Bostonia is published in print three times a year and updated weekly on the web.
Visitors to BU President Robert A. Brown’s oak-paneled office, on the eighth floor of One Silber Way, are probably most impressed by the view. Large wraparound windows look out on the Zakim Bridge, the Kenmore Square Citgo sign, the Charles River, and beyond. Inside, there are also some interesting things to see: Oriental rugs, a seven-foot tree perched in the corner, and some pretty quirky stuff that he’s collected over his 38-year career in academia.
The artifacts include signed photos of sports legends, trinkets from grateful students and employees, and perhaps most meaningful, memorabilia from his kids.
Sitting on the president’s imposing desk is a four-inch statue of the wizard Merlin peering into a crystal ball, a Christmas gift from his two sons, then ages 16 and 14. They gave Brown the statue when he became provost of MIT in 1998 (a job he held until 2005, when he became president of BU), “because they said that’s what they thought the job was,” he says. “You end up making a lot of decisions, and I think a lot of people think a lot of the decisions are mystical.”
Related Stories
Office Artifacts: Robert Devaney
CAS math and stats prof collects coffee mugs—lots and lots of them
BU President Robert A. Brown Honored by Fellow Engineers
National Academy of Engineering recognizes research, leadership
BU President Robert A. Brown Visits Alumni in Asia
Starting 2014 with BU connections from Taiwan to Singapore
Post Your Comment