Reflections Magazine Issue #57 - Spring 2002 | Page 4

4 Ethics lecture will be an annual event Kennedy Cuomo urges students to fight injustice ne person CAN make a difference,” human rights activist Kerry Kennedy Cuomo said Feb. 12 in the inaugural lecture of the Chiodini-Fontana Endowed Lecture Series on Ethics. Kennedy Cuomo encouraged the audience of students, faculty, Adrian Dominicans, and area residents gathered in Francoeur Theater to “muster your anger when you see injustice. We must speak out when we see injustice in our world.” “Even if you do nothing else but voice your condemnation of injustice, you will have a ripple effect.” Kennedy Cuomo’s compelling and passionate presentation set a high standard for future speakers in the ethics lecture series, made possible through The Campaign for Siena Heights University. The new series—Siena’s first endowed lectureship—was established with generous support from Siena friend Catherine Reuther and her family. The program will bring acclaimed speakers to campus every year to reflect on matters of moral significance that touch the many dimensions of today’s society. The lecture series is intended to explore theoretical issues in ethics, current issues of moral importance, and the nature and meaning of Catholic identity. The ethics program is intended to reach students at all Siena Heights locations; future speakers will likely travel to other SHU sites. For the inaugural lecture, a contingent of students from the Lake Michigan Center traveled to campus from Benton Harbor. They explored the Siena facilities and ate in Benincasa Dining Hall prior to the lecture. “This was a great opportunity for students from our off-campus centers to feel part of the University—and it was a wonderful demonstration of our institutional values,” said Deb Carter, dean of The College for Professional Studies. Kennedy Cuomo spoke eloquently about the problem of violence against women. She also noted some of the positive changes that have occurred in the world since she first became involved in human rights, such as the abolition of apartheid in South Africa and the end of sexual slavery in Ghana. These changes “came about because people with Students from SHU at LMC visited campus for the ethics lecture. few resources beyond their own determination fought for human rights,” she said. She challenged listeners to “have the courage to commit yourself to a cause greater than yourself.” The daughter of the late Robert F. -