The Boston College
Chronicle Published by the Boston College Office of News & Public Affairs march 15, 2012 VOL. 20 no. 13
Trustees Set Tuition, Budget for 2012-2013 Academic Year
INSIDE •Pemberton returns to tell his story, page 2
By Jack DuNn Director of News & Public Affairs
•A glimpse of Ireland at BC, page 2
The Boston College Board of Trustees has approved the budget for the 2012-2013 academic year, which calls for a 3.6 percent increase in tuition, fees, room and board, and provides an additional $7 million for academic and infrastructure initiatives to support the University’s strategic goals. Tuition was set at $43,140. The board also maintained
•Osnato, Taziva to lead UGBC, page 3
•GSSW ranks 10th in US News, page 3 •No developments in Garcia case, page 3 •Sadka scrutinizes hedge funds, page 4
Fourteen Appalachia Volunteers from Boston College helped with construction of two Habitat for Humanity houses in Huntington, WV, as part of the Habitat for Humanity Alternative Spring Break program.
Scenes from Spring Break BC students traveled far and wide — even outside of the US — to help others during last week’s spring break Go to www.bc.edu/chronicle to read the full version of this story
•BC Law’s Diane Ring talks taxes, page 5 •Burns Scholar Keogh to lecture, page 6 •BC plays host for NCAA regional, page 6
•1989 Jesuit slayings reexamined, page 7 •BC creates literary Boston exhibit, page 8
For the sixth year, Connell School of Nursing undergraduate and graduate students journeyed to Managua, Nicaragua, to work and learn about the Nicaraguan culture. The volunteers worked in a clinic in the barrio of Nueva Vida, part of la Ciudad Sandino, the poorest area of Nicaragua, and attended meetings and lectures about Nicaraguan history and the country’s health system. Will Sutton ’12: Health care and economics aside, I would say that we all learned more about ourselves from the individuals we met. We had the opportunity, individually, to visit members of the Nueva Vida community in their homes. By American standards, we would have been in “shacks.” Many of us were shocked by the conditions. However, we have never met more loving people. They welcomed us, gave us their best mangos, spoke with us about their lives and in doing so helped change our own. On Friday, our last day at the clinic, the housekeeper asked me what I thought about Nicaragua. I replied, “I am in love with the people of Nicaragua.” She replied in Spanish: “Nicaragua es pobre pero tenemos corazon y queremos
— Nicaragua is poor but we have heart and we love.” * * * The BC Acoustics, a student a cappella group, toured Philadelphia, Washington, DC, and New York City during spring break, appearing solo or with other collegiate singing groups at a variety of hospitals and charity organizations, and entertaining audiences at several historic sites. Taylor McLeod ’15: We went to The Morgan Center on Long Island, which is a preschool for kids who have cancer. We sang to them, got a tour of the facility, and then talked to them, as well as the parents. It was probably the best part of the tour for me. These parents were so happy, as were the kids. The founders of the facility told me that they hardly see the kids smile, and that this was such an amazing change in them. One of the mothers came up to us afterwards, saying that her daughter told her that she wanted to be a singer when she grows up. She then told us that that day was the one-year anniversary of her daughter being diagnosed with leukemia and that we changed a very sad day into one of hope. Continued on page 5
OF NOTE:
Boston College’s commitment to provide access to students from all socio-economic backgrounds by increasing need-based undergraduate financial aid by 6.4 percent to $90 million, and total student aid to $143 million. Boston College remains one of only 21 private universities in the United States that is need-blind in admissions and meets the full demonstrated need of all accepted undergraduate students. Seventy percent of Boston College students Continued on page 5
21 Faculty Are Promoted University President William P. Leahy, SJ, has announced the promotions of 21 Boston College faculty members. Promoted to full professor were Kevin Ohi (English), Prassannan Parthasarathi (History), Cyril Opeil, SJ (Physics), Benjamin Howard (Mathematics), Franco Mormando (Romance Languages and Literatures), Ourida Mostefai (Romance Languages and Literatures), Catherine Cornille (Theology), Rabbi Ruth Langer (Theology) and Kathleen Seiders (Marketing, Carroll School of Management). Faculty members promoted to as-
sociate professor with tenure were: Dunwei Wang (Chemistry), Owen Stanwood (History), Gerald Kane (Information Systems, CSOM), Gergana Nenkov (Marketing, CSOM), Linda Salisbury (Marketing, CSOM), Katherine Gregory (Connell School of Nursing), Brian Galle (Law), Katherine McNeill (Lynch School of Education), Patrick Proctor (LSOE), Stephanie Berzin (Graduate School of Social Work) and Nancy Pineda-Madrid (School of Theology and Ministry). In addition, Associate Professor of History Julian Bourg was granted tenure. —Office of News & Public Affairs
BC Education Researchers Help Draft Benchmarks for Catholic Schools By Ed Hayward Staff Writer
Working with partners in higher education and in Catholic schools, researchers from the Barbara and Patrick Roche Center for Catholic Education helped draft the first set of national standards and benchmarks for effective Catholic schools, which were released Monday. The creation of the standards and benchmarks serves as a crucial step in efforts to preserve and bolster the nation’s Catholic schools, said Roche Center Executive Director Patricia Weitzel-O’Neill, who was part of the three-year effort to draft Continued on page 4
Patricia Weitzel-O’Neill, executive director of the Roche Center for Catholic Education, aided in the effort to draft standards and benchmarks for effective Catholic schools.
The Boston College women’s ice hockey team’s second consecutive visit to NCAA’s “Frozen Four” national championship begins at 6 p.m. tomorrow when the Eagles meet the University of Wisconsin in the national semifinals in Duluth, Minnesota. For more coverage, see www.bceagles.com.