The Heights November 5, 2018

Page 1

HEIGHTS

THE

The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College

EST. 1919

WWW.BCHEIGHTS.COM

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2018

ARTISTICALLY OBSCENE

ABOUT TIME

SPORTS

ARTS

After its worst start in 80-plus years, men’s hockey entered the win column against Merrimack.

Isabel Cole aims to subvert notions of vulgarity with her protest posters of genitalia.

A11

A15

LSOE to Be Renamed in January Will be Lynch School of Education and Human Development BY ABBY HUNT Copy Editor The Lynch School of Education is changing its name to the Lynch School of Education and Human Development, effective this January. Dean of Lynch Stanton Wortham said that the name change reflects the fact that there is a large counseling, developmental, and educational psychology (CDEP) department in the Lynch School. While around 10 to 15 percent of faculty work in this area at most education schools, 30 percent of the Lynch faculty work in the CDEP department. The area has become increasingly popular among undergraduates over the last few years—the applied psychology major is now the ninth largest at BC, according to last year’s BC Fact Book. “Students have found [applied psychology] to be an attractive mix of basic academic understanding but also application to things they might think about doing in the future,” Wortham said. “And [with] the Lynch School of Education as the name, people couldn’t see it. They couldn’t see that that was a crucial part of the school in the same way—so a lot of the faculty in that area felt as if they were a little bit invisible.” Wortham noted that there have often been students who didn’t know about the applied psychology work being done in Lynch upon their arrival at BC, became very interested once they discovered it. Some students, however, weren’t finding out about the program until too late in their college careers. “The name change is partly to recognize we have this large, talented, important group of faculty who do applied psychology and human development, and that group of people—in the counseling area, in the developmental psychology area—need to be recognized,” Wortham said. The name change does not necessarily mean there are going to be any major developments in the CDEP area of Lynch, according to Wortham, but the department will probably hire a couple more faculty members as more students become interested in it. He also said it is important to note that “education” still comes first in the name, as this area is still critical to Lynch—none of the

See Lynch, A3

BRADLEY SMART / HEIGHTS EDITOR

Eagles Beat Virginia Tech for the First Time in Four Years, Earn ‘College GameDay’ BC, now No. 17 in AP Poll, recorded 24 second-half points in Blacksburg.

Jean-Charles Discusses Past, Future of Activism

Sample CSOM Finance Coursework sophomore

Freshman Portico

Financial Acct.

fall

spring

Corporate Finance

fall

Business Stats

spring

junior

spring

fall

Basic Finance

spring

Summer Internship Begins

Investments

AADS prof. on student activism, academics, admin BY ABBY HUNT

Accelerated recruiting begins

Copy Editor MADISON MARIANI / HEIGHTS EDITOR

CSOM Admin. Address Accelerated Recruiting Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase will not recruit sophs year BY JACK GOLDMAN News Editor Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase won’t participate in business school recruiting of college sophomores this year, according to a Wall Street Journal report. Beginning this past year, recruiting opened during the spring semester for sophomores to try to get an internship in the summer of 2019—over a year after they’re initially recruited. The WSJ report indicated that two years

ago, recruiting began in the fall of junior year for the first time. A year later, recruiting began creeping into the spring of sophomore year. “We applaud what Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan are doing and hope others follow suit,” Joseph Du Pont, associate vice president for Student Affairs and Career Services, said in an email. “We are working with [the Carroll School of Management] and peer schools to encourage other banks to follow their lead and reconsider super early recruiting deadlines.” Du Pont and Amy Donegan, assistant dean for undergraduate career advising in CSOM, have been working

See CSOM Recruiting, A3

One year ago, romance languages and literatures and African and African Diaspora studies (AADS) professor Régine Jean-Charles told students at the “Silence is Still Violence” march to take the emotions they were feeling and channel them into activism. This was the way to move toward creating a world without hate, she said. She told the crowd of students that what they started at that march should not end at the end of the day, at the end of the month, at the end of the year, or even at the end of their BC careers. “Don’t make this a moment, [because] it’s a movement,” she said. Today, Jean-Charles sees the impact that movement has had on student activism on campus—students have continued making demands of the administration, and many have refused to be silent or let racial incidents go. “I’ve been so inspired by the stu-

dents—I think the students are amazing,” she said. “I think that they have had the threat of … discipline, and they have still nonetheless stood up for things that they believed.” Jean-Charles, who currently teaches the Complex Problems course “From BlackLivesMatter to MeToo” with sociology professor C. Shawn McGuffey, said that many of her firstyear students have actually pointed to the student activity of the past year as a reason they wanted to come to BC. Even though they knew BC was predominately white and that they would be in a majority-minority culture, they also knew that there was a wealth of student activism on campus, which they were inspired by and looked forward to participating in. “I’ve seen a huge change in the students from when I started my position at Boston College 10 years ago to now—that the students are much more engaged, much more ‘woke,’ which I think is awesome,” she said. “And I hope that it continues.” While Jean-Charles said there has been a huge impact in terms of student activism on campus, it has had more of a “medium” impact in terms

See Jean-Charles, A3

BC Hillel Hosts Memorial After Shooting On Oct. 28, BC Hillel led gathering to remember 11 killed. BY KAYLIE RAMIREZ Assoc. Arts Editor

JESSICA RIVILIS / FOR THE HEIGHTS

On Oct. 31, Red Sox fans filled Boston’s streets to celebrate the World Series champs, see A8.

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

FEATURES: Kent Greenfield

Greenfield left his small hometown to clerk at the Supreme Court..........................A4

In response to the Tree of Life Synagogue shooting that took the lives of 11 members of the Jewish community in Pittsburgh on Oct. 27, Boston College Hillel hosted a community gathering at the Multi-Faith Chapel on Oct. 28. The Facebook event and an email to Hillel members notified the group, as well as members of the greater BC community, that the two-hour gathering would include an opportunity to “say Mourn-

NEWS: Geography of Opportunity

ers Kaddish, light candles, and have an open and welcoming space for students and faculty to gather and share how they feel if they would like.” “Students did express some—I wouldn’t even say anti-semitism necessarily, but people [were] not understanding the magnitude [of ] this event in the Jewish community,” said Talia Shapiro, president of BC Hillel and LSOE ’19. Shapiro noted that BC Hillel does not encounter incidents motivated by anti-semitic attitudes often, but regards the Pittsburgh shooting as a reminder of the persistence of such feelings. Shapiro emphasized providing Jewish students, faculty, and staff with a space to connect and celebrate their shared

The presidential scholars organized an event on Oct. 30, exploring social justice....................... A2

INDEX

faith and culture, especially in the wake of acts of anti-semitism that occur both on and off campus. “I think Hillel is just a nice, casual place for students to connect with other Jewish students, faculty, [and] staff and feel [like] a part of that Jewish community here at BC,” Shapiro said. “It’s a great place for people to gather and know that they are not alone on this campus.” Throughout the regular year, BC Hillel hosts weekly Shabbat dinners on Fridays and events to celebrate major Jewish holidays, including Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Hanukkah, and Passover.

See BC Hillel, A3

NEWS.........................A2 METRO..................... A5

Vol. XCIX, No. 25 MAGAZINE..................A4 SPORTS.................... A9 © 2018, The Heights, Inc. OPINIONS................... A6 ARTS..................... A15 www.bchelghts.com 69


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
The Heights November 5, 2018 by The Heights - Issuu