The Heights 03/21/2013

Page 1

CHASING TROPHIES

A SAD GOODBYE

DEAN’S LIST

SPORTS

METRO

SCENE

Men’s hockey duels BU on Friday in the Hockey East tournament semifinal, A12

A staple of modern media is lost as the Boston Phoenix’s 47 years come to an end, B10

With the release of Admission and Spring Breakers,, The Scene picks our favorite college-themed movies, B1

www.bcheights.com

HEIGHTS

THE

The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College

established

1919

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Vol. XCIV, No. 15

Three teams vie for next UGBC President and VP

TIM KOCH CHRIS TRUGLIO

&

MOLLY MCCARTHY RICKY KNAPP

&

MATT NACIER MATT ALONSOZANA

&

DEBATE HIGHLIGHTS:

DEBATE HIGHLIGHTS:

DEBATE HIGHLIGHTS:

Formation, policy, advocacy and outreach, programming, and transparency

Maintain unity through UGBC changes

Community, clarity, and creativity

Re-evaluate disciplinary policies

Open door policy for Senate meetings

Invest in Undergraduate Leadership Academy

Emphasize diversity and inclusion on campus, especially for GLBTQ and AHANA students

Reduced ticket price packages for sporting events

Emphasis on quality of programming

Increase visibility and access within UGBC

Landlord and Realtor Evaluation Profile System similar to PEPs

Advocate for sustainibility on campus

Advancement of the academic advising system

Establish CSOM minors for A&S students

BY DEVON SANFORD Assoc. News Editor The 2013 Undergraduate Government of Boston College (UGBC) Presidential and Vice Presidential Elections race has officially begun. The Elections Committee hosted the Elections Kick Off event in Merkert on Monday, Mar. 18, in which candidates introduced themselves and their campaign platforms to the student body. Three teams

announced their official candidacy at the event. Teammates Tim Koch, A&S ’14, and Chris “Trugs” Truglio, CSOM ’14, are running for president and vice president respectively, under the slogan “In Tim and Trugs We Trust.” Molly McCathy and Ricky Knapp, both A&S ’14, are running for president and vice president respectively, under the slogan “Believe in BC.” Matt Nacier and Matt Alonsozana, both A&S ’14, are running for president and vicepresident respectively, under the slogan

“Forward With U.” Students packed the Merkert auditorium on Monday night in support of the UGBC teams. Members of Koch and Truglio’s campaign donned purple; McCarthy and Knapp’s, yellow; Nacier and Alonsozana, blue. The Elections Committee conducted the first poll of the election season at the meeting, surveying the members of the audience. Nacier and Alonsozana won the Election Kick Off Event straw poll with 58.5

Change in the instituted alcohol policy

percent of the votes. McCarthy and Knapp placed second with 22 percent. Koch and Truglio finished last with 19.5 percent. At the event’s conclusion, the teams began official campaigning for the election. Banners were hung in the quad, flyers distributed, and social media newsfeeds filled with campaign endorsements. Last night, the Elections Committee presented the first UGBC Presidential Debate of the season in Hillside Cafe. Carter Bielen, Co-Chair of the Elections

Committee and A&S ’13, Devika Patel, ALC President and A&S ’13, and Joshua Tingley, GLC president and A&S ’13, presented questions to the teams. McCarthy and Knapp opened the debate with an overview of their platform. The team stressed the importance of unity within change. They hope that with their platform, which highlights convenience for students on campus, resolving Residential

See UGBC Debate, A5

Resolution calls for divestment

Gluck shares excerpts from WWII book

BC Fossil Free and Senate urge BC to divest from fossil fuels

BY PARISA OVIEDO Heights Editor

thought it would be nice, as just one element of trying to change the culture of BC … if people were more willing to embrace the concept of feminism.” Oh said that while it was important for both men and women to value feminism, it was especially important for women to stop considering “feminism” a “dirty word.” “Just as a starting point, I thought it would be great if we could just at least have

Most students don’t think twice about the validity of their history textbook. When reading about World War II, for example, many take the content of American textbooks as the truth, not considering that a Japanese textbook might, for example, view the war completely differently. “There are lots of questions that we need to ask ourselves,” said Carol Gluck, George Samson Professor of History at Columbia University. “However, do these memories come from the history textbook or from public memory?” Most World War II stories, Gluck pointed out, are told from a biased, nationalistic point of view. In a lecture last Wednesday to an audience in the Murray Function Room, Gluck talked about her newest book, Past Obsessions: WWII in History & Memory, and the discrepancy between public memory and factual history. A specialist in East Asian history, Gluck has been granted $2 million in a project aimed at expanding East-Asian studies at Columbia University. In the Lowell Humanities Series’ second to last event, Gluck, who received much success after her 1985 book Japan’s Modern Myths, was introduced as “the most inspiring professor of undergraduates and graduates.” In her recent book, she most specifically addresses the public’s memory of key events, WWII in particular, and how it is continously shaped through heroic narratives. Gluck made clear distinctions between

See Feminism, A4

See Gluck, A5

PHOTO COURTESY OF BOSTON COLLEGE HISTORY DEPARTMENT

BY ELEANOR HILDEBRANDT News Editor Boston College students have begun to push against the administration on University investment in fossil fuel companies. On Mar. 18, BC Fossil Free, a coalition of Boston College undergraduate and graduate students, sent out a press release asserting that the University is contradicting Boston College’s Jesuit, Catholic values by hosting Peter Voser, the CEO of the Royal Dutch Shell company, at today’s CEO Club of Boston luncheon. “The Catholic Church has explicitly and repeatedly identified climate change as a moral issue due to the fact that the consequences of climate change … are compromising key commitments of the Christian, Catholic faith,” the press release read. “The Catholic Church has explicitly called on people of faith and goodwill to meaningfully address climate change through reduced fossil fuel consumption, increased energy efficiency, and the development and implementation of clean energy technologies.” The BC Fossil Free coalition is a relatively new presence on campus. “BC Fossil Free comes out of years of underground activism at Boston College, in the sense that … there isn’t much in the way of activism

See Divestment, A5

PHOTO COURTESY OF BOSTON COLLEGE HISTORY DEPARTMENT

GRAHAM BECK / HEIGHTS EDITOR

Boston College students (left) and professors Arissa Oh and Robin Fleming (top right) sport buttons proclaiming their feminism.

Feminism the focus of ‘Coming Out Day’ BY ELEANOR HILDEBRANDT News Editor Amidst the flurry of UGBC campaigning, students and faculty members across campus have been showing their support for a different cause this week. While the maroon-and-gold pins sported on backpacks and lapels are themselves unassuming and understated, their message—“This is what a feminist looks like”—is anything but. “I think a lot of faculty—certainly in

the history department, but faculty across the University—are just really concerned about these recent studies and revelations showing that women are graduating from BC with less self-esteem than they had when they started,” said Arissa Oh, an assistant professor in the history department who formulated the idea to produce the pins and distribute them during Monday’s Feminist Coming Out Day. “There’s been a lot of talk about it, a lot of focus groups—University-wide task forces and things that were convened, and I just


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