About Bill McDonald

I’m a member of the Class of 1968. Came in as a physics major and left with a degree in another science, poli sci. Lived in Loyola, Kostka, and Williams for three years before “escaping” to an apartment in Brookline senior year. I joined the Heights as a sports writer freshman year and ended up as sports co-editor, along with classmate Tom Sugrue, for the spring and fall semesters of 1967. After Navy service and grad school, I later worked at BC for almost 20 years, in two segments, the most recent ending in 2011. As a member of the public relations staff 1974-82, I was founding editor of Boston College Magazine. I'm now retired in North San Diego County, growing blogs.

Denver Eagle

Terry Erwin, BC Eagle

Classmate Brian Froelich reported back in December about a visit to Denver and a reunion with classmate and football star Terry Erwin. (Obviously, I have been very tardy in posting this, for which I apologize to Brian, Terry, and all of you. Judith beat me to it in Class Notes!) Here’s Brian’s report:

“I went to Denver in mid-December to attend my wife Jeannie’s last performance with her championship barbershop quartet. (They are retiring after 15 years together. See here for more. ) I contacted Terry Erwin from our class who lives out there. I hadn’t seen Terry in 50 years. We had dinner together and then we both went to the show and an after-show party. Terry played for the Denver Broncos for a couple years and stayed in the area in the real estate business.

(L-R) Terry Erwin, Jeannie and Brian Froelich

“It was a great night. I was a little worried that Terry might not be interested in a barbershop singing show. But he was a great sport and, as it turned out, Terry’s dad and uncles were barbershop singers and singing was part of his family holiday tradition. Terry actually remembered some of the song tags from those days. (And his unrehearsed renditions were only slightly ragged!)

“We had a fine dinner before the show. Of course we reminisced about the 50 years. Terry looks great. And he has a terrific group of kids and grandkids. He had some great stories to tell.

“He told me that when he was drafted by the Broncos the team had also signed classmate Joe Divito and later traded for Brendan McCarthy. At one point in the season, the starting halfback (all-pro Floyd Little) and the starting quarterback were out with injuries. Terry (at running back) and Joe (quarterback) were on the field and into the huddle comes Brendan. At that moment the Denver Broncos were fielding an all-BC backfield that was the same one that started games as far back as our freshman year team in 1964! Apparently a lineman looked up and said, “Ok, now you Eagles better make something good happen!”

“Terry also said his daughter (Shelly ’87) was tri-captain of the BC swimming team and a classmate of Doug Flutie (Editor note: Doug was ’86 so same era, not same class). Terry told his daughter to tell Doug that since he was wearing Terry’s #22 jersey number that he better be play well. Apparently she actually did and, as we all know, he actually did. So Terry claims total credit for Flutie’s success.

“No meeting of grads is left without a Father Hanrahan story. When Terry was first bringing his daughter to BC he saw Father and went up to introduce her. Father mentioned that he started as Dean of Discipline when our class came in and was just then retiring. He added that it was apparently just in time since he was sure he ‘could not deal with another Erwin!’

“One of his sons was a world-class snowboarder.

“Terry told about how his (dearly loved) high school coach, who was a famous BC football grad (Roy Norden ’50), maneuvered that Terry got to BC and not to some other schools by carefully editing his submitted game films! For instance a game in which Terry gained over 300 yards was ‘accidentally’ left out of some tapes. Terry has since been inducted into his Beverly High School Hall of Fame.

“He talked about once after graduation visiting Brendan McCarthy in Washington, D.C., and trying to keep up with Brendan’s cigar smoking and whiskey drinking — always a challenge. There was more than a dozen other names and ‘events’ mentioned and discussed with much laughter. He mentioned fondly his friendship with Chris Markey back in the day.

“And, far from the financial heyday that professional sports is today, Terry only got paid about $14,000 with the Broncos and actually left football to make more money from a business job offer!

“In any event it was a night of good food, great stories, and fun singing (and a little wine!). Much like 50 years ago.”

Reunion, Day 3

Rose Lincoln Photo

Day 3, and last day, of our reunion took place on the very date — June 3 — on which we graduated from BC 50 years earlier. Good timing. :)

Not quite Baldwin . . . or Margo

The schedule for Sunday was light. A “Reunion Jazz Brunch” began at 9 am in the University Conference Center, the building on the Brighton Campus that also includes the McMullen Museum of Art and had been the residence of Boston’s archbishops. Newton alumnae attended Mass in Trinity Chapel on the Newton Campus at 10, followed by a “Garden Party Brunch” on the Stuart/Barat Lawn. Classmates also could have attended an “Agape Latte Grande” at the Cadigan Alumni Center, where they would have joined Karen Kelly Kiefer ’82, associate director, Church in the 21st Century Center, in conversation over coffee about the intersection of faith and everyday life.

I, on the other hand, was on the road. My older daughter, son-in-law, and two granddaughters picked me up early morning to go south for a visit to my sister and her husband at their home in Edgartown on Martha’s Vineyard. Hence no video from these reunion events. 

But there are some pictures from the brunch. The original setup was outside, but I’ve been told there was light rain and many went inside. Here’s a gallery.

I don’t know about you, but overall I didn’t have enough time to spend with enough people. Maybe there would never have been “enough time” in practical terms. I saw old friends and met new ones, which was a pretty good result. I hope you had a similar experience and that those connections continue. Can this blog and the Facebook group page help do that? Please share suggestions you have in how they might.

Go Golden Eagles!

Reunion, Day 2 — the party

Day 2 of our reunion culminated in the 50th Anniversary Party, Saturday night, back where our reunion began, in McElroy. It was a “party.” No real structure — just people talking, eating, gamboling about, some dancing.

The video below (10:48) reflects much of the same intent as the others, i.e., show as many classmates as possible. There was particular attention paid as well to the photo booth, which had its distinctive share of color and fun.

This was the result of the photo booth visit highlighted in the video.

There were some new people at the party, classmates who may not have attended the Golden Eagle investiture and other events of the day before, or even other events earlier on Saturday. Included among them was Ed Markey, who made it to one of the world’s most exclusive groups, the 100-member United States Senate. And a couple of BC basketball players, Jim Kissane and Steve Adelman, who stand out in the video by standing taller than any of the rest of us, I’m quite sure.

Senator Markey, who unknowingly ended up sitting next to me for dinner, shared an anecdote about the hall in which we were eating that I found somewhat poignant. Soon after Ed won election to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1976, he said, then-BC President J. Donald Monan, SJ, asked him to speak to a group of prospective or newly admitted students. That event took place in the very hall in which Ed shared the anecdote. Noting back then that it was likely the first time any of those students had been in the Main Dining Hall, Ed said, he told them it was the first time for him, too.

That was an expression of something that, during the course of working on this blog, I came to appreciate more was an unfortunate aspect of our overall BC experience as students. Segments of our class — resident/commuter, male/female, A&S/CBA/Education/Nursing — went through those years in “silos,” separated in several respects. As a student, Ed Markey, a dayhop from Malden, had never been in the main dining hall, and that status was shared by many classmates. Many of us overcame aspects of that relative isolation, of which the dining hall was only an example, through extracurriculars, etc., but many did not. I expect that nearly all of our classmates, particularly women, are very happy that BC has changed so dramatically in the absence of those silos.

Here, too, is a gallery of photos from the evening. If you have some to share, please do.

Here are some photos submitted by Judith Anderson Day, our erstwhile and forever class correspondent. She was too busy having fun to go around and interview people. Send her your memories of reunion. And do it soon. She has a deadline coming up!

Tomorrow, there will be a post about Day 3. Much more subdued.

Reunion, Day 2a

Saturday lunch tent, Bapst Lawn. Rose Lincoln Photo

The only full day of activities during our reunion was Saturday, June 2. Of course, most classmates started the day by joining other, younger reunion attendees at the “Alumni 5K Fun Run.” I don’t know the actual number of classmates who did that. I didn’t, but a shout out to at least one of our classmates who ran the run.

(This post and video cover the morning and afternoon activities of Day 2. Coming up will be the party that evening and then Sunday’s brief schedule.)

That same morning, I joined other classmates at the Hillside Cafe, where Golden Eagles were able to get free Starbucks coffee. Still others may have partaken of other early morning events, e.g., a spin hour, yoga hour, and AA meeting.

After coffee, I joined others on the lawn outside Burns Library (the northern end of Bapst) for the Veterans’ Reunion Reception and Ceremony. (With the myriad events during the day, I attended several, but couldn’t do them all. The video below is, therefore, of where I went. Pictures from BC and Rose Lincoln help fill out the coverage of the day, but some things, I’m sure, are missed here. If you have photos from other events that day, please share.)

The veterans’ ceremony, at 9:30, was for all veterans attending the reunion, but the large majority of attendees were members of our class. We graduated during the height of the Vietnam War and when draft deferments for graduate school had been removed. Quite a few of us had gone into the service.

Alumni veterans, most of them classmates.

Presiding at the veterans’ event were Dan Arkins ’81, a colonel in the Army Reserve, and George Harrington ’80, colonel in the Massachusetts Army National Guard, co-chairs of the BC Veterans Alumni Network. Speaker was Michael Lochhead ’93, executive vice president of BC, who had served in the Army prior to enrolling at BC and was among classmates celebrating their 25 anniversary of graduation that weekend. There is more coverage of the veterans event in the video below (7 mins.), as well as video of the midday barbecue on Bapst Lawn and the luncheon sponsored by our classmates from the School of Nursing.

Following the veteran’s ceremony, I joined about two dozen classmates for a “conversation” among ourselves and with a few members of the Class of 2017 and other “Graduates of the Last Decade” (GOLD) at the Fulton Honors Library. The idea was to allow conversation to move beyond nostalgia to something where different generations could share memories and insights about their “BC experience.” This was a first-timer, so it had some of the weaknesses of such activities, but it could also have been the first of what might become a tradition of Golden Eagles and young Eagles talking with each other.

(Often, when I passed by the reunion “help desk” in Stayer Hall, I noticed students staffing the desk were alone . . . and apparently bored. I would then stop in and start telling them about life at BC in the Sixties and things that were going on in the country and world in that era. I would sometimes start with something like, “If you think things are in tumult now . . . .” There were quite a few “OMG”s expressed.)

Joining us at the conversation were at least two members of the Class of 2017, Kristina Downey and Kristin Morrisseau, and several other younger alumni. (Kristina was one of a couple of young alumni who told me that a history course on Vietnam [HS 111: “Vietnam: America’s War at Home and Abroad”] has been one of the most popular courses at BC these days. Kristina, in fact, was so taken by the subject matter, she told me, that she will travel to Vietnam and Southeast Asia this fall.)

Newton classmates also held “conversations” that morning, and classmates attended a presentation on the restoration of the original BC Eagle (atop the pillar in front of Gasson). And at the same time as our class conversation, BC Athletic Director Martin Jarmond was telling classmates and others about what was “Inside BC Athletics.” You can tell from the photo below that this topic appealed to a certain “type.” (Of course, I would have been there were it not for the “conversation.”)

Martin Jarmond, center, and a flock of Golden Eagles.

Here are some additional photos from the barbecue and the day.

Following the barbecue and Nursing luncheon, as well as our Newton classmates’ “Tea Party” luncheon, Nursing alumni held a “Kelleher Award Ceremony” and Education alumni held a session on “How Do We Interest More Kids in Science?” There was another iteration of the campus bus tour and, at 4, the Alumni Reunion Mass wrapped up the pre-class party day.

Here’s a gallery of photos from the Mass.

Time to get ready for the party!

Reunion, Day 1

A toast to the newest Golden Eagles! Rose Lincoln Photo

Reunion started for us June 1 at midday. It was the first and, perhaps for many, the most significant event of the weekend — induction into the Order of the Golden Eagles. Okay, that may sound a bit pretentious. What happened was each of us got a pin presented by the president of BC, William P. Leahy, SJ. We also got a hat.

And we met a lot of old, and sometimes new, friends. Over the past several months, in working on this blog, I had made the email acquaintance of several classmates I did not know previously and it was a great pleasure to meet them personally.

Here is a video from the event, as well as the evening dinner on the Campus Green. It is just over 16 minutes long. I edited it not so much for brevity but to include as many classmates as possible. I do not identify anyone in the video. I could have, but only for a minority, so I felt it was better to let you recognize yourselves. If you have a question about a particular person, contact me and maybe we can figure it out. (If you click on “BC50 Day1” at upper left, the video will open in YouTube.) There are also galleries of photos from the events of Day 1 further down.

I and my BC bowtie became a Twitter micro-sensation when the social media manager for BC’s Advancement Communications and Marketing sent out this tweet from the investiture ceremony.

I also had the unexpected and very enjoyable opportunity to reconnect two classmates who met each other after graduation while both were in the Navy, but who had not been in contact with each other since 1969-70.

Maureen Burke. Rose Lincoln Photo

Early on at the investiture, when people were milling about, I overheard someone mention that a classmate, Maureen Burke, lived in Northern California. As a Southern Californian, I decided to say hello to a fellow resident of the Golden State. After introducing ourselves, Maureen said she had lived in Sunnyvale, Cal., for 45 years. And then she added, “After BC, I was a Navy nurse. Stationed in Norfolk, Virginia, 1969.” I replied, “I was in Norfolk in 1969.” “What ship?,” she asked. “USS Biddle,” I answered. She seemed a little startled at that. “I knew someone on the Biddle,” she said. “His name was Steve.” “Curran?,” I asked. “I think so,” she said. Then I said, “He’s here!”

Steve Curran

(Steve and I had not known each other at BC. But we ended up on the same Navy ship less than a year after graduation. We would be friends now anyway because we had been shipmates, but the BC connection has added to the bond.)

I quickly found Steve and told him that Maureen Burke . . . Norfolk 1969 . . . was at the reunion. And I then hustled him over to see her. They had met each other in Norfolk, likely, as Maureen remembers, at the Officers Club.

“It was a wonderful highlight of my reunion that I got to see and talk to Steve,” Maureen said in a recent email. “It was a difficult time in those years and it was wonderful and comforting to have someone whom you could depend on to be a good friend.” In a similar email, Steve said, “Maureen went ‘above and beyond the call of duty.’ She was kind enough to introduce me to a Navy physical therapist she worked with at the Portsmouth Naval Hospital. I proceeded to date that lovely PT while I was stationed in Norfolk. So Maureen played the role of ‘match-maker’ for a lonely Naval Officer in Norfolk. What more could I expect from a fellow Eagle?”

I’m sure there were several such serendipitous “reunions” at the reunion. If you were connected to any, please share.

Here is a gallery of photos from the investiture. It’s an automatic slideshow, advancing each 10 seconds, or you can click on it to move ahead.

Following the investiture luncheon, people split up to attend several afternoon activities. Newton alumnae went for a tour of the McMullen Museum of Art, which is located in the Brighton Campus building that formerly served as the residence of the Archbishop of Boston.

A lot of classmates climbed onto BC shuttle buses for a tour of the Chestnut Hill and Brighton campuses. This bus carried an exhortation with which all of us would agree.

Following the bus tour, many classmates attended a session on BC history — “10 Things You Didn’t Know about Boston College” — offered by James O’Toole ’72, PhD’87, Professor and Charles I. Clough Millennium Chair in History. There are photos from that event in the video.

Classmates from the Woods College of Advancing Studies (the Evening College when we were students) attended a reception on the lawn at St. Mary’s late in the afternoon. And all classes attended the Alumni Welcome Dinner — “A Taste of New England” — on the Campus Green (the “dustbowl”). There are scenes from the dinner in the video and here is a gallery of additional photos from the dinner.

Okay, how many of you attended “Late Night,” 11 pm-2 am, held in Corcoran Commons? Send pictures! 

Next installment will be about Day 2 — a full and active day. 

A poem

Much about the reunion — videos and photos — soon to come, but a more poetic look back first.

Classmate Kathi Horton (Education) was inspired by our reunion to send us some thoughts about it, as well as a poem.

Kathi Horton at reunion

“I had a great time at our reunion! It was so good to see old friends and of course those whom we have kept in touch with, too. It was a classy reunion, typical of BC. The dancing was terrific! I couldn’t stay in my seat, and eventually a lot of us got up rolling along and encouraging others to do the same; ‘Stop in the name of love . . .’

Kathleen Horton, Sub Turri

“When I’m not working part-time (I retired in 2004 after 31 years in the classroom, grades 1, 2, 3, and 5, but returned part-time seven years ago. I missed the kids too much!) I write children’s poetry. In this case, though, I was inspired to write about BC. It was a good number of years ago, but I would still like to share it. BC has, and will have, a special place in my heart for giving me the best years of my life. I think this poem shows that. At least that is what I intended. I am blessed that I have a network of friends from our class of 1968, who are still a very important part of my life 50 years later.”

BC

It never ceases to touch my heart
when I drive my car by any part
of BC.
The café arouses thoughts of many friends,
French fries with mayo,
game of Whist, expensive books,
that special someone waiting or missed.
The break you need from intense thought,
of friendly faces and one you sought,
to bring you back to the real world.

“In one’s arms, you seemed to flow . . . “

Later upstairs, the ball would be
with beautiful gowns and memories
of dances fast and dances slow.
In one’s arms, you seemed to flow
around that tall and spacious room.
Children we were, all in the bloom of life;
free from worry, bills and strife.
Our innocence captured, there in the past.
We will hold fast . . .
to those times.

RFK

On the early morning of June 5, 1968, classmate and roommate Richard Sullivan shook me awake at about 3 or 4 to tell me, “Bobby Kennedy’s been shot.”

I was, of course, stunned, as I’m sure you were when you first heard. Didn’t we just experience the assassination of Martin Luther King? What’s going on? I hung on to the fact that I knew only he had been shot. Maybe he would survive. . . . No, he died 26 hours after being shot.

I post about this on this blog, because, while the shooting of RFK did not fall specifically within the time we were at BC, neither did the assassination of his brother, John F. Kennedy, in November 1963, but they were tragic bookends to our college years.

Most of us, by that time, had gone our separate ways after graduation on June 3. There was no group or institutional response, no Heights, no University gathering, as there had been when Dr. King had been killed in April.

As college students, we had some wonderful times, times we celebrate and remember during this reunion. But we also were college students during some terrible times. I’m certain we remember many of those times, too.

Commencement Ball 1968

Look, up on the ceiling.

Between the technicalities and tedium(?) of Commencement ceremonies on June 3 and the real world crashing once again on us on June 5 came several hours of magic in McElroy Commons. (We’re posting on June 4, because no one left the ball before the clock struck midnight June 3.)

The 1968 Commencement Ball took place in McElroy Commons. !? “Upstairs,” the main dining hall, featured Count Basie and his band. “Downstairs,” Eagles’ Nest(?), there was Lester Lanin and his band. Back in our day, those were two premium musical entities. McElroy may have never heard better musical sounds.

Classmates invested $15 per couple to attend. Was it worth it? Were you there? What do you remember?

Here’s a gallery of photos taken at the Ball and published in the spring supplement to the 1968 Sub Turri. If you have identifications for people in the photos, please let me know.

 

A toast to 50 years hence

Today, we’re celebrating the 50th anniversary of our graduation — a half-century to the day. This photo was taken at the Commencement Ball the night of commencement and I’d like to think this handsome couple extended then a toast to us now. Here’s to you, Golden Eagles!

Commencement 1968

The Class of 1968, assembled for the last time as students on the field of Alumni Stadium. Where were you in this crowd? Sub Turri photo.

It finally came. For good or ill, our undergraduate days at BC were coming to an end.

According to the account in the Boston Globe the following day, “Boston College Graduates 2440” (BGlobe_BCgrad_060468). In the earlier Commencement 2018 post, we had noted that BC gave out 4,287 degrees this May 21st.

The following are somewhat estimates. (Actually, I tried to count the names in the 1968 commencement program, which I still have, so that explains any errors.)

Of the 2,440 degree recipients announced by the Globe, approximately 1,462 were undergraduates. Of those, 568 were A&S, 437 CBA, 279 Education, 127 Nursing, and 51 Evening.

Among the approximately 830 graduate and professional degree recipients, there were 17 PhDs awarded: 9 in education, 3 biology, 2 economics, and 1 each in chemistry, history, and philosophy. The remaining totals for graduate and professional degrees were: Master of Arts, 209; Master of Science, 64; Master of Arts in Teaching, 19; Master of Science in Teaching, 8; Master of Education, 198; Master of Social Work, 59; and LL.B. (law degree) 256.

Kingman Brewster, president of Yale University and 1968 Commencement speaker, leads this portion of the procession. Following (r-l) are Charles Donovan, SJ, Academic Vice President; Richard Cardinal Cushing; and Michael Walsh, SJ, President. Sub Turri photo.

Kingman Brewster, president of Yale University, was an honorary degree recipient and commencement speaker. The Globe said he spoke about making more loans available to college students. (Well, that seems to have happened, perhaps to an unfortunate degree.) I don’t remember anything he said. But I do remember that he was our commencement speaker, because not that long after this day, he became somewhat immortalized in Doonesbury, the iconic comic strip by Yale graduate Gary Trudeau. Many believe the Doonesbury character, President King, is the comic personalization of president _King_man Brewster.

Other honorary degree recipients were theologian Henri deLubac, SJ; Solicitor General of the US Erwin Griswold; Rita Kelleher, retiring dean of Nursing; John McEleney, SJ, archbishop of Jamaica; Cornelius Owens of NY Telephone Co.; James Shea, Jr., chairman of Milton Bradley; and California Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Traynor.

In this post are two of the only three pictures of graduation in Sub Turri (the other photo somewhat inexplicably being of John Wissler ’57, executive director of the alumni assocation.) You must have more. Didn’t your folks take tons? Won’t you please share? :)

This photo of classmate Tom Sugrue is in classic mode.

Share if you have something like this, or, even better, candids.

Now, this is a a movie of commencement. It is very short (53 secs) and of poor quality. My younger sister took it and, as you can tell, it was at the proverbial end of a reel. But it shows a bit of the A&S procession and some of the stadium. Please let us know you have better movies.

The real world awaited. And that world showed itself in an ugly way less than 48 hours after we graduated.