Dec8

Page 1

DECK THE HALLS

BUTTER PARTY

NEW YORK, NEW YORK

FEATURES

ARTS & REVIEW

SPORTS

Various music and arts groups will perform to ring in the holiday season, B8

Hello ... Shovelhead! gets Nicolas Cage in a sorority, explores the ludicrous, A8

Boston College to play Penn State in the Pinstripe Bowl, B1

www.bcheights.com

The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College

established

1919

Monday, December 8, 2014

Vol. XCV, No. 48

UGBC meets with OSI, DOS

HEIGHTS

THE

RALLY

FOR

Commitee pitches changes to Student Guide BY CAROLYN FREEMAN Heights Staff

Three representatives from the Undergraduate Government of Boston College (UGBC) met with members of the Office of Dean of Students (DOS) and the Office of Student Involvement (OSI) on Friday to discuss the proposed changes to the University’s Student Guide. This was the second meeting to discuss revisions and reach a compromise between UGBC’s goals and the administration’s. The next meeting is expected to take place before winter break. Thomas Napoli, chairman of the Institutional Policy Review committee (IPR) and A&S ’16, Daniel Sundaram, coordinator of Student Rights & Conduct and A&S ’16, and Elinor Mitchell, vice chair of the Student Organizations Board and A&S ’15, discussed the proposed changes with members of the administration. These three students make up the Student Guide Revision Committee, along with Director of OSI Gus Burkett; Associate Director of OSI Mark Miceli; Assistant Director of OSI Karl Bell; Associate Director of Leadership Involvement Jean Yoder; graduate assistant Melissa Woolsey, LGSOE ’16; and Assistant Director for Student Engagement Kyndra Angell. The proposed changes include an overhaul of free speech policies that currently restrict flier and banner usage to members of student organizations. Policies regarding bringing speakers to campus would be revised to make the process less restrictive Proposed changes to student rights include the right to review records and the right to appeal without fear of retaliations. Lastly,

STUDENT RIGHTS Students protest lack of free speech at “Rights on the Heights” BY GUS MERRELL Heights Staff

It was cold, windy, and overcast on Friday afternoon, but over 100 students gathered in O’Neill Plaza for the Rights on the Heights rally protesting the administration’s limitations on student free speech on campus. Hosted by a number of groups including Climate Justice at Boston College and the Social Justice Coalition, Rights on the Heights featured a platform for student leaders, professors, and alumni

to voice their struggles and concerns about how student groups are operated and organized on campus. “We got in touch with other people and then we realized, ‘Oh my gosh, everyone is really mad at BC too,’” said Sissy Liu, a member of Climate Justice at BC and A&S ’17. “Not specifically for the same reasons, but for having issues with how the administration has treated us, how we’ve never been taken seriously, and how there are rules set in place to slow us down.”

Registered student organizations are difficult to form at BC and Friday’s student speakers made it clear that they did not believe the administration did not do enough to support these groups in allowing them to become registered. If a student organization is not registered with the Office of Student Involvement (OSI), they currently are not allowed to hang fliers or oganize meetings in University spaces. “In a famous homily by Fr. Himes,

he tells us to measure the success of our education not by the number of job offers we receive, not by our midcareer salaries,” said Anthony Golden, a member of United Students Against Sweatshops and CSOM ’17. “He tells us to measure it by how we impact the lives of the marginalized of society who cannot enjoy the privilege of education we have here … the administration constantly subverts the student

See Rally, A3

DREW HOO / HEIGHTS STAFF

See Student Guide, A3

The Board of Trustees, UGBC review proposals BY ARIELLE CEDENO Heights Editor

ARTHUR BAILIN / HEIGHTS STAFF

People came from across Boston to fight the ruling made in the Garner case. They gathered during the city’s tree lighting ceremony.

Thousands protest Garner decision BY BENNET JOHNSON Heights Editor Didi Delgado paces from side to side, shuffling between the crowds of protesters on Thursday night. She talks to me in between breaths, gasping for air, while frantically waving her hands in a circular motion—trying to garner as much attention as possible. Delgado is wearing a neon orange construction vest, and despite her diminutive presence, her voice echoes across Boston Common, as thousands of protesters follow her lead. “Everybody to the left,” Delgado said. “Everybody go to city plaza. They are blocking us over here, and we have to

keep moving.” Delgado directed a crowd toward Government Center, where thousands of people gathered, chanting, “Hands up, don’t shoot,” and, “Black lives matter” in response to the grand jury decision not to indict the New York City police officer involved in the alleged homicide of 42year-old Eric Garner. “We never expected this many people to come out in solidarity,” Delgado said. “Everybody here is passionate to show that black lives matter, and I’m proud to be a part of that.” Delgado is a member of the organizational team responsible for Thursday’s

event, titled “#EnoughIsEnough: We Are the Ones, Justice for Eric Garner.” The gathering was first publicized through Facebook, and more than 7,000 people “attended” the protest, according to the page. “I saw the event was spreading like crazy across Facebook and I knew I wanted to be a part of it,” said Liann Ammar, a junior at Northeastern University. At approximately 7 p.m., nearly 3,000 protestors gathered in Boston Common—according to estimates from the Boston Police Department—in the midst

See Protesters, A3

Underg raduate G overnment of Boston College (UGB C) President Nanci Fiore-Chettiar, and Executive Vice President Connor Bourff, both A&S ’15, convened with the University Board of Trustees on Friday to discuss UGBC’s proposed initiatives and advocacy work, part of which included the presentation of a revised version of the Student Guide. Fiore-Chettiar and Bourff presented to a panel of seven members from the University Board of Trustees, who comprise the Student Life Committee. The meeting was one of four annual sessions in which the University Board of Trustees meets with UGBC—occurring in June, September, December, and March. The sessions are meant to create transparency between the Board and UGBC. It serves as an opportunity for the Board to provide feedback on UGBC’s proposed initiatives, and a platform for discussing relevant student issues and concerns. “The purpose of these meetings is to update them on UGBC’s progress, and give them an idea of what students care about on campus,” Fiore-Chettiar

said. “Something that we’ve worked really hard to do is to keep our presentations consistent, and show them not only what initiatives we’re working on, but the progress that we’ve made on them.” In an effort to maintain consistency and fluidity between meetings, UGBC addresses three overarching areas of concern in each meeting with the Board of Trustees: strengthening and clarifying student rights and the student voice, addressing campus climate issues, and increasing quality of student life. At the meeting, Fiore-Chettiar and Bourff discussed UGBC’s priorities for addressing these issues through various proposals and initiatives. The revised Student Guide was a main priority for the initiative to strengthen and clarify student rights and the student voice. “We also used the time to advocate directly for the 9,100 students that UGBC represents, and at the intersection of those two points was presenting UGBC’s work with OSI and the Dean of Students regarding revising the student guide,” Bourff said in an email. UGBC first expressed its desire to revise the Student Guide in a meeting

See Trustees, A3


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