CASH FOR WARHOL ALMOST AT ‘ALMOST, MAINE’
NOLE-IFIED SPORTS
METRO
SCENE
The Eagles fell to the Seminoles 72-62 on Tuesday night, B8
Boston’s wacky shop speaks to its lighthearted nature, A5
The Theatre Department puts on its adaptation of John Cariani’s classic play, B3
www.bcheights.com
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The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College
established
1919
Thursday, Janurary 28, 2016
Vol. XCVII, No. 3
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After its Tuesday announcement that actress and transgender advocate Laverne Cox would speak at Boston College on Feb. 15, Undergraduate Government of Boston College’s GLBTQ Leadership Council was informed that Cox will no longer speak at BC next month. Cox’s agent told UGBC that the actress will be canceling all of her speaking engagements from February through April, which includes her visit to BC and several other universities, because she begins filming for the new Rocky Horror Picture Show in February until May, according to Nick Minieri, chair of GLC and CSOM ’16. Cox had signed her contract with GLC prior to being cast in Rocky Horror Picture Show, so there was no way for her to know she would be filming on the date of the event, Minieri said. Minieri explained that BC is not allowed to hold any events during study days or finals, which are the only dates that overlap with Cox’s availability. GLC is looking into having another
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speaker come on Feb. 15 in place of Cox, and hopes to reschedule Cox for the 2016-2017 academic year. Cox was planning to discuss how the intersection of race, class, and gender affects trans women of color at the event, according to Afua Laast, UGBC vice president of diversity and inclusion and LSOE ’16. In addition, Cox was going to speak about growing up in a conservative, Christian family in Alabama, and how this affected her journey to womanhood and her ability to find her authentic self. Minieri came up with the idea to have Cox at BC last March, after attending a GLC conference at G e orgetown University. A student leader from Canisius College, a Jesuit university in Buffalo, N.Y., had
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unmet. The goal of the working proposal was to create an equal home at BC for all of the members of the community. Many of the requests highlighted in the document were discussed, including a bias response protocol and an expanded diversity training. UGBC’s request for a vice president for institutional diversity, however, was denied at this point. According to Jones, in the meeting
The recovery process from Boston College football’s disastrous 2015 campaign begins right now. On Tuesday afternoon, the ACC released the football schedules for each of its 14 member programs. Although each school has already sorted out its non-conference agreements and knows the teams it will play in the conference, this announcement by the ACC reveals which games will be nationally televised, highlighting those which are on non-Saturdays. This should include BC’s annual Friday night Red Bandanna Game, in honor of Welles Crowther, BC ’99, a former lacrosse player who gave his life saving 12 others in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. While the non-conference slate may pose little threat, the road of returning to respectability isn’t going to be an easy one for the Eagles. In Steve Addazio’s fourth season, BC will host ACC Atlantic Division opponents Clemson, Louisville, and Syracuse; Buffalo, a MAC team; regional foe UConn, of the AAC; and FCS Wagner. The Eagles will travel to divisional opponents Florida State, NC State, and Wake Forest; Coastal Division rival Virginia Tech; and FBS Independent UMass, which plays its home games at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass. But, of course, we begin in Dublin, Ireland, at Aviva Stadium. The Eagles will travel to the Emerald Isle to take on Georgia Tech on Sept. 3 for their “home opener.” The Yellow Jackets, the universal favorite to run away with the ACC Coastal Division, finished a poor 3-9. Their only ACC win came in an upset over Florida State, famously dubbed by announcer Brandon Gaudin as the Miracle on Techwood Drive. The Eagles will then travel to the home of the New England Patriots on Sept. 10 to challenge the Minutemen, who were 3-9 last season. Last time the two teams met in 2014, BC throttled them, 30-7, with Tyler Murphy behind center. UMass left the MAC to pursue the unknown paths of independence in 2016. This will include dates with three SEC teams—Florida, Mississippi State, and South Carolina—as well as trips to Provo, Utah to play BYU and Honolulu to take on the Rainbow Warriors. Yikes. Next up for BC is a trip to Lane Stadium to face the Hokies on Sept. 17, the first time in nearly three decades that legendary Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer will be absent from the sidelines in a game against the Eagles. Nevertheless, new head coach Justin Fuente, who took the reigns after leading the University of Memphis to its highest-ever ranking in school history, presents a serious challenge for BC. Virginia Tech finished last year at 7-6, yet still manhandled the Eagles in a 26-10 drubbing at Alumni Stadium. If freshman running back Travon McMillian racked up over 100 yards on the ground against last season’s stout BC defense, this year’s game against the Hokies could bring a familiar result. Remember the 76-0 blowout win against Howard last year? Well, BC’s Sept. 24 matchup with Wagner reeks of a similar FCS rout. Wagner’s 2015 season included only one win, against Central Connecticut, as the team stumbled to a 1-10 record against less-thanstellar competition. This is the first-ever date between the two schools. BC will then open a new month against Buffalo on Oct. 1. The MAC’s Bulls faltered in their only showdown—a 27-14 loss to Penn State in Happy Valley—against a Power Five team (ACC, Big Ten, Big XII, Pac-12, SEC) in a 5-7 2015 campaign,. The program has had mostly downs in its existence: SUNY Buffalo
See UGBC, A8
See Football Schedule, B6
See Laverne Cox, A3
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PHOTO COURTESY OF CYDNEY SCOTT
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sell the buildings, for which the profits will be used to benefit the university and its students. According to BU’s executive director of media relations Colin Riley, the school is marketing the property for the benefit of the mission of the school. He says that all of the buildings for sale have a lot of square footage and are in great condition. “We’ve improved Kenmore Square tremendously, and hopefully [the sale] will help with the improvement,” he said. The school’s website says they will
See Citgo, A8
L>9:# 8[d`e`jkiXk`fe fe GifgfjXc ]fi IXZ`Xc @eZclj`fe D\dY\ij d\k AXe% )) kf [`jZljj ]iXd\nfib 9P 8C<O8E;I8 8CC8D E\nj <[`kfi In a recent meeting between the Undergraduate Government of Boston College and the administration, members of the two groups discussed revamping programming, creating a bias response
protocol, and expanding training for students and staff in efforts to create a more inclusive environment at BC for students. Thomas Napoli, UGBC president and MCAS ’16, James Kale, chair of UGBC’s ALC and LSOE ’16, and Afua Laast, vice president of UGBC’s diversity and inclusion branch and LSOE ’17, met with Vice President of Student Affairs Barbara Jones and Associate Vice President of Student Affairs and Dean of Students
Thomas Mogan to discuss the proposal UGBC drafted, titled “Towards a More Inclusive Community.” The Jan. 22 meeting followed the release of the proposal, written earlier this year after UGBC received feedback from some students of color that they do not feel at home at BC. UGBC has been working with the administration to institute the action plan over the last few months, and asked that it be prepared by Tues., Jan. 19., but the request went