Mixer! Moulty!?

McHugh multitudes

It’s Friday, in the fall. That meant MIXER! in our days at BC.

Sub Turri photo

Remember dark, sweaty McHugh? Guys and girls dancing, maybe a few girls dancing together. Guys, mostly, standing on the sidelines. There were flings, romances, and marriages that probably started at one of these. And they featured many hours of blah, too.

There was a letter in the October 30, 1964, Heights signed by “School of Nursing Class of 1968” complaining about the presence of high school girls at mixers. “We strongly resent sharing our collegiate rights with high school students,” it said. “We cannot estimate the opinions of the male majority of the student body concerning this problem,” the letter added. “We can only observe that they appear to be as vexed as we are at the situation.”

 

BC was one of the college mixer stops for local bands. Among the “bigger” local bands was Barry and the Remains. Later known simply as The Remains, they were a BU band that played briefly, i.e., 1964-66 (they later reunited in the ’90s and are on a retro band circuit). Here’s a song we likely heard.

But the band I remember best, at least, was Moulty and the Barbarians, who started out in Provincetown. Moulty was the drummer and had a prosthetic hook replacing his missing left hand. Here’s a YouTube video. Only one I could find showing them “in action,” from the movie The T.A.M.I. Show. (Like The Remains, they later dropped the eponymous angle and were just The Barbarians.)

Their “big” hit was Are You a Boy or Are You a Girl?

I believe I remember this song, too, and figure I must have heard it at a mixer. Where else would I have seen or heard Moulty?

 

Homecomings . . . at home

The tradition of “homecoming” in the context of colleges and universities seems aimed at the return of alumni to campus. Graduates coming back into the arms of alma mater. Maybe it’s just self-centered memories, but the Homecomings at BC, 1964-67, seemed more oriented to us, the students.

1964
As was common through our time at BC, this Homecoming started with a Friday night concert, a football game that featured the naming of a Homecoming Queen and Favorite Son at halftime, a post-game social, and a “victory” dance in the evening.

Fats Domino

Ian and Sylvia, the Canadian folk-singing duo, performed in Roberts Center on Friday, October 16. “Orchestra” seats on the court cost $2.50, “balcony” $1.75.

BC won the football game, 10-0, over Cincinnati the next day. Jim Lucie and the Heightsmen were featured at the post-game social at Chestnut Hill Country Club ($.99), while Fats Domino headlined the entertainment at the Victory Dance at the Surf Nantasket ($5/couple).

 

1965
The organizers stuck with folk music this year, as the Friday concert, the “Homecoming Concert,” featured The Highwaymen, a quartet. Also performing were the comedy duet of Ullett and Hendra. (Ullett’s name was misspelled in both the Heights ad and the Sub Turri caption of the two.)

The Highwaymen

The Victory Dance (BC beat Richmond 38-7) was held at the Victory Road Armory in Dorchester. Bill Haley and the Comets (old rock n’ roll even then) were the musical artists.

1966
In a portent of things to come, the original act for the Homecoming Concert backed out. Instead of Chuck Berry, homecomers saw the Isley Brothers Friday night in Roberts.

The Isley Brothers twist and shout

After watching Syracuse pound the Eagles, 30-0, students enjoyed Junior Walker and the All-Stars at the Victory Dance at the Hotel Bradford.

1967

Wilson Pickett

As the Temptations might have described it, Homecoming our senior year was something of a  “Ball of Confusion.” Efforts to have The Righteous Brothers appear broke down, as did attempts to sign Woody Allen and Judy Collins. BC “settled” for Otis Redding. But we never saw him, either. Redding backed out and was replaced, if that’s the right word, by Wilson Pickett in Roberts on October 13. (Sadly, Otis Redding died less than two months later in a plane crash.)

Penn State rocked the Eagles, 50-28, and fans found solace listening to the Pandoras at the Sheraton Plaza.

Prices for these events hadn’t changed a lot during our years. All tickets, not just “orchestra,” in Roberts were $2.50 and the price of tickets for the dance Saturday was $5, but it didn’t say if it was apiece or per couple.