This month, Ěýhas landed in the mailboxes of alumni, students, parents, and others—with a lively array of stories that illustrate Boston College’s unique style of management education.
The Carroll School’s annual print publication features alumni who are bringing their Ď㽶Đă values and know-how to an eclectic range of business pursuits; students who are connecting their management studies to the liberal arts and to their development as whole persons; and faculty research that is helping people and organizations find answers to urgent questions.
Among the Carroll School alumni highlighted in this edition are:
• Nine CEOs, including three from Fortune 500 companies, profiled in our feature story, “The Changemakers.” They’re shaking up their industries the Boston College way.
• Joe Martinez ’05, who earned a World Series ring as a pitcher with the San Francisco Giants and left professional baseball for consulting. He’s now combining his management and baseball knowledge in his role as Major League Baseball’s vice president of on-field strategy.
• Ronnie Slamin ’13, a real estate developer who is bringing mixed-income housing to one of the richest neighborhoods in Washington, DC. She learned the trade from the pioneering developer of mixed-income housing, the late Joseph Corcoran ’59, H ’09, P ’85, ’86, ’87, ’98.
• Natalie White ’20, who has changed the game for women basketball players with her brand, Moolah Kicks, featuring a sneaker specially designed for women’s feet.
Carroll Capital’s cover story is about Paul Romer, the Nobel laureate in economics who arrived at Boston College this past year as the Seidner University Professor in the Finance Department and founding director of the new Center for the Economics of Ideas. Romer won the Nobel Prize for his upbeat theory of economic growth, but he has been sounding alarms that have grown more urgent. Romer the optimist is worried.
Another feature story looks at how Boston College is shaping the whole undergraduate experience through formative education. The article spotlights busy Carroll School students toggling between finance in Fulton and philosophy in Gasson, extending outward through organizations like the Joseph E. Corcoran Center for Real Estate and Urban Action, and reflecting on their experiences together with peers at an array of retreats.
For the “Bottom Line” column on the closing page, John and Linda Powers Family Dean Andy Boynton interviewed Jack Connors ’63, H ’07, P ’93, ’94. Dubbed “the last king of Boston,” Connors has never stopped connecting his Ď㽶Đă values to both business and his many philanthropic causes in Boston.
Much of the edition throws light on the old and the new—how the Carroll School is integrating those values and the arts and sciences into a contemporary management education.
“Boston College and the Carroll School have made great strides in recent times, but the gains would have been few and far between without the Jesuit Catholic ethos and liberal arts tradition that animate the curriculum, student life, and other areas of the University,” Boynton writes in his dean’s message. “Change and stability will carry us further still. Ever to Excel!”
Carroll Capital
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Carroll Capital, the annual print publication of the Carroll School of Management at Boston College, throws light on trends in business and society while telling stories about alumni and students as well as faculty and school initiatives.