Boston College Chronicle

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PUBLISHED BY THE BOSTON COLLEGE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS

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Around Campus

New Director

Q&A

Bone marrow drive results in two matches; Rosengart to talk about conservatorships; Lunar New Year at the McMullen (right).

Jonathan Laurence becomes head of BC’s Clough Center for the Study of Constitutional Democracy.

BC Law Rappaport Visiting Professor—and “sherpa”—Doug Jones discusses the Supreme Court and American politics.

PUBLISHED BY THE BOSTON COLLEGE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS

FEBRUARY 17, 2022 VOL. 29 NO.10

Undergrad Applications Set Another BC Record

The Shape of Dance

BY SEAN SMITH CHRONICLE EDITOR

The Dance Organization of Boston College presented its showcase “Electric” at Robsham Theater on February 5, with appearances by Synergy and The Heightsmen. photo by caroline alden

Perseverance Rewarded BC grad Derrick Evans leads successful effort to establish museum honoring African American community BY PHIL GLOUDEMANS STAFF WRITER

Boston College alumnus and former part-time faculty member Derrick C. Evans finally realized a dream in December— but it wasn’t his dream alone. Evans, who earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees from BC, was present for the December 11 opening of the first civil rights and labor museum dedicated to African Americans in Gulfport, Miss., located in the historic settlement of Turkey Creek, Evans’ hometown.

For more than 10 years, Evans, his relatives, and neighbors fought powerful corporate interests and politicians, and withstood the dual devastation of Hurricane Katrina and the pollution of the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Their intent was not only to preserve structures and artifacts of a community established in 1866 by emancipated African Americans, but to achieve self-determination and environmental justice. Evans’ indefatigable efforts to protect the historic district and ecologically sensi-

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Having received the most undergraduate applications in its history this winter, Boston College is set to enroll a first-year class that furthers the University’s efforts to promote diversity as well as academic excellence, and provide higher-educational opportunities for underrepresented students, according to Director of Undergraduate Admission Grant Gosselin. As of last week, there were 40,484 applicants for the Class of 2026, compared to last year’s total of 39,877—which represented a record at that time for BC and a 36 percent increase over the applications total for the Class of 2024. Such results are gratifying, said Gosselin, but as he has reiterated throughout the

success of recent years, setting impressive benchmarks is not the intent of BC’s undergraduate admission program. He points instead to the success of various components that represent the key to a successful long-term strategy in line with the University’s enrollment goals. One facet is BC’s Early Decision (ED) application program, introduced in 2019 to meet the growing preference of high school students and enroll more applicants for whom BC was a first choice—students can apply November 1 for a December 15 notification (ED I) or January 1 for a February 15 notification (ED II). This admission cycle has seen a 37 percent rise over last year in ED to 4,428 applications, and approximately half the Class of 2026 has enrolled via ED.

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Study of Hispanic Educators Offers Valuable Insights BY KATHLEEN SULLIVAN STAFF WRITER

A Boston College research team’s groundbreaking study of Hispanic educators in United States Catholic schools offers insights into the experiences of these teachers and school leaders and suggests pathways to increase the presence of Hispanic educators in Catholic schools—a critical issue given that more than 40 percent of the U.S. Catholic population is Hispanic. The interdisciplinary study—the first of its kind to take an in-depth look solely

Melodie Wyttenbach and Hosffman Ospino photo by caitlin cunningham

at this particular sector of Catholic school educators on a national scope—was led by School of Theology and Ministry Professor Hosffman Ospino and Melodie Wytten-

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I wanted to challenge viewers’ expectations of what it means or looks like to be a baseball player, and reveal Samrath’s daily testament to his faith as he stands in front of his locker. – john walsh on his “keeping the faith” video, page 5


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