Boston College Chronicle

Page 1

The Boston College

Chronicle Published by the Boston College Office of News & Public Affairs January 17, 2013 vol. 21 No. 9

INSIDE

At Last, the Doors Are Open for Stokes Hall

•Baldwin under glass for ESPN spot, page 2

•BC Law profs draw raves among blogs, page 2 •Flu advice, page 2 •Marching band to appear at inaugural, page 3

After two years of construction, Stokes Hall formally opened to the Boston College community on Monday. The 183,000 square-foot building houses classrooms and offices for several humanities departments.

Symbol of BC’s ‘enduring commitment’ to liberal arts

•Vanderhooft earns award for book, page 3 •GSSW, Robsham host film on street kids, page 3 •Biologist Gubbels earns grant to aid in study of disease, page 5

•Lykes to receive APA humanitarian award, page 5 •A record win for York, page 5

•Spring schedules for Humanities Series and Gaelic Roots, page 8

Hall provides the ideal facility to enhance the educational and formational experiences of our students in a way that honors our institutional commitment to the liberal arts and to student formation. It is an exciting time for the University.” Continued on page 4

St. Mary’s Project Underway St. Mary’s Hall, the primary residence of the Boston College Jesuit community, will be shuttered during 24 months of interior and exterior renovations that began Monday. The majority of St. Mary’s Jesuit residents have relocated to the BC-owned apartment complex at 2000 Commonwealth Avenue for

the duration of the project. The renovations to St. Mary’s, administrators said, are needed to restore the historically significant building, which opened in 1917 and is the second oldest on the Chestnut Hill campus. The project will entail a complete facelift of St. Mary’s, similar to that of GasContinued on page 4

Fr. O’Keefe to Direct Center for Ignatian Spirituality By Ed Hayward Staff Writer

•Obituaries: Former BC Librarian O’Connell; Prof. Crescenti, page 7

and spiritual development of our students as they study here. This building is intentionally designed to support that liberal arts commitment and to foster student formation through enhanced student-faculty interaction.” Added Executive Vice President Patrick Keating, “Stokes

Lynch School of Education Professor Joseph M. O’Keefe, SJ, an experienced administrator and a leading scholar of Catholic education, has been appointed interim director of the Center for Ignatian Spirituality. Established in 1997 by the University and the Boston College Jesuit Community, the center’s mission is to develop programs that provide a basic understanding

of Jesuit education and Ignatian spirituality; help faculty and staff to integrate Ignatian values in their professional or personal lives; and encourage those wishing to lead this process in their areas of the University. “I think this is a great moment to do this and I’m excited and enthusiastic about the possibilities,” Fr. O’Keefe said. “As a faculty member, I am delighted to have the opportunity to be able to enhance the spiritual life of our community.”

QUOTE:

Lee Pellegrini

•Profile of 2012-13 Burns Scholar Fallon, page 6

Photos: left, Gary Gilbert; above, Caitlin Cunningham

The building also includes By Jack Dunn space for the Academic Advising Director of News Center, College of Arts and Sci& Public Affairs ences Honors Department and Stokes Hall, Boston College’s Office of First Year Experience, 183,000 square-foot humanities as well as common areas, conferbuilding and nod to liberal arts ence rooms, a coffee shop and education, officially opened with an outdoor garden and plaza that the start of classes on Monday provide multiple meeting spaces after two years of construction. to connect students and faculty. The new $78 million facility, “Stokes Hall embodies Boston which is strategically designed to College’s enduring commitment foster interdisciplinary collabora- to the liberal arts, which is a cortion among BC’s hunerstone of Jesuit edumanities departments cation and the heart and enhanced student- Campus parking of our identity,” said faculty interaction, changes announced College of Arts and provides 36 new state- S ee p a g e 4 Sciences Dean David of-the-art classrooms Quigley. “Humaniand 200 faculty offices ties in particular form for the Classical Studies, English, the core of our undergraduate History, Philosophy and Theol- requirements, which enables us ogy departments. to integrate the academic, social

Joseph O’Keefe, SJ

Fr. O’Keefe replaces Michael Boughton, SJ, who left the center last summer to direct formation for the Society of Jesus New EnglandNew York-Maryland Province. The center offers retreats, lectures, and workshops to help members of the campus community reflect on the University’s Jesuit mission and the teachings and spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order. Vice President for University Mission and Ministry Jack Butler, SJ, said Fr. O’Keefe’s experiences Continued on page 6

“I’m not sure you can teach people how to write poems, but you can help them to learn to read poems. And that’s a way of fine-tuning, so you can see better what you’re writing.” —Peter Fallon, Burns Visiting Scholar in Irish Studies, page 6


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