reporting on the subject. Since returning to the air, Woodruff has reported from around the globe, with assignments in North Korea, Syria, Jordan and Sudan and is a mainstay of the network’s domestic coverage. In addition, Woodruff hosts Focus Earth, a weekly ABC News production for Planet Green, part of the Discovery Communications network. Bob and Lee Woodruff have four children, including Cathryn, a member of the BC Class of 2015.
Thousands of jubilant fans filled the O’Neill Library Plaza Tuesday evening to celebrate Boston College’s 2012 NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey title and watch the unfurling of the University’s fifth championship banner in the sport. “They are going to have to call the Conte Forum trophy case
‘The Jerry York Hardware Store’ pretty soon,” quipped special guest speaker US Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) JD ’76 as he looked over the array of championship trophies captured by Eagle hockey teams in recent years. Kerry, a former hockey player and devoted fan of the sport, joined a number of University and civic officials — including University President William P.
QUOTE:
Leahy, SJ, and Newton Mayor Setti Warren ’94 — in paying tribute to the Eagles, who won the top NCAA prize for the third time in five years with a hardfought 4-1 victory over CCHA champion Ferris State University in the “Frozen Four” championship game in Tampa, Fla., last Saturday night. “We are so excited to be here,” Continued on page 3
Confronting a paradox often gives one pause for thought, but in the case of senior Seth Woody the experience did more: It changed the course of his life at, and beyond, Boston College. The summer after his freshman year at BC, Woody and his family went to Rwanda with his father, an Episcopal priest, to meet missionaries and others working to help the country continue recovering from the genocide of 1994 that resulted in an estimated 800,000 deaths. Although Woody knew — or thought he did — about the genocide, witnessing its impact even more than 15 years later was at times overwhelming. But despite the Continued on page 5
“Our goal is to try to have a constructive conversation and look at the issues and underlying protections of religious liberties in a constitutional democracy. We want to get the conversation beyond the extreme positions and polemical clashes.” —Church in the 21st Century Center Director Erik P. Goldschmidt, page 3