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Chronicle T HE B OSTON C OLLEGE Chronicle APRIL 14, 2011 VOL. 19 NO. 15 Published by the Boston College Office of News & Public Affairs INSIDE: 3 5 8 USPS MAILING ADDRESS BY THE OFFICE OF NEWS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS United States Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood will address the Boston College Class of 2011 at the 135th Commence- ment Exercises on May 23. University President William P. Leahy, SJ, will present LaHood with an honorary Doctor of Public Administration degree at the cer- emony, which begins at 10 a.m. in Alumni Stadium (In the event of severe weather, Conte Forum will be the location). In addition, Boston College will present honorary degrees to: New Balance Athletic Shoe Inc. Chairman James S. Davis and Vice Chairman Anne M. Davis — who is managing trustee of the New Balance Charitable Foundation (Doctor of Business Administra- tion); Senior Vice President James P. McIntyre ’57, MA ’61, PhD ’67 (Doctor of Science in Education); and Trustee Associate Sylvia Q. Simmons MEd’62, PhD’90 (Doc- tor of Humane Letters). Ray LaHood was named the 16th US secretary of transportation by President Barack Obama on Jan. 23, 2009, heading an agency with more than 55,000 employ- ees and a $70 billion budget that oversees air, maritime and surface transportation missions. During his term, Secretary La- Hood has launched initiatives to spur high-speed intercity passenger rail service, strengthen commercial bus and driver safety, and establish consumer protections for airline passengers. LaHood has also led the federal government’s efforts to combat distracted driving, asking Americans to put down mobile phones and devices while behind the wheel. Earlier this month, he announced a safety campaign to overhaul and upgrade America’s oil and gas pipeline network and make more information available about potential hazards. He provides dai- ly Department of Transportation news and updates through his Fast Lane blog [fastlane.dot.gov]. A native of Peoria, Ill., gradu- ate of Bradley University and one- time junior high school teacher, LaHood was a seven-term Republi- can congressman from 1995-2009, serving on the House Transporta- tion and Infrastructure Commit- tee, the Permanent Select Commit- tee on Intelligence and House Ap- propriations Committee. He was a member of the Republican Main Street Partnership and organized bipartisan retreats for members of Congress. Anne M. Davis, vice chairman of New Balance Athletic Shoe Inc. and managing trustee of the New Balance Charitable Foundation, is the architect and guardian of a corporate culture and value sys- tem that is a model for industries Massachusetts Supreme Ju- dicial Court Chief Justice Rod- erick L. Ireland will give the Commencement Address at the 2011 Boston College Law School Commencement on May 27 at 10:30 a.m. on BC’s Newton Campus. A jurist for more than three decades, Ireland became the first African-American to serve on the Supreme Judicial Court when he was appointed in 1997, and last December became the court’s first African- American chief justice. He is an expert in juvenile law and authored Massachusetts Juvenile Law, a volume of the Massa- chusetts Practice Series. He has received several awards for his work with youths. “Chief Justice Ireland has had a long and celebrated ca- reer in public service, including over 33 years as a judge in the BY JACK DUNN DIRECTOR OF NEWS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS The University has named Notre Dame Law School Pro- fessor Vincent D. Rougeau, a national expert on Catholic social teaching and the role of moral and religious values in law mak- ing and public policy, as dean of Boston College Law School, effective July 1. Rougeau has been a distin- guished professor of contracts, real estate law and Catholic so- cial thought at Notre Dame for the past 12 years. His current academic research focuses on global migration and multicul- tural citizenship, with a special emphasis on the challenges posed by religious pluralism. His book, Christians in the American Em- pire: Faith and Citizenship in the New World Order, explores the philosophical and theological underpinnings of Catholic social teaching as they relate to various aspects of American law. Provost and Dean of Facul- ties Cutberto Garza, who chaired the search committee, praised Rougeau as a leader with the skills and experience to advance BC Law. “From the outset, the Law School community, the search committee and I agreed that our shared goal was to find the best dean to lead Boston College Law School,” said Garza. “I am delighted that Professor Rougeau has been named the next dean and know that his ten- ure will be marked by many suc- BY SEAN SMITH CHRONICLE EDITOR Christopher Sheridan ’12, a Presidential Scholar from Balti- more with both a scientific and artistic appreciation for the hu- man brain, has won a Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship, consid- ered the premier undergraduate fellowship in the sciences. Sheridan, who majors in bio- chemistry and philosophy, is the 12th Boston College student in the last 14 years to receive a Goldwater, awarded to the na- tion’s most promising undergrad- uates in math and science. The one- and two-year scholarships cover the cost of tuition, fees, books, and room and board up to a maximum of $7,500 per year. Many Goldwater Scholars go on to receive Rhodes Scholarships, Marshall Awards and other pres- tigious fellowships. “It’s very rewarding to see this kind of appreciation for the work you do,” said Sheridan. “It can be easy to lose sight of what you’re striving for, but to receive a unique and prestigious honor like this represents a great oppor- tunity, and is truly humbling.” Sheridan’s interest in the brain crosses disciplines, continually fostering conversations and expe- riences that have enriched his life. It’s led him to personal exchanges with leading scholars in both the natural and social sciences. Last summer, after having been se- lected as a Sophomore Scholar by the Chemistry Department, Sheridan completed a German language immersion program at Munich’s Goethe Institute — thereby strengthening his abil- ity to do research in science and philosophy. But Sheridan — equally at home writing poetry as he is contributing to BC’s undergrad- uate research journal Elements, for which he serves as a senior editor doesn’t regard these and his other activities as purely academic. He sees this scientific- humanistic approach as integral to a future career in medicine and research, most likely focused on the emerging field of neuro- imaging. “It’s extraordinarily important that doctors never treat people like mere constellations of cells,” he explains. “Our scientific un- derstanding of disease, and the human body, is advancing so rapidly. The danger is that this makes it easy to see patients in overly definitive terms, as a col- lection of symptoms or biological problems X, Y and Z, rather than COMMENCEMENT 2011 US Transportation Chief to Receive Degree Senior VP McIntyre also among this year’s honorary recipients United States Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood will address this year’s graduating class at Commencement on May 23. Continued on page 4 Continued on page 4 Continued on page 4 Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Chief Justice Roderick L. Ireland. SJC Chief Justice to Speak at Law Commencement Vincent D. Rougeau Catholic Social Teaching Expert Is New Law Dean Continued on page 3 Christopher Sheridan ’12 Sean Smith Junior Earns Goldwater Scholarship New BC tradition: ‘Mile 21’ Mariani’s book comes to silver screen 13th annual BC Arts Festival
Transcript

ChronicleThe BosTon College

ChronicleAPRIL 14, 2011 VOL. 19 NO. 15

Published by the Boston College Office of News & Public Affairs

INSIDE: 3 5 8

USPS MAILING ADDRESS

BY THE OFFICE OF NEWS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS

United States Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood will address the Boston College Class of 2011 at the 135th Commence-ment Exercises on May 23.

University President William P. Leahy, SJ, will present LaHood with an honorary Doctor of Public Administration degree at the cer-emony, which begins at 10 a.m. in Alumni Stadium (In the event of severe weather, Conte Forum will be the location).

In addition, Boston College will present honorary degrees to: New Balance Athletic Shoe Inc. Chairman James S. Davis and Vice Chairman Anne M. Davis — who is managing trustee of the New Balance Charitable Foundation (Doctor of Business Administra-tion); Senior Vice President James P. McIntyre ’57, MA ’61, PhD ’67 (Doctor of Science in Education); and Trustee Associate Sylvia Q. Simmons MEd’62, PhD’90 (Doc-tor of Humane Letters).

Ray LaHood was named the

16th US secretary of transportation by President Barack Obama on Jan. 23, 2009, heading an agency with more than 55,000 employ-ees and a $70 billion budget that oversees air, maritime and surface transportation missions.

During his term, Secretary La-Hood has launched initiatives to spur high-speed intercity passenger rail service, strengthen commercial bus and driver safety, and establish consumer protections for airline passengers. LaHood has also led the federal government’s efforts to combat distracted driving, asking Americans to put down mobile

phones and devices while behind the wheel. Earlier this month, he announced a safety campaign to overhaul and upgrade America’s oil and gas pipeline network and make more information available about potential hazards. He provides dai-ly Department of Transportation news and updates through his Fast Lane blog [fastlane.dot.gov].

A native of Peoria, Ill., gradu-ate of Bradley University and one-time junior high school teacher, LaHood was a seven-term Republi-can congressman from 1995-2009, serving on the House Transporta-tion and Infrastructure Commit-

tee, the Permanent Select Commit-tee on Intelligence and House Ap-propriations Committee. He was a member of the Republican Main Street Partnership and organized bipartisan retreats for members of Congress.

Anne M. Davis, vice chairman of New Balance Athletic Shoe Inc. and managing trustee of the New Balance Charitable Foundation, is the architect and guardian of a corporate culture and value sys-tem that is a model for industries

Massachusetts Supreme Ju-dicial Court Chief Justice Rod-erick L. Ireland will give the Commencement Address at the 2011 Boston College Law School Commencement on May 27 at 10:30 a.m. on BC’s Newton Campus.

A jurist for more than three decades, Ireland became the first African-American to serve on the Supreme Judicial Court when he was appointed in 1997, and last December became the court’s first African-American chief justice. He is an expert in juvenile law and authored Massachusetts Juvenile Law, a volume of the Massa-chusetts Practice Series. He has received several awards for his

work with youths.“Chief Justice Ireland has

had a long and celebrated ca-reer in public service, including over 33 years as a judge in the

BY JACK DUNN DIRECTOR OF NEWS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS

The University has named Notre Dame Law School Pro-fessor Vincent D. Rougeau, a national expert on Catholic social teaching and the role of moral and religious values in law mak-ing and public policy, as dean of Boston College Law School, effective July 1.

Rougeau has been a distin-guished professor of contracts, real estate law and Catholic so-cial thought at Notre Dame for the past 12 years. His current academic research focuses on global migration and multicul-tural citizenship, with a special emphasis on the challenges posed by religious pluralism. His book, Christians in the American Em-pire: Faith and Citizenship in the New World Order, explores the philosophical and theological underpinnings of Catholic social teaching as they relate to various aspects of American law.

Provost and Dean of Facul-

ties Cutberto Garza, who chaired the search committee, praised Rougeau as a leader with the skills and experience to advance BC Law. “From the outset, the Law School community, the search committee and I agreed that our shared goal was to find the best dean to lead Boston College Law School,” said Garza. “I am delighted that Professor Rougeau has been named the next dean and know that his ten-ure will be marked by many suc-

BY SEAN SMITH CHRONICLE EDITOR

Christopher Sheridan ’12, a Presidential Scholar from Balti-more with both a scientific and artistic appreciation for the hu-man brain, has won a Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship, consid-ered the premier undergraduate fellowship in the sciences.

Sheridan, who majors in bio-chemistry and philosophy, is the 12th Boston College student in the last 14 years to receive a Goldwater, awarded to the na-tion’s most promising undergrad-uates in math and science. The one- and two-year scholarships cover the cost of tuition, fees, books, and room and board up to a maximum of $7,500 per year. Many Goldwater Scholars go on to receive Rhodes Scholarships, Marshall Awards and other pres-tigious fellowships.

“It’s very rewarding to see this kind of appreciation for the work you do,” said Sheridan. “It can be easy to lose sight of what you’re striving for, but to receive a unique and prestigious honor

like this represents a great oppor-tunity, and is truly humbling.”

Sheridan’s interest in the brain crosses disciplines, continually fostering conversations and expe-riences that have enriched his life. It’s led him to personal exchanges with leading scholars in both the natural and social sciences. Last summer, after having been se-lected as a Sophomore Scholar by the Chemistry Department,

Sheridan completed a German language immersion program at Munich’s Goethe Institute — thereby strengthening his abil-ity to do research in science and philosophy.

But Sheridan — equally at home writing poetry as he is contributing to BC’s undergrad-uate research journal Elements, for which he serves as a senior editor — doesn’t regard these and his other activities as purely academic. He sees this scientific-humanistic approach as integral to a future career in medicine and research, most likely focused on the emerging field of neuro-imaging.

“It’s extraordinarily important that doctors never treat people like mere constellations of cells,” he explains. “Our scientific un-derstanding of disease, and the human body, is advancing so rapidly. The danger is that this makes it easy to see patients in overly definitive terms, as a col-lection of symptoms or biological problems X, Y and Z, rather than

COMMENCEMENT 2011

US Transportation Chief to Receive DegreeSenior VP McIntyre also among this year’s honorary recipients

United States Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood will address this year’s graduating class at Commencement on May 23.

Continued on page 4

Continued on page 4

Continued on page 4

Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Chief Justice Roderick L. Ireland.

SJC Chief Justice to Speak at Law Commencement

Vincent D. Rougeau

Catholic Social Teaching Expert Is New Law Dean

Continued on page 3

Christopher Sheridan ’12

Sean

Sm

ith

Junior Earns Goldwater Scholarship

New BC tradition: ‘Mile 21’

Mariani’s book comes to silver screen

13th annual BC Arts Festival

2

The BosTon College

ChronicleAPRIL 14, 2011

DIRECTOR OF NEWS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS

Jack DunnDEPUTY DIRECTOR OF NEWS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS

Patricia DelaneyEDITOR

Sean SmithCONTRIBUTING STAFF

Melissa BeecherEd HaywardReid Oslin

Rosanne PellegriniKathleen SullivanEileen Woodward

PHOTOGRAPHERS

Gary GilbertLee Pellegrini

The Boston College Chronicle (USPS 009491), the internal newspaper for faculty and staff, is published biweekly from September to May by Boston College, with editorial offices at the Office of News & Public Affairs, 14 Mayflower Road, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 (617)552-3350. Distributed free to faculty and staff offices and other locations on campus. Periodicals postage paid at Boston, MA and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: send address changes to The Boston College Chronicle, Office of News & Public Affairs, 14 Mayflower Road, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467.

Contact Chronicle via e-mail: [email protected] editions of the Boston College Chronicle are available via the

World Wide Web at http://www.bc.edu/chronicle.

The BosTon College

Chronicle

On the listEver been to the “First Fridays

Open Studios” in the South End or attended a concert at the New England Conservatory? Both are entries on the “Arts Bucket List,” a challenge issued by the Boston College Arts Council to all BC undergrads.

“Time flies by too quickly at BC,” reads the list. “Be sure to take advantage of the arts and culture opportunities with Boston College and the greater Boston community.”

Part promotion, part contest, the “Arts Bucket List” (a “bucket list” refers to goals one aspires to complete before “kicking the bucket”) is the brainchild of Asso-ciate Professor of Theatre and BC Arts Council Chair Crystal Tiala, Arts Council Program Adminis-trator and Arts Festival Director Cathi Ianno, and their students.

“Each year we sit down with students at the end of the year and talk about what we have done and what we can do better,” said

Tiala. “This idea of a ‘bucket list’ came up organically when stu-dents suggested that there were more arts-related things on cam-pus and in the city that they wish they had time to do.”

The campaign that resulted asks students to complete a list of arts-related tasks within their four years as BC undergrads. Participants are asked to fill an envelope (shaped, fittingly, as a bucket) with tickets, programs,

photos or other proof of atten-dance and submit it to become a member of the “Bucket of Fame,” which can be found online at www.bc.edu/artsbucketlist.

Tiala and Ianno worked with designers in the Media Technol-ogy Services department to create the envelope.

“This year, we handed out 2,000 buckets,” said Tiala. “If anything, it is a motivator for students to engage with opportu-nities here on campus, but also ex-plore all that Boston has to offer.”

And for overachievers, the council has formed an “Advanced Arts Bucket List” that includes, among other things, visiting Sa-lem to see the House of Seven Gables and attending a broadcast from the Metropolitan Opera in Fenway Park.

“This is a way that we hope to promote the idea for students to get out and enjoy the rich culture that is around us,” said Tiala. “We hope to plant the seed in their minds that there is so much more out there.”

—MB

Linking upIn a tough, competitive job

market, nothing can be more comforting then hearing from others who have successfully found – or forged — their own paths. The Boston College Career Center established the RealJobs Blog last year to do just that.

The blog, available via the main page of the Career Center website [http://www.bc.edu/ca-reers], connects current students with alumni in successful careers and has found a devoted follow-ing online.

“We really try to get alumni back to campus whenever we can to allow current students as much face-to-face interaction as possi-ble,” said Career Center Associate Director Janet Costa Bates. “Our alumni are so amazing and stu-dents really learn a tremendous amount from them.

“This was a way to create a conversation virtually, so alumni from all different industries all over the world can share what

worked, or what didn’t work for them,” Bates said. “We didn’t know how it would work out, but after the first submissions were given, I found myself sitting in front of the computer, reading the entries with this stupid grin across my face. The stories are really, re-ally great.”

RealJobs follows 20 alums through a typical workweek. En-tries are as diverse as the authors. This year they include an entre-preneur of a startup company in San Francisco, a member of the United States Olympic Commit-tee, a founder of a women’s health education program in Cambodia, a partner at a prestigious New York City law firm and a family physician in Virginia.

Patricia McLaughlin Carey writes: “I graduated from Boston College in 1982 in what everyone said was the worst economy since the Great Depression. Sound fa-miliar? I remember wondering whether I would ever get a real job and who in the world would hire me.”

Today, Carey is the vice presi-dent for college relations at Con-necticut College and helps walk students through her week – staff meetings, planning sessions, even snapping photos of her office and coworkers.

“Borrowing some of our alum-ni’s expertise in their given fields can help our current students get a better understanding of a job or position they may be interested in, or learn about a position they never knew existed,” said Bates.

The blog came together or-ganically – Bates asked alumni she knew or some who were rec-ommended to her from cowork-ers to contribute. Next year, she has already started reaching out to alumni to participate. Real-Jobs Blog supplements the Career Center’s already successful depart-mental blog, at http://bccareer.wordpress.com.

To become a contributor to the blog or to recommend an alumnus, email Janet Costa Bates at [email protected].

—MB

Fr. Himes a must-readA recently launched weekly series of spiritual reflections prepared by Theology

Professor Rev. Michael Himes and sponsored by the Boston College Alumni As-sociation has become a popular on-line destination for those seeking guidance and prayer throughout the Lenten sea-son.

More than 13,500 unique page views of “Reflections” were recorded during the first three weeks of the traditional period of prayer and spiritual preparation that started on Ash Wednesday.

In addition to the many views of the “Reflections” website [www.bc.edu/reflections], the average reader has spent more than three-and-a-half minutes on-site – a lengthy stopover in today’s “fast-click” Internet universe.

“This is something that we have wanted to do for a while,” says Associate Director for Alumni Relations Jean Chisser. “You can find thousands of sites on the Internet that offer spiritual reflections, but we wanted to make this something that is unique to Boston College. So many people think the world of Fr. Himes, that we asked him to be our inaugural author.”

Chisser says the numeric results have far exceeded her expectations. “This is a gift to Boston College alumni.”

Many priests and parish leaders also use the reflections, which are updated each Friday leading up to Easter, as a basis for homilies and spiritual discussions, Chisser notes.

“We have received very positive feedback for this program and we plan to offer a similar one during Advent,” she says.

—RO

The BosTon College

Chronicle ONBe sure to check out the Boston College Chronicle YouTube channel

[www.youtube.com/bcchronicle] for video features on Boston College people, programs and events. New and upcoming videos include:

•FISTS at Boston College: The undergraduate student group Females Incorporating Sisterhood Through Step (FISTS) promotes unity, excel-lence, discipline and friendship through step and service — at Boston Col-lege and beyond.

•Community Safety Day: Organized by the Boston College Police De-partment, this event featured an up-close look at emergency services, crime prevention and both personal and property safety tips.

Theology Professor Rev. Michael Himes at the April 3 Laetare Sunday breakfast. (Photo by Frank Curran)

Since March 22, the School of Theology and Ministry has hosted a nine-foot statue of Mohandas Gandhi, on loan from the Peace Abbey, an interfaith non-profit center for peace and nonviolence in Sherborn, Mass. The school has held several events to celebrate Gandhi’s presence and a Lenten commitment to peace and nonvio-lence, including a screening of the film “Gandhi,” music and interfaith readings, and a Gandhi-themed liturgy in the STM chapel. The statue will remain at STM until tomorrow. (Photo by Lee Pellegrini)

A PEACEFUL PRESENCE

The BosTon College

ChronicleAPRIL 14, 2011 3

He’ll be fighting fatigue by then, but count John Farrow among the Boston Marathon runners who looks forward to passing by Boston Col-lege on Monday.

Farrow, a lawyer from Albuquerque, was so impressed with the recep-tion he got at the Heights on last year’s Marathon Day, he sent an e-mail recently to Chronicle addressed to “BC Students” expressing appreciation for their support: “You were absolutely nuts! I like that 20-plus miles into a marathon — you really picked me up. Don’t ever change!”

In a follow-up e-mail interview, Farrow said that while Wellesley College students tend to get most of the attention for their cheering (“They are fun,” he acknowledges. “There was a good Elvis impersonator there”), the BC students’ enthusiasm is a welcome sight by that juncture of the marathon. Given that he was fighting the heat of the day and a painful hip, Farrow said he really needed a boost as he crested Heartbreak Hill.

“The crowds were getting noisy, high-fiving everyone, really yelling, jumping up and down, even running out into the street and screaming, some were in costume slapping people on the back...I just started laugh-ing and it made me forget about my hip.”

Farrow wound up finishing in a little over three hours and 56 min-utes and qualified for the 60-64 year-old division in this year’s marathon, which will be his third in Boston. He’s lately been struggling with a hamstring injury and sinus infection, but aims to “do the best I can and enjoy how fortunate I am to still be able to be a part of this great event.”

—Sean Smith

BY MELISSA BEECHER STAFF WRITER

There’s no shortage of memo-rable spots along the Boston Mara-thon route: the starting line in Hopkinton, the “scream tunnel” in Wellesley, the dips and climbs of Heartbreak Hill and the din of cheering along Kenmore and Copley squares. If student leaders and University administrators have their way, Boston College will be the site of another storied tradition of Marathon Monday: “Mile 21.”

Designed to be a comprehen-sive daylong program, “Mile 21” aims to organize the robust BC cheering section at the Heights and position students and alumni in front of the Commonwealth Avenue Gate to create a “golden mile” into Boston.

The Office of Residential Life, Student Affairs, Undergraduate Government of Boston College, the Residence Hall Association, the Office of the Dean for Student Development, Student Programs Office, Athletics, Quality of Stu-dent Life Committee, Office of Vice President for Student Affairs, Dining Services and BC Police Department have all played a role and lent their support to providing positive Patriots Day activities.

“This student-run initiative is working to create a cultural change on campus and get students in-volved in what can be a phenom-enal event for not only BC, but for Boston,” said Office of Residential Life Director George Arey.

“It is a great opportunity to change BC into an involvement

culture instead of a spectator cul-ture on Marathon Monday.”

The effort started when a group of students met with Arey and brainstormed ways to change the attitudes on campus toward Patri-ots Day from simply having a day off from classes to establishing a larger meaning of community.

“I can’t think of a day that has bigger meaning in the context of BC and the larger Boston commu-nity,” said student organizer Justin Pike ’11. “The value of a new tradition is not just to get students participating, but highlighting the efforts of the runners – our peers, who, by Mile 21, are about to complete a truly admirable under-taking.”

To that end, two film crews – one student, one professional – have created videos about Mile 21 and the athletes who run on behalf of the Boston College Campus School, which serves students ages 3-21 with multiple disabilities in-cluding complex health care needs. This year, 350 students are run-ning to raise money for the school and other charities.

“When runners on the route come over that last rise of Heart-break Hill, the first thing they see is BC and know that the end is in sight. We want that image to be a truly memorable one,” said Pike.

The most conspicuous rep-resentation of the day will be a large inflatable arch reading “The Heartbreak is Over” raised by the Commonwealth Avenue Gate. A number of panoramic photos will be taken of the spectators under the arch, including seniors, alumni

In the spirit of the upcoming Boston Marathon and in cele-bration of the University’s on-going partnership with the St. Columbkille School, members of the Boston College community are invited to participate in the inaugural “BC Race to Educate” – a 5-kilometer road race for run-ners and walkers to be held this Saturday to benefit the Brighton school.

Saturday’s race events will start with a children’s 1K “Fun Run” at 9:30 a.m., followed at 10 a.m. by the 5K event for all ages. The start and finish line will be at the Yawkey Center, with the race course winding through campus and the adjoining Chestnut Hill neighborhood along Common-wealth Avenue.

Among the sponsors of the benefit race are Boston College’s men’s and women’s varsity ice hockey teams. Players from both teams participate in a highly ac-claimed student mentoring pro-gram at St. Columbkille and will work as volunteers at Saturday’s race.

“Our players seem to really enjoy the mentoring process at St. Columbkille,” said BC assis-tant hockey coach Mike Cava-naugh, who is overseeing Satur-day’s event. “It has been great for them.”

Cavanaugh, who says the event is aiming to generate as much as $20,000 for St. Columbkille, hopes to see even more BC stu-dents sign up to participate in Sat-urday’s fund-raiser. “The money is going to a great cause. Students here have been afforded the op-portunity for a great education that puts them in the position to attend a school like BC. It’s all about giving back and appreciat-ing the terrific opportunities that have been afforded to us in our lives.”

Runners and walkers can reg-ister for the race on-line at http://bcracetoeducate.com or at Alum-ni Stadium starting at 8 a.m. on Saturday. The first 400 people to register will receive a race t-shirt with a special logo designed by St. Columbkille students.

—Reid Oslin

cesses. His academic background, scholarship and experiences make him uniquely suited for the Law School and Boston College.”

In accepting the position, Rougeau said he was eager to as-sume a leadership role in a Jesuit, Catholic environment that was so important to his own develop-ment as a teacher and a scholar, and one that would enable him to continue to be engaged in issues of social and economic justice.

“I am thrilled to be joining the Boston College community and I look forward to participating in the mission of this extraordinary university and law school,” said Rougeau. “I have long admired the Boston College Law School faculty and feel very honored by the opportunity to serve as their dean.”

While at Notre Dame Law School, Rougeau also served as dean for academic affairs for three years, and as a member of the law school’s appointments committee, including three terms as commit-

tee chair. “In this role, I was thor-oughly familiar with the strategies that must be employed to recruit and retain the best possible fac-ulty,” said Rougeau. “I am also personally aware of the challenges and opportunities a meaningful commitment to diversity presents to a law faculty.”

Rougeau also has a longstand-ing interest in bank regulation, particularly as it relates to the protection of consumers. Much of his early teaching and writing focused on ways in which the law might check predatory behavior in the marketplace, as well as govern-ment regulation and intervention in financial markets.

A graduate of Brown Univer-sity where he majored in interna-tional relations, Rougeau received his law degree from Harvard Law School. He worked as an assis-tant and then associate professor of law at Loyola University of Chicago School of Law, before joining the faculty at Notre Dame Law School. He has also served

as a fellow at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame, and as a senior fellow at the Con-textual Theology Centre at the Royal Foundation of St. Cath-erine in London. The author of a book and several book chapters, his latest work, titled Cosmopoli-tan Democracy, Religious Citizens, and Global Multiculturalism, is a part of an ongoing project called Contending Modernities, which will likely result in a conference next year.

“Any successful search out-come is the result of the efforts of many,” said Garza. “I would like to thank the members of the search committee and all who assisted in the process. I am also thankful to Interim Dean George Brown and the Law School fac-ulty, students, staff and alumni, whose commitment and dedica-tion to their school and University have been evident throughout this process.”

Contact Jack Dunn at [email protected]

and the entire cheering section.Along with Pike, students who

have led the “Mile 21” effort in-clude Katrina Lutfy ’12 and seniors Matt McCluskey, Cliff Baratta and Will Rush.

The festivities will start at 6 a.m. with the Campus School run-ner sendoff outside Campion Hall. The Campus School Pep Rally will follow at 10:30 a.m., along with a barbeque outside Corcoran Commons. Starting at noon, “Mile 21” giveaways and entertainment are planed outside the main gate of campus. Giveaways and events will continue throughout the day (see the “Mile 21” website, www.bcmile21.com, for more).

“The Boston Marathon is one event that literally happens on our doorstep,” said Arey. “This group of student leaders has tirelessly worked across departments to es-tablish ‘Mile 21’ as the next great Boston College tradition.”

Contact Melissa Beecher at [email protected]

BC’s ‘Mile 21’ at Its Starting Line for Monday

Continued from page 1

April 16 ‘BC Race to Educate’ Will Benefit St. Columbkille School

Marathoner Appreciates BC Boost

“Mile 21” co-organizers Justin Pike ’11, Matthew McCluskey ’11 and Katrina Lutfy ’12 discuss plans for the program’s debut on Marathon Monday. (Photo by Lee Pellegrini)

Collaborative effort by students and administrators seeks to build University tradition for Marathon

Rougeau Is Choice as New Law Dean

4

The BosTon College

ChronicleAPRIL 14, 2011

worldwide.In her business role as the offi-

cer responsible for the recruitment, training, compensation, benefits administration and corporate pol-icy for business operations in over 70 countries, she has helped guide the company through periods of double-digit growth. Her innova-tive and progressive management techniques — which feature manu-facturing teams, employee involve-ment and cross-functional man-agement teams — have produced one of the industry’s most highly motivated and goal-oriented work forces. As overseer of New Balance’s social responsibility program, cor-porate contributions and commu-nity service functions, she has been an integral factor in the company’s widely acknowledged leadership in philanthropic pursuits.

Davis is a graduate of Boston’s Emmanuel College where she ma-jored in languages. She and her husband James – also receiving an honorary degree from BC this year – are the parents of two children, in-cluding daughter Kassia who gradu-ated from BC in 2010.

Few business entrepreneurs have done as much to encourage healthy lifestyles for Americans as James S. Davis, chairman of New Balance Athletic Shoe Inc., a Boston-based footwear and athletic apparel manu-facturer.

Davis bought the firm on Bos-ton Marathon day in 1972 when

the company’s six-person work force was turning out just 30 pairs of running shoes a day. Since that time, New Balance has developed into one of the world’s leading man-ufacturers of running gear, with $2 billion in sales projected for 2011, and is the largest private compa-ny in the sporting goods industry. Once located in a small facility in the Allston section of Boston, the company now includes five US plants — two in Massachusetts and three in Maine — and more than 5,000 employees around the globe.

In addition, Davis has made great strides in the race to improve the well being of all American citizens, especially children. New Balance has joined First Lady Mi-chelle Obama in her efforts to end childhood obesity and to promote healthy lifestyles for children and families, and earlier this year, the foundation made a $7 million gift to Boston’s Children’s Hospital to establish the New Balance Founda-tion Center for Childhood Obesity Prevention, Clinical Research and Care.

During a career spanning more than a half-century, Boston Col-lege Senior Vice President James P. McIntyre has played a unique role in the advancement of Boston College from a commuter school to a preeminent national university.

McIntyre received his under-graduate degree from BC in 1957 after attending classes at night. Af-

ter a stint in the Army, McIntyre returned in 1959 to work in the admissions office and earn his mas-ter’s degree and a PhD in higher education and administration.

In 1968, he became BC’s first lay vice president of student affairs. In 1976, he was named vice president for university relations, overseeing the Alumni Association, Commu-nications and Development offices. In 1986, he was named senior vice president. His 43 consecutive years of service as vice president are un-matched in Jesuit higher education.

There are few areas of the Uni-versity that do not bear the imprint of McIntyre’s dedication. He helped to establish BC’s financial aid pro-gram, direct its first major capital campaign and host two acclaimed finance conferences. The Newton Campus, the Flynn Recreation Complex, O’Neill Library, Conte Forum, the renovated Alumni Sta-dium, Merkert Chemistry Center — as well as several of the Universi-ty’s largest donations — all involved his efforts, helping to earn him the label of “BC’s troubleshooter” and, as one newspaper headline called him, “Mr. BC.”

McIntyre met Monica Flatley while working in the admissions office and they married in 1962. All six of their children – James Jr., Pe-ter, David, Mary, Karalyn and Ann – are graduates of Boston College.

Sylvia Q. Simmons, whose life work has been dedicated to

education and ensuring access to education for the underserved, is the retired president of the American Student Assistance Corporation, an organization that insures and administers educational loans and supports college access services. She also is a co-founder of the Higher Education Information Center, now serving as a model nationwide.

In 1966, Simmons was named registrar of the BC School of Man-agement, becoming the Universi-ty’s first female African-American administrator. Her affiliation with the University includes service as a trustee (1990-98), trustee associate (1998-present) and founding mem-ber of the Council for Women of Boston College. In 1998, the Sylvia Q. Simmons MEd ’62, PhD ’90 Scholarship Fund was established to provide financial assistance for African-American students.

Simmons’ service in higher edu-cation has included senior admin-istration positions at Harvard and Radcliffe colleges, the University of Massachusetts, and more recent-ly, the Public and Private Higher Education subcommittee of Mas-sachusetts Governor Deval Patrick’s Commonwealth Readiness Project, for which a group of educators and business and community leaders were charged with developing a 10-year strategic plan for the future of education in Massachusetts.

For information on Commence-ment, see http://www.bc.edu/com-mencement

Massachusetts Juvenile Court, the Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Judicial Court,” said BC Law Interim Dean George Brown. “I’m very pleased that he has accepted our invitation to address our 2011 graduating class.”

A native of Springfield, Ire-land began his legal career in 1969 as a Neighborhood Legal Services attorney, then worked with the Roxbury Defenders Committee as chief attorney, deputy director and executive director. He was assistant sec-retary and chief legal counsel for the Massachusetts Executive Office of Administration and Finance, and chair of the Mas-sachusetts Board of Appeals on Motor Vehicle Liability Policies and Bond.

Ireland served on the state Juvenile Court from 1977-90 and as associate justice on the Massachusetts Appeals Court from 1990-97.

He holds a bachelor’s degree from Lincoln University, a juris doctorate from Columbia Law School, master of laws degree from Harvard Law School, and a PhD in law, policy and society from Northeastern University.

Ireland has been an adjunct faculty member at Northeast-ern University since 1978, and on the faculty of the Appellate Judges Seminar at New York University Law School since 2001.

More information on the Boston College Law School Commencement is available at the school’s website, www.bc.edu/law.

—Law School Marketing and Communications Director Na-thaniel Kenyon

appreciate them as people with distinct characteristics and needs.

“I want to stake out a position in-between. I felt I should ground myself thoroughly in the chemis-try of the brain, but train to think like a philosopher as well — to keep the ques-tions framed in hu-man terms, rather than cells and mol-ecules.

“With a focus on neuroimaging, asking these questions can help us to learn more about major psy-chiatric disorders, to more thor-oughly translate detailed clinical descriptions of classically ‘men-tal’ diseases with biological and chemical targets in the live brain, giving molecular biologists and

geneticists more tractable targets — and, ultimately, leading to more effective therapies.”

Sheridan’s faculty mentors are impressed with his devotion to

a well-rounded aca-demic and personal development. “Chris uses his first-rate intel-lect to serve an exem-plary thoughtfulness about the responsibil-ities that come with unusual talent,” says College of Arts and Sciences Honors Pro-gram Director Mark O’Connor.

“This starts with his willing-ness to engage so well the ‘two cultures’ of science and the hu-manities: Whether it is doing research in a lab, analyzing an abstract piece of 20th century phi-

losophy, a verb declension in Ger-man, or a 19th century painting, nothing human, nothing humane, is alien to Chris Sheridan.

“His commitment to all these areas of intellectual inquiry, above all his concern for what such in-quiry can mean for improving the quality of life both materially and spiritually, inspires the research he does into complex brain functions — and makes him a worthy re-cipient of such a prestigious award as a Goldwater.”

Assistant Professor of Chem-istry Jianmin Gao, in whose lab Sheridan has served, notes that Sheridan has taken the initiative to learn more about neuroimag-ing by reaching out to Psychology faculty at BC, and experts at Har-vard and MIT: “He is constantly thinking about innovative ideas on how to advance this field. It is

quite admirable for a college stu-dent to have such ambition and determination.”

Sheridan displayed those quali-ties from the beginning at BC. When he took the class Philoso-phy of Biology as a freshman, he hit upon “a crazy idea” to inter-view leading neuroscientists and philosophers about their work. Al-though unable to land a grant to fund this project, Sheridan went ahead and did it anyway, and wound up corresponding with lu-minaries such as John R. Searle, a prominent UCal-Berkeley scholar on the philosophy of mind and language, and Johns Hopkins re-searcher Solomon Snyder, who studies the nature and role of neurotransmitters.

Sheridan is quick to credit the support and commitment his par-ents Talia and Michael have given

him. Michael Sheridan ’71, in fact, stands as a role model in more than a few ways: as a doctor, and as a co-founder of BC’s ac-claimed PULSE Program, which combines academics, service and faith-related reflection and discus-sion — all of which Christopher Sheridan values.

“I’ve never seen my educa-tion in purely career terms, as in ‘I’m going to be a lawyer’ or ‘I’m going to be a doctor,’” says Sheri-dan, who envisions earning a joint MD-PhD degree. “For me, it’s a matter of what set of credentials will enable me to ask and answer the questions that get me up in the morning, and to put as many of the skills and interests I have into meaningful service for my community.”

Contact Sean Smith at [email protected]

Continued from page 1

Continued from page 1

Continued from page 1

Anne M. Davis and James S. Davis James P. McIntyre Sylvia Q. Simmons

“Chris uses his first-

rate intellect to serve

an exemplary thought-

fulness about the re-

sponsibilities that come

with unusual talent.”

—Mark O’Connor

COMMENCEMENT 2011

Transportation Secretary LaHood to Speak at Graduation

Law School to Honor Ireland

Goldwater Scholar Combines Scientific and Humanistic Concerns

The BosTon College

ChronicleAPRIL 14, 2011 5

BY ROSANNE PELLEGRINI STAFF WRITER

University Professor of English Paul Mariani was prescient when his biography of American poet Hart Crane, The Broken Tower: The Life of Hart Crane, was published in 1999, the year of his subject’s 100th birthday.

“I did think that it might make a good movie, if only one could find the right producer, director and actor to play Hart Crane.” But as time passed he turned his attention to other projects, “and the idea that someone would make a movie of Crane’s life was forgotten.”

A dozen years later, Mariani’s book is the inspiration and basis for a biopic directed by and starring acclaimed Golden Globe Award-winning actor James Franco, who will be on campus tomorrow for a premiere screening of “The Broken Tower” for BC undergraduates.

Mariani’s critically hailed biog-raphy came to Franco’s attention when he read Hart Crane’s poetry; an introduction by writer and liter-ary critic Harold Bloom lauded it as the best source for understanding the poet.

An accomplished poet himself, Mariani says of his book: “I knew by the time I was 28 that I wanted to write a biography of Hart Crane, the brilliant and obscure late Ameri-can Romantic who killed himself at the age of 32. But it was not until I was 55 that I seriously began researching and writing [his] life, attempting to make the poet more accessible to a larger audience.

“Many American poets have ac-knowledged the impact of Crane’s work on their own. But how to explain the man’s life: his critical brilliance and creativity and vision flashing in bold outline against his erotic antics and his Dionysian ad-diction to booze?” adds Mariani, who has published five biographies of poets over the past 30 years, and is working on his sixth.

When the film prospect arose, he “was warned from the get-go

that most projects like this soon went down in Icarian flames, and so not to get my hopes up. But James proved from the beginning to be a man of his word, who I came to admire and respect. To say I have enjoyed working with James would be an understatement. I consider him truly a friend.”

Mariani — who has a small speaking part in the film as pho-tographer-artist Alfred Stieglitz — recalls a day spent together in New York in August 2009, “going over sites in Greenwich Village and mid-town Manhattan and Brook-lyn’s Columbia Heights and lower Broadway, walking the Brooklyn Bridge and touring the old sub-

ways and the Woolworth Building and so much more, suggesting ways of looking at these landmarks of New York. Consider what the poet Robert Lowell once said: that Hart Crane somehow managed to get New York into the very matrix of his epic poem, ‘The Bridge.’”

Of Franco’s acting — including his portrayal of the young Allen Ginsberg in “Howl,” and power-ful, Oscar-nominated role as moun-tain climber Aron Ralston in “127 Hours” — Mariani describes him as “entering the very soul of another human being.”

While Mariani hopes the film inspires a new generation of readers of his book, “even more, I would hope the book and the film would turn the attention of serious read-ers of poetry back to the words of a young, tragic poet — like [John] Keats or [Percy Bysshe] Shelley or [Gerard Manley] Hopkins — who

believed in the visionary powers of the poetic imagination to change for the better those who took the time to listen to what the poet had to offer. Certainly, that is what Hart wanted, and it is what I believe James has given us in the film.

“I hope the audience will come away with the sense of a poet doomed almost from the start in spite of his visionary aspirations,” he adds. “Like many young people today, his parents had one plan for him, while he had another. His father wanted him to work in his candy business.” Hart’s father was the inventor of Life Savers, Mariani notes, “which patent he sold early on for a pittance, and which is dou-

bly ironic when you consider that Hart drowned at sea while several lifesavers bobbed idly on the sea’s surface.”

The BC student audience will have the opportunity to hear first-hand from Franco and Mariani, when they discuss the film, Crane’s life and poetic reputation during a Q&A session following the Robsham Theater screening.

Mariani also hopes the audience recognizes “the seriousness with which James has rendered this feature-length film. I have worked closely with James and I have been struck again and again at how deeply [he] has grasped the very soul of this complex, obscure, but necessary poet of the American religious experience.”

A Q&A with University Professor of English Paul Mariani — which was the basis for this article — is available via online Chronicle [www.bc.edu/chronicle]

How do Americans — most of whom consider religion a private, not public, matter — talk about God? How is it that one of the most reli-giously diverse countries in the world has so little history of religious vio-lence?

These questions will be the focus of an April 28 event that will bring together history and theology scholars and the creative minds behind the PBS television series “God in Amer-ica” which aired to critical acclaim last fall. “Lingua Sacra: Negotiating God-Talk in America” will be held at 4 p.m. in Cushing 001.

The panel will feature “God in America” series director/writer/pro-ducer David Belton and writer/pro-ducer/director Sarah Colt, School of

Theology and Ministry Dean Mark Massa, SJ, Associate Professor of History Cynthia Lynn Lyerly and Harvard University doctoral candi-date Rachel Gordan. Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life Associate Director Erik Owens, an adjunct assistant professor of theology and international studies, will serve as moderator.

Panelists will discuss how what we say about God — and how we say it — reveals much about our national character, principles and beliefs.

Both Fr. Massa and Lyerly were interviewed for the “God in America” series, a joint project of PBS’s “Front-line” and “The American Experi-ence.” The landmark series explored the intersection of religion and public

life in America, from the first Euro-pean settlements to the election of Barack Obama.

Lyerly and Fr. Massa contributed to the series’ sections on 19th and early 20th century America, commenting on the religious divide that arose after Charles Darwin’s publication of The Origin of Species. Fr. Massa also was in-terviewed about religious prejudice and anti-Catholicism in New York public schools in the 1800s, while Lyerly spoke on the Civil War and slavery.

“Negotiating God-Talk in Ameri-ca,” which is free and open to the public, is sponsored by the School of Theology and Ministry, the Boisi Center for Reli-gion and American Public Life and the Office of Marketing Communications.

—Kathleen Sullivan

BY SEAN SMITH CHRONICLE EDITOR

Boston College will be the re-pository for an archive of docu-ments that chronicle the decom-missioning of Northern Ireland’s paramilitary groups — widely re-garded as one of the most crucial steps on the road to peace in that troubled region.

The documents are from the Independent International Com-mission on Decommissioning (IICD), appointed in 1997 to oversee the process of putting “be-yond use” weapons used by com-batants involved in the violence and aggression that marked the three decades of sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland known as “The Troubles.”

Over the next decade, as the 1998 Good Friday Agreement was being implemented, the IICD worked with the Provisional Irish Republican Army, Loyalist Vol-unteer Force, Ulster Volunteer Force, Ulster Defense Association and other paramilitary organiza-tions in Northern Ireland to verify that their weapons — including rifles, machine guns, explosives and missiles — were destroyed.

The commission’s voluminous documents from this undertak-ing — which include both Com-mission deliberations, as well as a few personal notebooks kept by IICD members — will now be housed in the Special Collec-tions of Boston College’s John J. Burns Library. The decision to donate the materials was approved by the Irish Minister for Justice Alan Shatter, the British Secre-tary of State for Northern Ireland Owen Peterson and Director of the Northern Ireland Office Hil-ary Jackson. The collection will be curated over time, and possibly digitized so that the documents may eventually be available, at least in part, on the Internet for scholars everywhere.

University Professor of History Thomas Hachey, executive direc-tor of the Boston College Center for Irish Programs, worked closely with Sean Aylward, secretary gen-eral of Ireland’s Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform, to help secure the archive.

Hachey described the docu-ments as an incredibly valuable collection for future studies on

the era of “The Troubles.” “What the contents of the archive will re-veal are the subtle nuances in the recorded deliberations that reflect the personal dispositions, reason-ing and strategic maneuvers of the various participants during the negotiations.”

The real significance of the commission’s accomplishment “lies in the fact that the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, as well as the subsequent sustainability of the Northern Ireland Assem-bly and power sharing Executive,” said Hachey, “would have been fatally compromised without the IICD’s contribution to the peace process.”

Under Irish and British law, the archive could be inaccessible for a period of 30 years, a provi-sion that comports with the em-bargo on government archives in much of the world at present, Hachey said. There will, however, be periodic review that may grant earlier access if approved by the appropriate Anglo-Irish authori-ties.

Given the controversy that would ensue over locating the ar-chive in Dublin or Belfast, Hachey explained, Boston College repre-sented a logical alternative, given its ties to Ireland and Northern Ireland: the Center’s Irish Stud-ies Program faculty exchange program with Queens University Belfast; the Irish Institute’s feder-ally funded executive leadership program for participants from North and South as part of the Department of State’s peace and reconciliation program; and the multiple initiatives in Northern Ireland overseen by the BC-Ire-land office in Dublin.

In addition, Hachey said, Burns Library is recognized as having the most diverse and comprehensive holdings relating to Northern Ire-land in the Western Hemisphere. These include the Center for Irish Programs’ oral history archive of Irish Republican Army and Ulster Volunteer Force participants; pri-vate papers of various Northern Irish poets and writers; the Bob-by Hanvey photograph archive on “The Troubles”; the William Van Vorris papers; the William F. Stout papers; the Canon Rogers pamphlets on Northern Ireland; and the new Ulster Movement Archive.

Thomas Hachey, left, and Robert O’Neill flank Aaro Suonio, left, and Tauno Ni-eminen, members of the International Commission on Decommissioning who presented the commission’s papers to Boston College. (Photo by Gary Gilbert)

Archive Strengthens BC’s Resources on ‘The Troubles’

Panel Discussion on ‘God-Talk in America’ April 28

From Book to the Big ScreenWith the premiere of ‘The Broken Tower’ on Friday, BC’s Mariani realizes unlikely dream

University Professor of English Paul Mariani, whose book on Hart Crane was adapted by James Franco for a film premiering on campus tomorrow. (Photo by Gary Wayne Gilbert)

6

The BosTon College

ChronicleAPRIL 14, 2011

BY ED HAYWARD STAFF WRITER

For more than 50 years, what today is known as the Institute for Scientific Research has quietly gone about its business of helping a range of government and academic insti-tutions better understand the space “between the surface of the earth and the center of the sun,” says ISR Director Patricia Doherty.

With a 60-person staff featuring some of the leading researchers in their fields, the institute focuses on events in space – like solar flares, geomagnetic storms and hurricane-like outbursts on the surface of the sun – and their impact on the tech-nologies earth-bound humans rely upon on to forecast weather, nav-igate, and communicate, among other tasks.

But for most of its existence, the institute has been largely invisible to the rest of BC — until now.

This semester, nearly 40 ISR staffers are relocating from offices and labs at a downsizing Hanscom Air Force Base in Bedford to new workspace in Kenny Cottle Library on the Newton Campus. In ad-dition, ISR experts are teaching courses and offering some of BC’s most accomplished undergraduate scientists unique opportunities to conduct research at the institute, said Doherty.

“For the first time in the his-tory of ISR, we’ll actually all be together,” said Doherty, who works at the ISR offices in St. Clem-

ent’s Hall. “That’s exciting, and we thank [Provost and Dean of Facul-ties Cutberto Garza] for the oppor-tunity to be together by renovating space at Kenny Cottle Library.”

Bringing ISR staff to Newton Campus will give the institute a chance to “open our doors to the University community,” said Doherty, adding that ISR was orig-inally formed to administer a large research grant and, unlike other types of centers and institutes, nev-er integrated into BC’s undergradu-ate programming.

“With our move to the Newton Campus,” she said, “one of our goals is to increase our presence in the academic community so more

students can be involved in our work and to enable more interac-tion with faculty.”

One of the most prolific grant-winning units on campus, the in-stitute brings in between $5 million and $7 million each year, receiving contracts to conduct research into the evolution of ionospheric struc-tures, which Doherty describes as the space environment that starts at about 200 kilometers and extends out to interstellar space. Condi-tions in this region are crucial to the world’s fleet of satellites and the technology they support, such as global positioning systems and air traffic navigation.

ISR funders have included the Air Force Office of Scientific Re-search, Office for Naval Research, the Naval Research Laboratory, NASA, the Federal Aviation Ad-ministration and the National Sci-ence Foundation, as well as private industry.

In 1954, a BC math professor, Rene Marcou, formed the Iono-spheric Research Laboratory to sup-port a $5,000 grant to map the ionosphere and define its effect on radio waves, work that continues to this day, says Doherty. In the 1960s and 70s, the unit was called the Space Data Analysis Laboratory; in the late 1980s it was the Institute for Space Research, before giving way to the ISR label in the 1990s.

The institute’s current research initiatives stretch across the globe, including senior physicist Cesar Valladares’ project to design and

deploy a network of ground-based scientific sensors across South America that provide measure-ments of the low-latitude upper atmospheric regions where many of the key physics questions of the ionosphere remain unsolved. In addition, Doherty and ISR team members Endawoke Yizengaw Kassie and Charles Carrano are working closely with several African universities to create a similar net-work on that continent and to pro-vide training in the use of satellite navigation for scientific exploration and for practical applications with societal benefits such as navigation, precision farming, mapping and surveying, and emergency location services.

ISR researchers hold leadership positions with some of the top sci-entific organizations in the world, including the Institute of Naviga-tion, where Doherty serves as vice president, the International Union of Radio Scientists, the Internation-al Astronomical Union —where ISR senior scientist Dave Webb served as president for three years — and the American Geophysical Union, where senior physicist Su-nanda Basu sits on the board of di-rectors. Several ISR staff members are also recipients of prestigious awards from Air Force sponsors, including senior physicists Frank Marcos, Bill Burke and Santimay Basu. ISR scientists have published more than 50 papers a year in peer reviewed scientific journals.

As ISR expands it role on cam-

pus, some of these experts will be interacting more with students, particularly in the classroom. For the past two years, Research As-tronomer Tom Kuchar has taught an astronomy class to students in the Department of Earth and Envi-ronmental Sciences. There are also pending proposals for an under-graduate course on space weather and for a graduate level space phys-ics course, Doherty says.

“We’ve been interacting with Pat and scientists at ISR in a few ways over the last couple of years, and we look forward to building on those interactions,” said Earth and Environmental Sciences De-partment Chair Associate Professor Gail Kineke. “We share interests scientifically in the broad areas of the geosciences and the research and expertise of the scientists at ISR is a good complement to some of the activities in the department.”

This year, ISR launched the Marconi Scholarship Program, named after the pioneering radio wave researcher. Two undergradu-ates are currently conducting re-search through the program and two additional students are expect-ed to join in the work.

“We welcome the opportunity to connect with students and our colleagues on the faculty,” says Doherty, “and we now have the chance to open the institute up more and make those connections.”

Contact Ed Hayward at [email protected]

BY REID OSLIN STAFF WRITER

Three members of the Boston College Jesuit Community opened their hearts – and their memories — to a University audience on March 31 for a personal, insight-ful, and often poignant discussion about their vocations as members of the Society of Jesus.

University President William P. Leahy, SJ, Vice President for University Mission and Ministry Jack Butler, SJ, and scholastic Jer-emy Zipple ’00, a student in BC’s School of Theology and Ministry (STM), offered their unique per-spectives on their lives as Jesuits. They described how their indi-vidual journeys to the order began, whether by answering a life-long call to serve God, searching for the right opportunity to share a fam-ily’s love and concern for others — or, in one case, through a chance meeting with a BC Jesuit priest.

“The priesthood to me is about mission,” Fr. Leahy said during the hour-long panel discussion spon-sored by the Church in the 21st Century Center, STM, the The-ology Department, Alumni Asso-ciation and Center for Ignatian Spirituality. “It’s about serving. It’s about trying to respond to God’s call.”

That call came early in his life, he said: “Some of my earliest mem-ories were thinking about being a

priest. When I was in high school – I went to a public high school – I didn’t even know how to become a priest, so I went off to college.”

After a year at Jesuit-run Creigh-ton University, the young Iowa native made a decision: “I knew I was not go-ing to return there as a sophomore. I would either go to be a diocesan priest in the Diocese of Des Moines or I would follow up in this new interest in the Jesuits. There was a desire – a sense of calling.”

Fr. Leahy said that a Jesuit men-tor at Creighton counseled him to

return home and contemplate his decision for a month. “There was no big pressure,” he said. “It was all about what was in my heart.

“At the end of the month, I went back to Creighton and went through the application process. I was accepted in July and entered a month later. In all of the time since, I have al-ways had this

abiding desire to be a Jesuit priest.”Fr. Butler compared his initial

interest in the Jesuits to “the way that people fall in love and get married.”

Said Fr. Butler, “I fell in love first with the concept of the God that I saw working in people’s lives. My own family – my grandmoth-ers in particular – had all sorts of love in them. They never worried about themselves. Quite honestly – through selfishness – I wanted that. I wanted to be empowered to love others.”

As intrigued as he was by the thought of being a religious, Fr. Butler said he resisted the idea. But long conversations with the New England Province’s James Kane, SJ, convinced him he had “found a home” in the society.

“To be a Jesuit priest is to meet people where they are,” said Fr. Butler, who has worked in a hospital psychiatric ward, as a prison chaplain, and as a vocations counselor among many other as-signments. “I have had some bad days [as a priest], but I have had far more good days.”

Zipple recalled his 1995 visit to BC, while he was weighing an offer to enroll as a Presidential Scholar, and how he happened to sit at a table with Vice President and Special Assistant to the President William B. Neenan, SJ.

“I just remember thinking ‘This guy is not like any other priest I had met before,’” said Zipple, who has written, produced and directed documentary films for National Geographic Television. “He had this breadth of knowledge; he was

an economist – which is something I was thinking of studying; and he had just a wonderful sense of humor. Bill was the first Jesuit I had ever met and I think he is still a model for what attracted me to the society.

“The Jesuits I have met are in-credibly talented in their academic disciplines and normal, happy, joy-ful people,” he said. “Yet, they are also men of faith. That model of a priest appeals to me.”

The presentation, which drew an overflow audience of more than 200 to the Heights Room in Corcoran Commons, was moder-ated by Michael Broughton, SJ, di-rector of the Boston College Cen-ter for Ignatian Spirituality.

Contact Reid Oslin at [email protected]

The Boston College Police Department will hold its annual auction of abandoned property on April 30 in the Walsh Hall Function Room. Items can be previewed from 8:30-9 a.m.; the auction will run from 9 a.m. until completion. All sales are cash only. Proceeds will be donated to the Boston Col-lege Campus School and other charities.

Institute for Scientific Research Opening Its Doors to BC Community

“One of our goals is to increase

our presence in the academic com-

munity so more students can be in-

volved in our work and to enable

more interaction with faculty,” says

ISR Director Patricia Doherty.

Kat

heri

ne C

. Coh

en

BCPD Auction Is April 30

Three Jesuits Talk About ‘Answering the Call’

(L-R) University President William P. Leahy, SJ, Vice President for University Mission and Ministry Jack Butler, SJ, and scholastic Jeremy Zipple ’00, a stu-dent in BC’s School of Theology and Ministry, at the March 31 panel discus-sion “Three Jesuits: Who Do They Say They Are? Personal Perspectives.”

Just

in K

nigh

t

“The priesthood to

me is about mission.

It’s about serving. It’s

about trying to respond

to God’s call.”

—William P. Leahy, SJ

The BosTon College

ChronicleAPRIL 14, 2011 7

NOTA BENE

JOB LISTINGS

The following are among the most recent positions posted by the De-partment of Human Resources. For more information on employment opportunities at Boston College, see http://www.bc.edu/offices/hr:

Events Manager, Center for Corporate Citizenship

Director, Annual Capital Projects, Fa-cilities Management

Housing Assignments Specialist, Resi-dential Life

Assistant Manager, Residential Life

Associate Vice President, Residential Life

Associate Director, Classes & Re-unions, Law School - Alumni and Development

Web Developer, Office of Marketing Communications

Research Technician, Biology De-partment

NEWSMAKERSProf. Marc Landy (Political Science) discussed President Obama’s approach to the threat of a federal government shutdown with Fox News Boston and the Christian Science Monitor.

Prof. James Mahalik (LSOE) was interviewed by WBUR-FM about research suggesting popular culture’s emphasis on masculinity is leading men to lead unhealthier lives.

Prof. Peter Skerry (Political Science) offered his views to Voice of America on efforts by lawmakers in more than a dozen US states try to ban the Is-lamic religious and civil code known as Sharia.

CBS “Sunday Morning” interviewed Sloan Center on Aging & Work Re-search Director Jacquelyn James on a center study showing that older un-employed workers are having more trouble finding work, as companies favor less-experienced, cheaper can-didates.

Center on Wealth and Phi-lanthropy Director Prof. Paul Schervish (Sociology) and Associate Director Robert Kenny discussed their study of the attitudes of the super rich — previewed in the April issue of The Atlantic — on National Public Radio’s “On Point.” Assoc. Prof. Jonathan Laurence (Po-litical Science) published a piece in Foreign Policy on the danger posed by European leaders’ attacks on “multi-culturalism.”

The American Conference for Irish Studies (ACIS) has awarded Adjunct Associate Professor of History Robert Savage the James S. Donnelly Sr. Prize for Best Book in History and Social Sciences, in rec-ognition of his 2010 work A Loss of Innocence? Television and Irish Society, 1960-72.

ACIS praised the book — which explores how television helped facilitate the moderniza-tion of Ireland in the 1960s, while undermining its longstanding conservative political, cultural and social consensus — for “meticulous use of historical archives, careful engagement with secondary sources, and interviews with key lead-ing figures.” A Loss of Innocence “is particularly impressive in its scope that traces the effects of the same medium in the very different, but connected contexts of both northern and southern states as well as in its interdisciplinary appeal.”

The award was presented during the 2011 ACIS international meet-ing, held March 30-April 2 at The University of Wisconsin, Madison. A multidisciplinary scholarly organization, ACIS has some 800 members in the United States, Ireland, Canada and other countries.

Louise McMahon Ahearn Professor of Social Work James Lubben has been selected as a Fellow of the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare (AASWSW).

Lubben is a leading scholar in social geron-tology and pursues research examining social support networks among older populations. He developed the Lubben Social Network Scale, an abbreviated measure designed for both research and clinical use among older populations that has used for studies in Asia, Australia, Europe and North America. In addition to chairing the Graduate School of Social Work doctoral program, he is director of the Boston College Institute on Aging, and director of the Hartford Doctoral Fellows Program.

Lubben will be formally inducted into the AASWSW — an hon-orific society of distinguished scholars and practitioners dedicated to achieving excellence in the field of social work and social welfare — on May 6 in Washington, DC.

The Jakarta Post reported on a talk by Prof. James Morris (Theology) on Indonesia’s need for wise politicians to encourage Indonesians to refrain from committing acts of religious intoler-ance.

PUBLICATIONSAsst. Prof. Seung-A Annie Jin (Com-munication) published the following journal articles: “The impact of 3D virtual haptics in marketing” in Psy-chology & Marketing; “The influence of regulatory fit and interactivity on brand satisfaction and trust in e-health marketing inside 3D virtual worlds (Second Life)” in CyberPsychology, Be-

havior, & Social Networking; “I feel present. Therefore, I experience flow: A structural equation modeling ap-proach to flow and presence in elec-tronic games” in Journal of Broadcast-ing & Electronic Media; and “I feel more connected to the physically ideal

mini me than the mirror-image mini me” in CyberPsychology, Be-havior, & Social Networking.

Assoc. Prof. Kevin Ohi (English) published Henry James and the

Queerness of Style.

“Exile and the Unburdening of Guilt,” by Prof. Maxim D. Shrayer (Slavic and Eastern Languages), was reprinted in Short Story Criticism.

TIME AND A HALFFounders Professor in Theology James F. Keenan, SJ, gave the 11th Annual Portman Lecture at the University of San Diego, “Teaching ‘HIV/AIDS and Ethics’ at American Universities Today.”

Neenan Professor of Economics James Anderson presented “Terms of Trade and Global Efficiency Effects of Free Trade Agreements, 1990-2002” to invited seminars at Nottingham University and Oxford University, and presented the 2011 Nottingham Lec-tures in International Economics based on the forthcoming Annual Review of Economics article “The Gravity Model.”

BC BRIEFING

BY KATHLEEN SULLIVAN STAFF WRITER

School of Theology and Min-istry Professor of Historical The-ology Khaled Anatolios has been selected as one of only seven Henry Luce III Fellows in Theology for 2011-2012.

The Henry Luce III Fellows in Theology program supports the research of leading scholars in theological studies whose projects offer significant and innovative contributions to the church and the general public.

“I was thrilled to get the phone call that I had been awarded this fellowship,” said Anatolios. “I love teaching, but this fellowship will afford me the opportunity to con-duct serious and rigorous scholar-ship that can be shared with other scholars.”

The Luce fellows engage in year-long research and then gather at the annual Luce Fellow Con-ference, where they will present their findings for publication and discuss with current and past Luce Fellows how their work may im-pact the life of the church and the broader society.

Anatolios’ project, Deification Through the Cross: An Eastern Christian Soteriology, will entail the development of a manuscript about the meaning of the cross in Eastern Christianity.

“Many modern scholars con-tend that Eastern Christians down-play the significance of the cross in favor of the resurrection and Western Christians do the reverse,” said Anatolios. “I believe that char-acterization distorts the reality.”

Anatolios, an Eastern Christian, says he will write a comprehen-sive treatment of soteriology — the doctrine of salvation through Christ — that will demonstrate that the main historical currents of Eastern soteriology bear central reference to the salvific value of

the cross. “Khaled’s richly deserved selec-

tion as a Luce Fellow offers a quite distinguished recognition of a remarkable academic career, and a mark of approval for STM’s es-teemed faculty,” said STM Dean Rev. Mark Massa, SJ. “I couldn’t be happier.”

Anatolios’ teaching and research interests are early Christian the-ology (Greek fathers, Augustine, Patristic Exegesis), contemporary Trinitarian theology and Chris-tology, Eastern Christianity and Moslem-Christian Dialogue. He is the author of the forthcoming Retrieving Nicaea: The Development and Meaning of Trinitarian Doc-trine; Athanasius: The Coherence of his Thought, and the Athana-sius volume of the Routledge Early Church Fathers series. He also is the editor of the forthcoming The Trinity in the Life of the Church.

Anatolios is on the steering committee of the Boston Collo-quy in Historical Theology and a member of the board of directors of the Pappas Patristic Institute at the Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology.

He earned bachelor’s and mas-ter’s degrees from the University of Toronto and a doctorate in system-atic theology from Boston College.

Contact Kathleen Sullivan at [email protected]

Leading arms control experts will offer their views on the North Korean, Pakistani and Iranian nuclear controversies, and the prospects for an international treaty prohibiting production of fissile material, at a conference taking place at Boston College tomorrow.

Sponsored by the Political Science Association, the conference “The Obama Administration and the Future of Nuclear Arms Control” will include a keynote address by Marcie Berman Ries, the deputy assistant secretary of state for nuclear strategy.

Other speakers include: Christopher Hill, dean of the University of Denver Korbel School of International Studies; New York Times Wash-ington correspondent David Sanger; Ollie Heinonen, senior fellow at the Harvard University Belfer Center; Ploughshares Fund President Joseph Cirincione; Princeton University Professor Frank von Hippell, co-chairman of the International Panel on Fissile Materials; Hudson Institute Senior Fellow Christopher Ford; and Michael Guhin, senior negotiator at the State Department International Security and Non-Proliferation Bureau.

Vice Provost for Undergraduate Academic Affairs Donald Hafner will provide opening remarks at the conference, which begins at 10 a.m. in the Fulton Hall Honors Library. BC Political Science faculty members Timothy Crawford, Jennifer Erickson and Robert Ross will moderate the conference’s three panel discussions.

The event is free and open to the public, but non-BC guests must register in advance by e-mail to [email protected]. For more information e-mail [email protected] or [email protected].

—Office of News & Public Affairs

Thomas P. O’Neill Professor of American Politics Shep Melnick joined Rosemary O’Neill — daughter of the late Thomas P. O’Neill and a former State Department political officer — and Raymond Schroth, SJ, biographer of late Boston College Law School Dean and Congressman Robert Drinan, SJ, for a lecture, “Reclaiming Politics as Service,” on April 6. (Photo by Caitlin Cunningham)

Khaled Anatolios

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STM Faculty Member Earns Luce Fellowship

Nuclear Issues On Agenda for Arms Control Forum

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The BosTon College

ChronicleAPRIL 14, 2011

BC SCENES

DATE TIME &

LOOKING AHEAD

The annual Black Family Weekend will take place to-night through Sunday, fea-turing a panel discussion on “Transformative Leadership,” a 40th anniversary celebration of the Black Student Forum and a talk on black leader-ship by Georgetown University Professor of Sociology Michael Eric Dyson, and other events. See http://www.bc.edu/clubs/bsf/38th.html for more details.

Legendary documentarian Frederick Wiseman, above, will screen his 2006 film “State Legislature” and lead a discus-sion afterwards on Saturday at 10 a.m. in Cushing 001. See http://www.bc.edu/centers/cloughcenter/events.html.

The Irish Studies and American Studies program will sponsor the lecture “Baseball and the Business of American Inno-cence” on April 19 at 4:30 p.m. in Connolly House. E-mail [email protected].

Natalie Jeremijenko, an artist who works at the intersection of contemporary art, biochem-istry, physics, neuroscience, and engineering, will give a work-shop on April 26 at 2 p.m. To sign up (the location will be an-nounced upon RSVP), e-mail [email protected]; more informa-tion available at http://www.bc.edu/sustainbc.

The Heinz Bluhm Annual Lecture series will host a talk, “Totalitarian Art: What it is, by Comparison with Islamic Art,” by Brandeis Professor and for-mer Iraqi dissident Kanan Ma-kiya on April 27 at 4:30 p.m. in Devlin 008. E-mail [email protected].

For more on Boston College campus events, see events.bc.edu or www.bc.edu/bcinfo.

BY ROSANNE PELLEGRINI STAFF WRITER

More than 1,000 Boston College students, faculty and administrators will display their artistic talents and interests at the University’s 13th an-nual Arts Festival April 28-30.

The festival, which last year drew more than 16,500 BC alumni and area residents, includes over 80 events — most of them free — that showcase performing, visual and literary arts programs. Professional artists, many of them alumni, also will take part.

Each afternoon, music, dance and theater events fill O’Neill Plaza, the fes-tival’s hub; each eve-ning there are several featured events. In ad-dition, art exhibitions and demonstrations are open all afternoon, with exhibitions continuing into the evening; there also are daily literary readings.

This year’s special guest is best-selling author Chuck Hogan, a 1989 BC alumnus whose novel Prince of Thieves was adapted for the film “The Town,” directed by and starring Ben Affleck. Ho-gan will be presented with the an-nual Boston College Arts Council Alumni Award for Distinguished Achievement from University Presi-dent William P. Leahy, SJ, at an arts awards celebration and public reception on April 29 from 4-6:30 p.m. in O’Neill Plaza. Awards will also be presented in recognition of

the artistic accomplishments of BC students and faculty.

Hogan’s public appearances during the festival will include a Q&A following a screening of “The Town” on April 28 at 7 p.m. in Devlin 008, and a panel discussion — sponsored by the Lowell Lec-tures Humanities Series — on April 29 at 7 p.m. in Devlin 008. The panel, “Chuck Hogan’s Prince of Thieves and ‘The Town’: A Boston Crime Story as Novel and Movie,” also includes English professors Carlo Rotella and Chris Wilson.

Activities for families with chil-dren of all ages will be offered on

April 30 from noon to 5 p.m.: a parade led by BC’s March-ing Band, arts and crafts, story hours for children and teens, and an origi-nal theater produc-tion — most ap-propriate for 5th to 8th graders — on bullying, written by Theatre Depart-

ment faculty member Luke Jor-gensen and presented by students in his Creative Dramatics class.

This year’s festival, according to organizers, features a greater infu-sion of professional mentors beyond BC faculty and staff members. They include artists, among them alumni, who have been on campus this spring to work with students in various genres, including a cappella, dance, improv theater and fashion. Some mentors will return to take part in the festival. The goal of this

initiative — dubbed the “Road to the Festival,” which has included workshops, master classes and other programs — is to enhance students’ creative preparation not only for the festival, which showcases this work, but for their ongoing artistic growth and development.

Examples of “Road to the Festi-val” this semester included a work-shop on choreography for perfor-mance led by Betsi Graves Aker-stein ’04, founder and director of Boston’s Urbanity Dance company; English faculty member and “slam poet” Susan Roberts’ sessions with student poets; and Boston-based

rock band Five O’Clock Shadow’s mentoring of student a cappella groups BC Dynamics and BEATS.

The festival is organized by the Arts Council and sponsored with the offices of the President, the Pro-vost and Dean of Faculties, and the Institute for the Liberal Arts.

For more information, includ-ing event locations and updates, see the festival website http://www.bc.edu/artsfestival or call ext.2-ARTS(2787). Note that the sched-ule is subject to change. Events with admission fees are indicated.

Contact Rosanne Pellegrini at [email protected]

A talk by the co-editor of a controversial new edition of Finnegan’s Wake will highlight a weekend of James Joyce celebra-tions April 16 and 17 at Boston College, including the University’s annual “Bloomsday-in-April” event that brings to life Joyce’s legend-ary book Ulysses.

Danis Rose — who collaborated with John O’Hanlon to produce the new Finnegan’s Wake — will speak at BC on April 16 at 2 p.m., as part of the Boston Joyce Forum “Joyce, Gender and History.”

The Rose-O’Hanlon edition generated a debate when it was released last year in Ireland over alterations in spelling, punctuation, syntax, placing of phrases and other aspects to “facilitate a smooth reading of the book’s allusive density and essential fabric,” according to Rose and O’Hanlon.

For information on other events at the forum, see http://joyceg-enderandhistory.wordpress.com.

The program for April 17’s “Bloomsday-in-April” includes “Joycean Moments,” dramatizations and readings from Ulysses and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and songs from Joyce’s works — with introductions by WGBH-FM host Brian O’Donovan — and a series of workshops on how to read Joyce, and a “relay reading” of Ulysses.

The afternoon ends with a screening of “Faithful Departed,” a documentary on Joyce’s Dublin based on the collection of period photographs by William Lawrence, creating a photographic im-pression of Dublin on June 16, 1904 — “Bloomsday,” the day on which Ulysses takes place.

For more on “Bloomsday-in-April,” see http://bloomsday-inapril.wordpress.com.

Both the Joyce Scholars Forum and “Bloomsday-in-April” will take place at Connolly House (300 Hammond Street), the location of Boston College’s Center for Irish Programs.

—Sean Smith

WALKING INTO THE FUTURE

Kimberly O’Neill ’13 takes visiting high school student Kiara Matier on a tour of Boston College as part of “A Day in the Life of a College Student,” co-organized by BC senior Elizabeth Yuan with the Big Sister Association of Greater Boston. The event matched BC students with high school-age “Little Sisters” and their “Big Sisters” — including Erin Hayes (left) — to talk about college life.

Photo by Caitlin CunninghamA Weekend of Joyce

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Chuck Hogan ’89 (Prince of Thieves) will make several appearances at the festival.

Song, dance and many other forms of artistic expression will be on display at the BC Arts Festival.

BC Gets Ready to Show Its Artistic Side

13th Annual Arts Festival April 28-30

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