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Archive for April, 2008

Beyond “For Boston”

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Published in conjunction with the University’s 75th anniversary in 1938, Songs of Boston College contains 13 school songs, in “lead sheet” form, for voice and piano accompaniment. It was compiled and arranged by James Ecker, director of the Boston College Music Clubs from 1926 to 1936, and is dedicated to a women’s philanthropic group that that supported Boston College during the first half of the twentieth century, “the ladies of the Philomatheia Club.” It contains “Hail! Alma Mater!” and the ever-popular “For Boston,” both by T.J. Hurley, 1885, along with lesser-known Hurley tunes “Hit ’er Up” and “The Workhouse” (“At the Heights the word is ever, work, work, work”).

Most of the songs are long forgotten, although former LSOE faculty member Vincent Nuccio ’49, a long-time performer in the University Chorale, recalls singing two other songs in the book, “Maroon and Gold,” by George Dennis, and “Sweep Down the Field,” by Theodore Marier ’34. University historian Thomas O’Connor ’49 says he always thought “Sweep Down the Field” was “the best of the bunch.” He recalls, “Groups of students would be brought together and taught these songs by student leaders,” and the music would be sung at pre-game rallies.

Boston’s Old Corner Books offers a copy of Songs of Boston College, in “very good” condition, for $105.60, but @BC is pleased to present online much of what is to be enjoyed in this collection. Our production staff has scanned the pages and prepared an edition that enables viewers to view and print each page. It also contains an audio track of the piano part for 10 of the songs. (Due to the quality of the original images, three of the songs could not be translated to audio.)

Portfolio

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Freshman faculty

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

@BC presents the final installment of profiles of the 10 men and 6 women who are new to the faculty this year. Among them are a classicist who describes how groups in Roman society—celebrity orators, doctors, and early Christians—were coping with the dynamics of membership and entitlement; a political scientist who investigates the “mysterious processes” that have changed the rules of constitutional democracy in the US; and an attorney looking for the proper regulatory balance that both protects intellectual property rights and provides a “rich commons” for use by artists and inventors.

Neenan’s list

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

William Neenan, SJ, vice president and special assistant to the president, says that he became an avid general reader when he was studying economics in graduate school. “I started reading before going to bed because I didn’t want my whole life to be constrained by reading economics and math. As the twig was bent, so it grew.”

He recalls the occasion in the early 1980s when, as the new dean of Arts & Sciences at Boston College, he encouraged incoming freshmen to read a few library books that were not required by their course work. “I told them that we had gone to a great effort to build up a large library collection at the University, and since they were going to have four years here, it might be good if they read a book or two.” In response to suggestions from faculty, he compiled a list of “recommendations for an evening of good reading.”

And so, an institution began. Since then, Neenan has annually prepared what has come to be called the “Dean’s List,” of 27 books. (“That’s three cubed and a mystical number; I’m making this up, but ‘three cubed’: it sounds mystical.”) In August 2006 the list was featured in a Chronicle of Higher Education story and that same month it was the subject of a Boston Globe feature, which quoted Office of Public Affairs director Jack Dunn’s statement that there are 10,000 requests annually for the latest list.

In a recent conversation, Neenan, who is in his eighties, observed that his taste in literature has changed over the years. These days he has a greater proclivity to “doze off” in the evening. “I read less of a serious nature—more novels and narrative history.” He is glad for the annual exercise of reflecting over his prior year’s reading. “It’s the same reason final exams are useful. They give the student the opportunity to reflect on what happened since September,” he explained. “St. Ignatius wanted people to reflect at the end of each day on how that day had gone. Reflecting on last year’s reading mirrors that. It’s a spiritual thing. Please notice: I’m ending on a spiritual note.”

To mark the 25th anniversary of the Dean’s List, in February the O’Neill Library unveiled a “special exhibition of the 130 or so books that have made the List over the years.” On February 27 Fr. Neenan spoke at a reception celebrating the opening of the exhibit. @BC presents a video of his talk on that occasion.

Googled: Michael Durkin ‘77

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Michael K. Durkin ’77 is four months into his term as the new president and CEO for the Massachusetts branch of the country’s largest charity, the United Way. Described by colleagues as “someone who is as comfortable in a homeless shelter as in a corporate boardroom,” Durkin has been with the United Way for 30 years, ever since he joined the nonprofit’s management training program after leaving Boston College with a degree in political science. From there, Durkin crisscrossed the country, working his way up the United Way chain in New Hampshire, Virginia, Massachusetts, South Carolina, Georgia, and eventually as president and CEO of Mile High United Way in Denver.

He demonstrated his ability to work both tactically and strategically in 2004 during one of the Mile High city’s coldest winters. When the shelters were full, he opened United Way’s office to house 60-80 homeless men. At the same time, he partnered with the mayor of Denver to launch a 10-year plan to eliminate homelessness. Forging alliances with other nonprofits and organizations was also a hallmark of Durkin’s strategy as he collaborated with the Denver public schools on after-school programs, and with local nonprofits to raise $1 million to support 1,200 Katrina evacuees displaced in Colorado. Durkin also worked on the national level, cochairing a partnership that aimed to help families become more financially stable, and leads a task force analyzing the effectiveness of United Way in individual communities.

A Syracuse native, Durkin has ties to Massachusetts through his wife (a native of Melrose), and his daughter, a freshman at Boston College. His dedication to service also began here, when he volunteered at the Margaret Fuller House in Cambridge and the Haley House in the South End as an undergraduate. He returns to head the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley “at a time when the organization faces critical challenges,” according to the Boston Globe, “particularly in convincing increasingly sophisticated donors that it should remain a destination for their philanthropic dollars.”

“I’m not taking a job, I’m continuing to fulfill an intense passion that I have about helping people,” said Durkin in a press release. “United Way is a critical piece for how the community as a whole can be successful.”

Maestro

Friday, April 25th, 2008

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Rev. Hubert Walters came to Boston College in 1982 to direct the vocal group Voices of Imani. (Imani means “faith” in Swahili.) His contributions to cultural life on campus “made Black Studies [now African and African-American Diaspora Studies] an emotional and intellectual home for black students, and gave them the confidence to share their music and their culture with other students and faculty,” according to J. Joseph Burns, associate vice provost for undergraduate programs. Walters, who is retiring this year, conducted his final annual spring concert of Voices of Imani on April 11 at a packed Trinity Chapel. The New Fisk Jubilee Singers joined in the performance. Afterward, Walters was greeted by well-wishers (above) and there was a gala reception to honor him.

Champions

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

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A crowd of some 2,000 came to Conte Forum on the evening of April 12 for a rally to celebrate the Boston College men’s hockey team, which won the NCAA championship on April 12 with a 4-1 win over Notre Dame. Happy fans formed up in a line that wound halfway around the concourse to get autographs from the players, including Nathan Gerbe ’09 (above), who scored two goals and had two assists in the Notre Dame game and was the nation’s leading scorer for the season with 35 goals and 32 assists. President William P. Leahy, SJ, Gene DeFilippo, director of athletics, and Coach Jerry York spoke at the ceremony, which ended on a climactic note when, after the Eagles’ previous NCAA trophies from 1949 and 2001 were brought out, Balwin came onto the ice, riding a Zamboni, bearing the 2008 prize.

Roman holiday

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

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Beginning with a worship service at the McMullen Museum’s exhibit Tree of Paradise: Jewish Mosaics from the Roman Empire, the semi-annual student-faculty Shabbat celebration, sponsored by Hillel of Boston College, attracted some 70 participants on April 4. “This is one of those things that Boston College does best,” said museum director Nancy Netzer in describing the diversity of attendants. “Faculty, students, and staff were there; Jews, Muslims, African-Americans, Christians, Asians—it was a beautiful mix.” It is likely, she noted, that in the 6th century a similarly varied group worshipped in the proximity of items in the exhibit, which include the reconstruction of a synagogue’s mosaic floor (in foreground of photo), created in about 500 C.E. in Hammam Lif, Tunisia. “For all we know, this could be the first time in 1,500 years that a liturgy has been conducted near these parts of the synagogue.”

The envelope, please . . .

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

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Adrienne Leslie ’08 (center) won three golden eagle statuettes (“Baldwins”) at the fourth Annual Baldwin Awards program on March 28 in the Heights Room. During the evening—which celebrates student filmmaking at Boston College, and is modeled on Hollywood’s Oscar presentations, complete with red carpet, faculty celebrity skits, popcorn, and sentimental acceptance speeches—student films were recognized in 14 categories by a panel of judges from the communication department and the film studies program. Leslie, flanked by John Deng Nyuon ’08 and Joy Dixon ’08, took several prizes. Her Eat Drink Talk Think: Perspectives from Behind the Counter, a montage of interviews with students who work in the University’s dining facilities, won Baldwins in the categories of Best Documentary (where it tied with Indian Healthcare: Right or Privilege? by Amanda Abel ’07 and Daniella Morello ’07), and Best Picture. Leslie’s film also won the Viewer’s Choice Award, decided by some 600 students who voted online. To view all of this year’s Baldwin-nominated films go to http://omc.bc.edu/baldwin/archive/2008/watch.php.

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Boston College ("BC") is a private research university located in Chestnut Hill, MA, 6 miles west of downtown Boston. BC was founded as a liberal arts college and preparatory school in 1863 by the Society of Jesus in Boston's South End before moving to its current location in 1913. The university's historic campus is one of the earliest examples of the Collegiate Gothic architectural style in North America. BC is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic institutions in the United States, and is home to one of the largest Jesuit populations in the world. It also hosts one of the world's most prominent Catholic theological and philosophical faculties.

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