Jul 13, 2021
tags: Academics
The °Ä¿Í×ãÇò got a report card of its own in May. And it’s one they’re going to want to hang up on the fridge.
The °Ä¿Í×ãÇò got a report card of its own in May. And it’s one they’re going to want to hang up on the fridge.
More than 40 years ago, curators from the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art helped °Ä¿Í×ãÇò choose pieces of significance for what was then a new collection of religious art to be housed on campus.
Now, some of the very pieces from that collection will grace the walls at Kansas City’s premier art museum for the next year.
°Ä¿Í×ãÇò President the Rev. Thomas B. Curran, S.J., met virtually Wednesday with members of Missouri’s federal congressional delegation with a simple message — double the Pell.
The next full-scale °Ä¿Í×ãÇò Leaders Series event, with national speakers, will have to wait for another time as the world continues to recover from the pandemic.
This fall, students will notice some changes to the Thomas More Dining Room in Massman Hall. Emphasis on the “More.â€
The campus dining hall is getting a complete remodel this summer, aimed not only at expanding the space to accommodate more diners during peak times, but to expand the available options for students, faculty and staff.
"In our time, when day by day humanity is being drawn closer together, and the ties between different peoples are becoming stronger the Church examines more closely her relationship to non-Christian religions.
Diego Gutierrez, Assistant Professor of Management and Marketing, credits his time as a student at Rockhurst for much of the success he's had in his life and career. With his son about to begin his freshman year as a Hawk, we caught up with Diego to reflect on his time at Rockhurst as the next °Ä¿Í×ãÇò journey is his family is about to being.
°Ä¿Í×ãÇò has announced the dean’s list for the spring 2021 semester. This honor recognizes students who have achieved a grade-point average of 3.5 or above.
The following students earned a spot on the list:
Ashley Abbott
Macee Adams
Peyton Aerni
Erica Akins
Shereen Al-Saoudi
Balem Alamerew
Le'Bonet Alfaro
Alexandra Allen
Michael Allen
Heba Alsousi
Litzy Alvarado Islas
Joseph Alvey
David Anderson
Kathleen Anderson
Madelyn Anderson
Marianna Anderson
Capping an academic year unlike any other, °Ä¿Í×ãÇò graduates were able to walk across the stage in person to receive their degrees in a commencement ceremony Friday afternoon at Children’s Mercy Park.
Last year’s ceremony was held virtually because of the pandemic, and as the masks and spaces between families at the ceremony could attest, concerns about COVID-19 haven’t disappeared completely. But the fact that there was an in-person ceremony at all is a testament to where these graduates have been and how far they’ve come.
The small gesture, moving the tassel from left to right, officially marks the passage from student to graduate.
It’s a moment that Niki Sanchez waited a long time for. Not just because she, like so many others, had worked very hard to complete her college coursework. But because she had to wait, withstand a pandemic, and travel nearly 2,500 miles to take part in it.
Sanchez has been at home in Belize City, Belize, since campus was shut down in March 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, completing the work for her accounting degree from afar.