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The men’s and women’s hockey teams advanced to the Beanpot final, A10
The executive director of JazzBoston details the nonprofit’s jazz scene promotion, B10
The Scene interviews step team Sexual Chocolate, previewing thier show next weekend, B1
www.bcheights.com
The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College
HEIGHTS
THE
established
1919
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Vol. XCV, No. 6
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PHOTO COURTESY OF THE OFFICE OF NEWS AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS
Richard DeCapua returns to BC after being named Associate Dean of Students in November.
Beyond framing and overseeing the conduct process, new Associate Dean of Students Richard DeCapua believes there is a second fold to his position—one centered on education and conversations. “I’m responsible for how the community standards are written, formulated, and administered in terms of the conduct process,” DeCapua said. “My own personal philosophy is that there is a whole other half of that job description that is about education and preemptively giving students the tools to make good decisions. Anything we can do to keep students out of the conduct process by making good decisions is what I’m looking for.”
DeCapua brings years of experience in higher education administration to his new role, which he assumed in early November. His career in residential life began at Boston College when he served as a Resident Director on College Road after graduate school, and continued at Brandeis and Suffolk universities, where he was director of residential life and associate dean of students, respectively. Returning to BC, DeCapua said, was an opportunity he readily accepted. “The more you move up in higher education, the fewer jobs there are, and when they become available at a place like BC and at this level, you have to jump at it,” he said. In approaching his position, DeCapua emphasized that he seeks to facilitate productive conversations between students and
administrators and work with other departments within the University to give students the support they need. “My hope for being here, like I’ve done at other places, is that conduct is really a way to work with students individually and sometimes filter them to other places on campus where they can get better support,” DeCapua said. One way in which DeCapua and other administrators are examining how students think and act is joining forces through the Committee on Civility and Campus Culture. Representatives from the Dean of Students’ Office (DOS), Residential Life, Student Programs Office (SPO), Office of First Year
See DeCapua, A4
L>9: gifgj\j i\m`j`fej kf Zfejk`klk`fe# jkXe[`e^ ilc\j 9P E8K?8E D:>L@I< 8jjk% E\nj <[`kfi Just two semesters after UGB C approved its new constitution, Matt Alonsozana, executive vice president and A&S ’14, presented to the Student Assembly (SA) on Tuesday a number of suggested edits and clarifications to the document that he helped draft. “The constitution that we have been working off is a flawed document in every sense of the word—grammatically, interpretational [wise], and it also hasn’t been updated,” Alonsozana said after the meeting. Alonosozana finished the edits last week and sent the revised constitution to the senators. Some in the SA were initially concerned that Alonsozana was overstepping his authority, but he explained at the meeting that his edits were only suggestions and that in order for the changes to take effect they would have to be approved by the SA. Most of the edits are clarifications regarding practices that UGBC was already carrying out—such as officially designating the press secretary as the vice president of communications, a change that brings the constitution in line with guidelines set by the Student Programs Office (SPO). Already considered a vice president by SPO, the press secretary was already receiving a stipend. Only vice presidents, the presidents, and the executive vice president receive stipends.
In an email sent to senators after the meeting, Chris Marchese, candidate for executive vice president, president pro tempore, and A&S ’16, said that the proposed revisions would blur the lines between the Constitution and the Standing Rules, a set of governing guidelines that are adopted at the beginning of each semester. His main concern was with the designation of the press secretary as a vice president. “Aside from blurring the lines between the Constitution and Standing Rules, the revisions also include substantive changes, such as making the press secretary a vice president,” the email read. “This was neither included in the original Constitution, nor was the idea vetted by the legislature.” Marchese said that the constitution should be a flexible document that broadly outlines the structure, roles, and mission of the organization, and that it should not be concerned with naming specific staff, as one of Alonsozana’s changes would. “Marchese believes it to be a substantive change—it isn’t,” Alonsozana said. “It really is getting the constitution in line the Student Programs Office rules and regulations regarding UGBC.” Marchese was at the meeting but left early. “While [some] changes do reflect what we have done this year, I didn’t feel comfortable with them being added
See UGBC, A4
GRAHAM BECK / HEIGHTS EDITOR
The 30 BC football signees consist of 16 offensive players and 14 defensive players from 10 different states, 12 of whom are from New England.
8[[Xq`f j`^ej *' kf Ô ijk i\Zil`k`e^ ZcXjj 9P :FEEFI D<CC8J ?\`^_kj <[`kfi Steve Addazio’s first recruiting class is officially in, and the Boston College football head coach plans to feature many of the new student-athletes next fall. “We’re going to be a very young football team next year, and we’re going to play a lot of young players,” Addazio said in a teleconference on Wednesday, National Signing Day. “That’s a good thing, and we’ll build for the future that way.” Since arriving in Chestnut Hill, Addazio has stressed the need to dominate Massachusetts recruiting and then build BC’s recruiting footprint outward. With many of his recruits coming from the New England area—seven of whom hail from the Bay State—his first class is
a leap in that direction. “We want to make sure that we get the best players out of the state of Massachusetts,” Addazio said. “I mean, we’re building a fence. I said that when I took this job in my first press conference, and I’m sticking to it.” In total, Addazio brought in 14 defensive recruits—six linemen, four linebackers, and four defensive backs. The defensive side of the local recruiting crop is highlighted by Connor Strachan, a 6-foot-2, 240-pound middle linebacker out of St. Sebastian’s, and Isaac Yiadom, a 6-foot-1, 170-pound defensive back from Doherty Memorial High School—players Addazio said could make an impact immediately. Looking outside of Massachusetts, Ty Schwab, a 6-foot-2, 280-pound linebacker and Harold Landry, a 6-foot-3,
258-pound defensive end, are primed to play in defensive coordinator Don Brown’s aggressive defense right away. “I would say you’re going to see a large portion of these guys on the field, I mean, quickly,” Addazio said. In the 2013 season, Addazio found success on offense with former head coach Frank Spaziani holdovers Chase Rettig, Ian White, Alex Amidon, Nate Freese, and Andre Williams, to name a few. Signing 16 offensive players—five offensive linemen, three running backs, three wide receivers, two quarterbacks, two athletes, one tight end, and Mike Knoll—a kicker/ punter—Addazio will begin to mold his own players to an offensive plan focused on power and versatility.
See Signing Day, A9
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EMILY FAHEY / HEIGHTS EDITOR
Late Tuesday night, the University announced it would close for the entirety of Wednesday, Feb. 5 due to inclement weather.
The Boston College Law School and department of theology recently announced that Cathleen Kaveny, a scholar of both law and moral theology, has joined the faculty. Given her experience, Kaveny will teach law and theology, the first professor to hold such a dual position in the University’s history. The Darald and Juliet Libby professorship is an endowed chair provided by the gift left by Darald R. Libby, a 1995 graduate of the BC Law School, to honor his mentor Michael G. Pierce, S.J., of Boston’s Jesuit Mission Bureau, who passed away in 1998. Current Libby Professor Emeritus, Sanford Katz of the Law School, was named the inaugural holder in 2000. For Kaveny, the position offers an opportunity to pursue her two academic passions—law and moral theology. “From the time I started my career, even as an undergraduate at Princeton 30 years ago, I wanted to combine the study of law with the study of ethics, particularly Catholic ethics,” she said.
“I prepared myself after graduation by pursuing a J.D. [Juris Doctor, a doctorate in law] and Ph.D. at same time,” Kaveny said. “It took a little longer, but I was able to complete both.” Following her graduation from Yale, Kaveny practiced health care law in Boston for three years as an associate for the Ropes & Gray law firm. For the better part of her academic career, though, Kaveny has been able to combine law and theology, authoring Law’s Virtues: Fostering Autonomy and Solidarity in American Society as well as over 100 journal articles and book chapters, and most recently, serving as a John P. Murphy Foundation Professor of Law and professor of theology at the University of Notre Dame. Given her background in health care law, she uses the recent debate concerning the Affordable Care Act as an example of the ways in which the law and ethics intersect in modern society. “For instance, with the Affordable Care Act, and all the ethical challenges, legal challenges, and access challenges that have come with it, the intersection of
See Kaveny, A4