A look back at Lynch School

A screen capture from the video shows Campion Hall under construction.

Back in 2002, I worked at BC’s Lynch School of Education as director of communications and alumni relations. The School celebrated its 50th anniversary that year. Part of the celebration was a gathering at which a video about the School’s half-century was shown.

I had been among the people who had worked on the video, and it had been probably at least 15 years since I had last viewed it. Until this year, when a young BC alumna doing research on the early years of women at BC, tracked me down. She had found mention of the video on a page on the BC website published in 2006, but the link there was not functional.

I remembered the guy in Media Technical Services who had put the elements of the video together and, looking on the BC website, learned Dave Corkum was now in charge of that office. A few email exchanges and he was able to send me a link to the video, which I was able to download and then put on YouTube.

The video is 22:24. It includes vintage film from the early years of the Lynch School; interviews with an alumna from the inaugural Class of 1956, other alumni, faculty, and students, as well as Carolyn and Peter Lynch; and information about programs current in 2002. It’s also a bit of a history of the University overall, of course.

The School of Ed (a Heights feature for incoming freshmen of my era [1964] asked “Who’s Ed?”) was notable for being BC’s first “professional school,” but its principal impact came from introducing women to the Chestnut Hill Campus. San Diego Eagles interested in BC history and especially alumnae may find this of interest.

I cleared putting this online with the BC Office of Communications. Their only request was that it be mentioned that the School of Education, which became the Lynch School in 2000, is now the Lynch School of Education and Human Development.

Game on, Notre Dame!

We’ve got another contest with Notre Dame . . . and it’s local.

Chapter member Bob Nascenzi ’78 (second from left, above) is president of Cristo Rey San Diego High School, set to open with its inaugural freshman class this fall. He has issued a challenge to us and to members of the local Notre Dame alumni chapter — which group of alumni can first raise $7,500 to sponsor a student at Cristo Rey.

Get more info and donate!

This is an opportunity, if you have the means, to be men and women for others in our San Diego community. The families served at Cristo Rey are getting hit the hardest financially by current conditions. Given their limited economic means, the gap between what families can be expected to contribute and the cost to educate each student amounts to $7,500 a year.

Let’s rise to the challenge and sponsor one student for the upcoming year!

Go Eagles! Beat the Irish!

 
 

‘Butts kicked’ by Bearcats

David Bailey (photo by Butch Dill/AP)

New football coach Jeff Hafley watched the 2019-20 Eagles get, as interim coach Rich Gunnell termed it, their “butts kicked” by #21 Cincinnati yesterday in the Birmingham (Ala.) Bowl. Final score 38-6. Hafley likely realized he had a lot of work ahead.

Scoring only on the return of a blocked field goal attempt when already down 24-0, BC gained 164 yards total offense, lowest total of the season. The Bearcats meanwhile amassed 459 yards, including 343 yards rushing. In attempting to gain a first down on 11 third-down opportunities, BC was unsuccessful each time.

The game featured a weird sense of deja vu. Last season, BC’s bowl game against Boise State was canceled because of lightning. Yesterday, the start of the game was delayed for 30 minutes because of lightning and then suspended for the same reason after only seven minutes and five seconds of play. The suspension lasted 90 minutes and, to the later dismay of some, the game resumed.

Star BC running back AJ Dillon had announced previously he was preparing for the NFL draft and did not play in the game. 

The Eagles ran 47 plays in the game, compared to 91 for Cincinnati, and possessed the ball for 18 minutes, 31 seconds, less than half the 41:29 possession time for the Bearcats. Running back David Bailey ran eight times for 28 yards, while freshman running back Pat Garwo, playing in his third game of the season, gained 24 yards on four carries. Two Bearcats, including quarterback Desmond Ridder, each gained 105 yards on 21 carries.

BC quarterback Dennis Grosel was 8-17 for 87 yards.

The Eagles finished the season 6-7. While there may be an ACC opponent on the schedule to open the 2020 season, scheduled for September are Holy Cross (September 5), Ohio University (September 12), at Kansas (September 19), and Purdue (September 26).