PUBLISHED BY THE BOSTON COLLEGE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
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MLK Scholarship
Beckman Honored
BC Arts
Latifat Odetunde ’22 was inspired
BC Innocence Program director, named a “Lawyer of the Year,” reflects on BCIP’s success.
Gaelic Roots presents a lecture/ performance celebrating a pioneering Irish musician.
by the Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarship banquet as a first-year student. This year, she won the award.
FEBRUARY 25, 2021 VOL. 28 NO. 10
PUBLISHED BY THE BOSTON COLLEGE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
New Financial Aid Funds for Woods College Undergraduates
Moore to Step Down as Student Affairs VP But will continue in role as head of Pine Manor Institute for Student Success
BY PATRICIA DELANEY SENIOR DIRECTOR FOR UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
BY JACK DUNN ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT FOR UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
Two new financial aid funds have been established at the Woods College of Advancing Studies, thanks to the generosity of Boston College alumni and parents James P. ’88 and Monica Shay ’08, P’24, Woods College Dean Karen Muncaster has announced. The Shay Family Financial Aid Fund honors former longtime dean James A. Woods, S.J., for whom the school was
Vice President for Student Affairs Joy Moore, who has been on leave since October to assist her husband, Rob, in his battle with brain cancer, has announced that she is stepping down from her position in Student Affairs. A popular administrator who has been lauded by students for her advocacy and support, Moore said that she plans to continue her work as the inaugural executive director of the Pine Manor Institute for
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Student Success, but could not devote herself to her duties in Student Affairs. She will remain a University vice president. University President William P. Leahy, S.J., praised Moore as a dedicated University citizen who was committed to helping all students to thrive at Boston College “I support Joy Moore’s decision to step down as head of Student Affairs as she has rightly concluded that her family responsibilities must come first,” said Fr. Leahy. “I am pleased that she will remain at Boston College as vice president and executive director of the Pine Manor Institute for Student Success, enabling our community to continue benefiting from her experience, commitment, and creativity.” Executive Vice President Michael Lochhead, who is serving as interim vice presiJoy Moore
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photo by lee pellegrini
BC Law Faculty Member’s Book Makes the Case for Masks Wearing a mask during the pandemic is ‘a public health need,’ says Hashimoto BY ED HAYWARD STAFF WRITER
The sputtering roll-out of vaccines to combat the spread of COVID-19, combined with new, more contagious strains of the coronavirus, have placed a renewed focus on mask wearing. Boston College Associate Professor of Law Dean Hashimoto, M.D., says evidence from the first year of the pandemic points to masks and their use as one of the surest ways to limit transmission of the virus.
Dean Hashimoto
photo by dana smith
Hashimoto’s new book, The Case for Masks: Science-Based Advice for Living During the Coronavirus Pandemic, examines the earliest science to emerge on mask wearing during the pandemic, which has so far claimed more than 500,000 lives in the U.S. With that science, Hashimoto makes a compelling argument for the benefits of masking, a seemingly straightforward solution that quickly became tangled in political leaning, complaints over religious and personal liberty, as well as conflicting reports in mainstream and social media about the benefits and risks of face coverings. “Fundamentally, it is a public health need,” said Hashimoto, who is also the chief medical officer and leader of the
Workplace Health and Wellness Division at Mass General Brigham, the largest health care provider in Massachusetts. “Masking is misunderstood by an important segment of the population: those resistant to masking. Most people don’t have a basic understanding as to why wearing a mask is important.” In part, a lot of attention has gone to other aspects of the pandemic. “It’s not very sexy,” said Hashimoto. “Masking has not received the same amount of attention as vaccinations or drug therapies. But if you look at the data, they are very impressive about the positive, beneficial impact that masking has.” Hashimoto learned firsthand about the benefits of masking as Mass General
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Darwin formulated the theory of evolution by natural selection before DNA was discovered. I think he would be blown away by how much we have learned since then. This is the great thing about science: it is ever changing and we are always accumulating new knowledge. – boston college biologist jeffrey dacosta, page 9