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Archive for July, 2008

Getting the lead in

Friday, July 18th, 2008

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Restoring stained glass windows is like “repairing a painting,” says construction project manager Jacob Mycofsky, who has supervised a five-year effort to repair and restore windows in the Burns and Bapst Libraries. Many of them were removed and taken to a studio where they were disassembled, cleaned, treated, and rebuilt, using the original glass panes. Above, Fernando Carmona, a stained glass restoration artist, works on July 11, resealing the lead of a window left in place in the Burns Library trustee board room. The undertaking is one of this summer’s 54 projects to repair and restore the University’s $1 billion worth of buildings and facilities. Activities include renovating laboratory space in the Merkert Chemistry Center; upgrading classroom space in Carney, Devlin, Fulton, Gasson, Higgins, and Lyons Halls; installing artificial turf at the Newton Campus soccer field; removing an underground gasoline storage tank behind St. Mary’s Hall; and waterproofing the area above the luxury boxes at Alumni Stadium. All work is scheduled to be complete by August 29, the Friday prior to the beginning of classes on September 2.

Tender welcome

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

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Think of yourselves as having graduated from Google and Wikipedia. Your teachers at Boston College will have high expectations and you will need powerful tools,” reference librarian Syed Khan told a group of 100 incoming freshmen on June 24, the third and final day of their orientation program. During an informal session with members of the Class of 2012 in the Connors Family Learning Center, he described the library’s resources, including access to some 500 databases.

Incoming freshmen and transfer students must attend one of the seven orientation programs the University offers throughout the summer. In addition to meeting students, faculty, and administrators, they tour the campus, live for three days in a residence hall, plan their academic programs with faculty advisers, and register for first-semester courses. A concurrent session is offered for parents and guardians. Orientation is one element of the University’s First Year Experience, which includes a weekend retreat, elective courses designed to help newcomers “reflect on their lives as students,” and the Conversations in the First Year program, in which incoming freshmen are assigned a text (this year it is The Tender Bar by J.R. Moehringer) that provides a theme for study and conversation at the First Year Academic Convocation held during fall semester.

The way we were

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

In anticipation of its 150th anniversary in 2013, Boston College is gathering oral histories and memorabilia from alumni and faculty for a project called “The “Boston College Experience,” sponsored by the Office of the President, Boston College Magazine, the Burns Library, and the Alumni Association. The program was inaugurated a year ago with a public panel discussion among members of the Class of ’57 held during reunion weekend. This year there were two programs in which class members reminisced about their time at Boston College in the 1950s and 1960s. @BC presents highlights from each session, one on May 30 for the Golden Anniversary Class of ’58 and the other on May 31 for the Class of ’68. The full programs may be viewed at Front Row, for which a link is provided in the right-hand column of this page under “Related Links.”

Class of ’58 panelists:

Sheldon Daly grew up in Wellesley and has had a 45-year career in sales and construction. He currently works with the Boston College Athletics Department as a director of the Varsity Club and as president of the Boston College Hall of Fame Club.

Paul Fennell grew up in Brighton and devoted his career to finance and investments. He earned an MBA from the University of New Hampshire and served as a captain in the U.S. Marine Corps. He has written several articles on financial tax planning and spent 15 years researching and publishing a book on Irish history and the history of the Fennell family in County Limerick, Ireland.

James Murphy Jr. grew up in Newton. He teaches writing and literature at the Woods College of Advancing Studies and is a published author. A past recipient of a Fulbright scholarship, Jim is currently working on a novel about the Korean War.

Patricia Brine O’Riordan grew up in Cambridge and worked as the department head for health occupations at Northeast Metro Tech for 30 years. She holds a master’s degree in education from Fitchburg State College. In recent years she has worked at her brother’s sporting goods store, Brine’s, in Harvard Square.

Margaret Molloy Vasaturo grew up in Medfield and became a teacher. She earned a master’s degree in special education at Lesley University and devoted 22 years to teaching history and English to adolescents in a residential treatment center.

Ben Birnbaum, moderator, is the editor of Boston College Magazine, special assistant to the president, and executive director of the Office of Marketing Communications.

Class of ’68 panelists:

Judith Anderson Day grew up in Scituate and was a middle school English teacher. She has been the 1968 class correspondent for several decades. After moving to Los Angeles in 1995, she became a docent at the J. Paul Getty Museum, specializing in Greek and Roman antiquity.

Chrisopher “Kip” Doran lives in Denver where he is a practicing psychiatrist and a clinical professor at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. He is a supervising psychiatrist for the Veterans Administration and has written two textbooks on mental health. Kip was president of the Boston College Alumni Association chapter in Colorado for five years and president of the national Alumni Association in 2004.

Robert Howe grew up in Quincy and following graduation was an officer in the U.S. Marine Corps, receiving the Bronze Star for service in Vietnam. He cofounded ADS Financial Services Solutions in 1980 and was its president and CEO until 2004. Bob is a former chairman of the Boston College High School board of trustees.

Carmine Sarno grew up in Acton. He has started six companies, ranging from high tech to recreation. He is president of the electronic component company Bothhand USA, and frequently travels to the company’s facilities in China.

Joanne Calore Turco received a master’s degree in community health nursing from Boston University and also completed course work in the doctoral program in higher education administration at Boston College. She was the first full-time nursing faculty member at Salem State College, where she currently is a professor in the School of Nursing.

William McDonald, moderator and a senior editor in Advancement Communications and Marketing at the University, was a Navy officer and holds a master’s degree from the Columbia University School of Journalism. He is the founding editor of Boston College Magazine and has specialized in university communications throughout his career.

Big man on campus

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

While he was a graduate of John Carroll University, a sister Jesuit institution in Cleveland and a short drive along Lake Erie from his beloved hometown of Buffalo, Tim Russert became part of what we call the Boston College community when his son, Luke, enrolled in September 2004. Parents who are public figures are not unheard of at Boston College, but they mostly move discreetly from airport to hired car to campus to hotel and then back to airport. Mr. Russert, however, like an eager freshman, took advantage of every opportunity to engage with the University, flying up for football games, sitting through a public interview with the editor of the student newspaper on a sweltering evening in the Shea Room, flipping a BC cap onto his head on Meet the Press, and lending his capacious drawing power and journalistic abilities to public forums sponsored by the Church in the 21st Century Center. Whether in the stadium or on the Dustbowl, he moved through Boston College with the confidence of an old boy, endlessly proud, cheerful, and at ease. “Today I’m here as a dad,” he begged off on May 19, 2008, when a reporter approached Russert at Luke’s graduation ceremony to ask for a comment on Senator Ted Kennedy’s illness. “BC lost a friend,” a senior administrator emailed me from his BlackBerry soon after the news of Russert’s death was announced on the Friday afternoon of June 13. The sentiment was widespread. On Monday morning, I arrived at the office to find that a young alumnus in Washington, D.C., had emailed me photographs of the floral tributes piled on the street in front of the NBC studios, as though thinking we, too, might want to bank them against our front gate.

Ben Birnbaum
Executive Producer, @BC
Editor, Boston College Magazine

The links below are to selected stories, photographs, and videos from Mr. Russert’s five years of association with Boston College.

The way we were

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

In anticipation of its 150th anniversary in 2013, Boston College is gathering oral histories and memorabilia from alumni and faculty for a project called “The “Boston College Experience,” sponsored by the Office of the President, Boston College Magazine, the Burns Library, and the Alumni Association. The program was inaugurated a year ago with a public panel discussion among members of the Class of ’57 held during reunion weekend. This year there were two programs in which class members reminisced about their time at Boston College in the 1950s and 1960s. @BC presents highlights from each session, one on May 30 for the Golden Anniversary Class of ’58 and the other on May 31 for the Class of ’68. The full programs may be viewed at Front Row, for which a link is provided in the right-hand column of this page under “Related Links.”

Class of ’58 panelists:

Sheldon Daly grew up in Wellesley and has had a 45-year career in sales and construction. He currently works with the Boston College Athletics Department as a director of the Varsity Club and as president of the Boston College Hall of Fame Club.

Paul Fennell grew up in Brighton and devoted his career to finance and investments. He earned an MBA from the University of New Hampshire and served as a captain in the U.S. Marine Corps. He has written several articles on financial tax planning and spent 15 years researching and publishing a book on Irish history and the history of the Fennell family in County Limerick, Ireland.

James Murphy Jr. grew up in Newton. He teaches writing and literature at the Woods College of Advancing Studies and is a published author. A past recipient of a Fulbright scholarship, Jim is currently working on a novel about the Korean War.

Patricia Brine O’Riordan grew up in Cambridge and worked as the department head for health occupations at Northeast Metro Tech for 30 years. She holds a master’s degree in education from Fitchburg State College. In recent years she has worked at her brother’s sporting goods store, Brine’s, in Harvard Square.

Margaret Molloy Vasaturo grew up in Medfield and became a teacher. She earned a master’s degree in special education at Lesley University and devoted 22 years to teaching history and English to adolescents in a residential treatment center.

Ben Birnbaum, moderator, is the editor of Boston College Magazine, special assistant to the president, and executive director of the Office of Marketing Communications.

Class of ’68 panelists:

Judith Anderson Day grew up in Scituate and was a middle school English teacher. She has been the 1968 class correspondent for several decades. After moving to Los Angeles in 1995, she became a docent at the J. Paul Getty Museum, specializing in Greek and Roman antiquity.

Chrisopher “Kip” Doran lives in Denver where he is a practicing psychiatrist and a clinical professor at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. He is a supervising psychiatrist for the Veterans Administration and has written two textbooks on mental health. Kip was president of the Boston College Alumni Association chapter in Colorado for five years and president of the national Alumni Association in 2004.

Robert Howe grew up in Quincy and following graduation was an officer in the U.S. Marine Corps, receiving the Bronze Star for service in Vietnam. He cofounded ADS Financial Services Solutions in 1980 and was its president and CEO until 2004. Bob is a former chairman of the Boston College High School board of trustees.

Carmine Sarno grew up in Acton. He has started six companies, ranging from high tech to recreation. He is president of the electronic component company Bothhand USA, and frequently travels to the company’s facilities in China.

Joanne Calore Turco received a master’s degree in community health nursing from Boston University and also completed course work in the doctoral program in higher education administration at Boston College. She was the first full-time nursing faculty member at Salem State College, where she currently is a professor in the School of Nursing.

William McDonald, moderator and a senior editor in Advancement Communications and Marketing at the University, was a Navy officer and holds a master’s degree from the Columbia University School of Journalism. He is the founding editor of Boston College Magazine and has specialized in university communications throughout his career.

Big man on campus

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

While he was a graduate of John Carroll University, a sister Jesuit institution in Cleveland and a short drive along Lake Erie from his beloved hometown of Buffalo, Tim Russert became part of what we call the Boston College community when his son, Luke, enrolled in September 2004. Parents who are public figures are not unheard of at Boston College, but they mostly move discreetly from airport to hired car to campus to hotel and then back to airport. Mr. Russert, however, like an eager freshman, took advantage of every opportunity to engage with the University, flying up for football games, sitting through a public interview with the editor of the student newspaper on a sweltering evening in the Shea Room, flipping a BC cap onto his head on Meet the Press, and lending his capacious drawing power and journalistic abilities to public forums sponsored by the Church in the 21st Century Center. Whether in the stadium or on the Dustbowl, he moved through Boston College with the confidence of an old boy, endlessly proud, cheerful, and at ease. “Today I’m here as a dad,” he begged off on May 19, 2008, when a reporter approached Russert at Luke’s graduation ceremony to ask for a comment on Senator Ted Kennedy’s illness. “BC lost a friend,” a senior administrator emailed me from his BlackBerry soon after the news of Russert’s death was announced on the Friday afternoon of June 13. The sentiment was widespread. On Monday morning, I arrived at the office to find that a young alumnus in Washington, D.C., had emailed me photographs of the floral tributes piled on the street in front of the NBC studios, as though thinking we, too, might want to bank them against our front gate.

Ben Birnbaum
Executive Producer, @BC
Editor, Boston College Magazine

The links below are to selected stories, photographs, and videos from Mr. Russert’s five years of association with Boston College.

Partial recall

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

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When Elizabeth Kensinger was a psychology graduate student working with aging adults and Alzheimer’s disease patients, she realized that although it seemed obvious to caregivers that people were more likely to remember experiences associated with strong emotions, most researchers studying memory measured “college-aged students’ abilities to remember lists of unrelated words or line drawings.” Now an assistant professor of psychology and director of Boston College’s Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Laboratory, she investigates how age and emotions influence the formation and retrieval of memories.

“Tasks used in our laboratory have ranged from asking octogenarians to report what they can remember about photographs to asking BC hockey players to remember positive and negative events from the hockey season while undergoing a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan,” says Kensinger. The research, supported by the National Science Foundation, the American Federation for Aging Research, and the Dana Foundation, has validated her intuition that “we cannot understand memory processes without understanding how they are influenced by emotion and aging.” In dozens of articles and presentations during the last eight years she has reported that emotions significantly influence whether and how people remember experiences, that an emotion’s positive or negative valence affects the accuracy of recollections (negative emotions enhance accuracy), and that neural imaging techniques reveal physical changes in the brain indicative of a connection between strong emotions and memory.

This spring Kensinger was named a Searle Scholar—the first Boston College faculty member to receive this honor, which provides “exceptionally creative and productive young scientists with sufficient funds to work on their best ideas.” Boston College also awarded her its Junior Faculty Distinguished Research Award on May 2. @BC presents an interview with Elizabeth Kensinger, conducted on June 19, in which she discusses her recent work.

Partial recall

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

k

When Elizabeth Kensinger was a psychology graduate student working with aging adults and Alzheimer’s disease patients, she realized that although it seemed obvious to caregivers that people were more likely to remember experiences associated with strong emotions, most researchers studying memory measured “college-aged students’ abilities to remember lists of unrelated words or line drawings.” Now an assistant professor of psychology and director of Boston College’s Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Laboratory, she investigates how age and emotions influence the formation and retrieval of memories.

“Tasks used in our laboratory have ranged from asking octogenarians to report what they can remember about photographs to asking BC hockey players to remember positive and negative events from the hockey season while undergoing a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan,” says Kensinger. The research, supported by the National Science Foundation, the American Federation for Aging Research, and the Dana Foundation, has validated her intuition that “we cannot understand memory processes without understanding how they are influenced by emotion and aging.” In dozens of articles and presentations during the last eight years she has reported that emotions significantly influence whether and how people remember experiences, that an emotion’s positive or negative valence affects the accuracy of recollections (negative emotions enhance accuracy), and that neural imaging techniques reveal physical changes in the brain indicative of a connection between strong emotions and memory.

This spring Kensinger was named a Searle Scholar—the first Boston College faculty member to receive this honor, which provides “exceptionally creative and productive young scientists with sufficient funds to work on their best ideas.” Boston College also awarded her its Junior Faculty Distinguished Research Award on May 2. @BC presents an interview with Elizabeth Kensinger, conducted on June 19, in which she discusses her recent work.

Neighbor to neighbor

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Featured Photo

President William P. Leahy, SJ, spoke on June 20 at Minihane’s Flower and Garden Shop in Brighton during a celebration at which checks were presented to 12 community organizations that were awarded grants this spring by the Allston/Brighton–Boston College Community Fund. Chancellor and former Boston College President J. Donald Monan, SJ, established the fund with Boston Mayor Thomas Menino in 1995 to benefit neighborhood programs and services “for which financial support is not otherwise available.” Since its inception the fund has distributed some $650,000, targeting services for youth, senior citizens, and the needy, as well as community beautification projects. Joining Leahy behind the lectern were (l–r) State Representatives Kevin Honan and Michael Moran, and Mayor Menino. The following organizations received grants: Allston-Brighton Adult Education Coalition, Allston/Brighton Baby, Allston-Brighton Walk for Recovery 2008, Brighton High School, Brighton Main Streets, Commonwealth Tenants Association, Community Rowing, Inc., The Fishing Academy, Friends of the Brighton District Library, Open Door Ministry of the Holy Resurrection Orthodox Church, St. Columbkille School, and the Veronica B. Smith Multi-Service Senior Center.

Neighbor to neighbor

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Featured Photo

President William P. Leahy, SJ, spoke on June 20 at Minihane’s Flower and Garden Shop in Brighton during a celebration at which checks were presented to 12 community organizations that were awarded grants this spring by the Allston/Brighton–Boston College Community Fund. Chancellor and former Boston College President J. Donald Monan, SJ, established the fund with Boston Mayor Thomas Menino in 1995 to benefit neighborhood programs and services “for which financial support is not otherwise available.” Since its inception the fund has distributed some $650,000, targeting services for youth, senior citizens, and the needy, as well as community beautification projects. Joining Leahy behind the lectern were (l–r) State Representatives Kevin Honan and Michael Moran, and Mayor Menino. The following organizations received grants: Allston-Brighton Adult Education Coalition, Allston/Brighton Baby, Allston-Brighton Walk for Recovery 2008, Brighton High School, Brighton Main Streets, Commonwealth Tenants Association, Community Rowing, Inc., The Fishing Academy, Friends of the Brighton District Library, Open Door Ministry of the Holy Resurrection Orthodox Church, St. Columbkille School, and the Veronica B. Smith Multi-Service Senior Center.

Golden memories

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Featured Photo

During Reunion Weekend, (from left) President William P. Leahy, SJ, speaks with Class of ’58 panelists James Murphy, Jr., Paul Fennell, Margaret Molloy Vasaturo, and Pat Brine O’Riordan at a program (which also included Sheldon Daly ’58) entitled “The Way We Were.” Boston College Magazine editor Ben Birnbaum moderated the session on May 30 in Devlin 008 at which class members recalled their experiences of Boston College a half-century ago for an audience of more than 100 classmates and their families. The event was part of an ongoing initiative to gather artifacts and memories from alumni and faculty in anticipation of the University’s 150th Anniversary in 2013. “We are very interested in collecting as much information as we can about the evolution of Boston College,” Leahy said in his introduction. “We want to get at the culture and ethos so future generations of students will have a feel for what this institution was like.” Some 5,600 alumni attended the May 28–June 1 Reunion Weekend festivities, which included a golf tournament, jazz brunch, clambake, dancing, seminars, and the induction of the Class of 1958 into the Golden Eagle Society.

Golden memories

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Featured Photo

During Reunion Weekend, (from left) President William P. Leahy, SJ, speaks with Class of ’58 panelists James Murphy, Jr., Paul Fennell, Margaret Molloy Vasaturo, and Pat Brine O’Riordan at a program (which also included Sheldon Daly ’58) entitled “The Way We Were.” Boston College Magazine editor Ben Birnbaum moderated the session on May 30 in Devlin 008 at which class members recalled their experiences of Boston College a half-century ago for an audience of more than 100 classmates and their families. The event was part of an ongoing initiative to gather artifacts and memories from alumni and faculty in anticipation of the University’s 150th Anniversary in 2013. “We are very interested in collecting as much information as we can about the evolution of Boston College,” Leahy said in his introduction. “We want to get at the culture and ethos so future generations of students will have a feel for what this institution was like.” Some 5,600 alumni attended the May 28–June 1 Reunion Weekend festivities, which included a golf tournament, jazz brunch, clambake, dancing, seminars, and the induction of the Class of 1958 into the Golden Eagle Society.

Historical perspective

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

On May 19, at the University’s 132nd Commencement, David McCullough addressed some 3,000 graduating students, their parents, and members of the University community. “Make the love of learning central to your life. What a difference it can mean,” McCullough declared. “If your experience is anything like mine, the books that will mean the most to you, books that will change your life, are still to come.”

One of America’s preeminent historians, McCullough holds a bachelor’s degree from Yale University, where he studied with John Hersey, Robert Penn Warren, Brendan Gill, and Thornton Wilder. He worked for a dozen years as a writer and editor for the U.S. Information Agency, Sports Illustrated, and American Heritage. His first full-length history, The Johnstown Flood (Simon & Schuster, 1968), was called a “first-rate example of the documentary method” by the New Yorker. Since then he has written books on the Brooklyn Bridge, the Panama Canal, Theodore Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and John Adams, among others. He has won two Pulitzer Prizes, two National Book Awards, and more than 80 other literary awards. In 2006, the nation’s highest civilian award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, was conferred on McCullough “for his lifelong efforts to document the people, places, and events that have shaped America.”

@BC presents McCullough’s May 19 Commencement address, delivered in Alumni Stadium.

Historical perspective

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

On May 19, at the University’s 132nd Commencement, David McCullough addressed some 3,000 graduating students, their parents, and members of the University community. “Make the love of learning central to your life. What a difference it can mean,” McCullough declared. “If your experience is anything like mine, the books that will mean the most to you, books that will change your life, are still to come.”

One of America’s preeminent historians, McCullough holds a bachelor’s degree from Yale University, where he studied with John Hersey, Robert Penn Warren, Brendan Gill, and Thornton Wilder. He worked for a dozen years as a writer and editor for the U.S. Information Agency, Sports Illustrated, and American Heritage. His first full-length history, The Johnstown Flood (Simon & Schuster, 1968), was called a “first-rate example of the documentary method” by the New Yorker. Since then he has written books on the Brooklyn Bridge, the Panama Canal, Theodore Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and John Adams, among others. He has won two Pulitzer Prizes, two National Book Awards, and more than 80 other literary awards. In 2006, the nation’s highest civilian award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, was conferred on McCullough “for his lifelong efforts to document the people, places, and events that have shaped America.”

@BC presents McCullough’s May 19 Commencement address, delivered in Alumni Stadium.

Portfolio

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

About Boston College

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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