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Women’s basketball beat Hofstra on Tuesday for its first win of the season, A9
The city of Boston is seeking a chance to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, B10
With the release of Lady Gaga’s ARTPOP, The Scene looks at the multiple personas of musical shape-shifters, B1
www.bcheights.com
HEIGHTS
THE
The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College
established
1919
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Vol. XCIV, No. 43
WRC events address body image issues
BY NATHAN MCGUIRE Heights Staff AND
MARY ROSE FISSINGER
Heights Editor Editor’s Note: This story is part of an ongoing series about body issues and health on campus.
DREW HOO / HEIGHTS STAFF
Veterans, families, and ROTC students gathered on Monday to reflect on the sacrifices of service men and women. Rev. Robert Keane, S.J. discussed his work as a military chaplain.
BC RECOGNIZES VETERANS’ SERVICE BY ANNA OLCOTT For The Heights As the bright sun streamed into the roof of the tent, a laugh could be heard from a crowd of veterans, families, and ROTC students as Rev. Robert Keane, S.J. spoke at Monday’s Veterans Day memorial ceremony. As he honored the veterans and lightly joked about his time sleeping in Bapst Library while an undergraduate student at Boston College, Keane also spoke on his role as a military chaplain in the U.S. Navy. The purpose of this event, held on the Burns Library Lawn, was both to recognize and honor BC veterans and discuss the place of Jesuits and the Society of Jesus in military chaplaincy. After a detailed introduction by an ROTC student that outlined Keane’s 23-year career in the U.S. Navy
and his work in the New England Jesuit Community, Keane addressed his place as a Jesuit chaplain. He opened his speech at the otherwise solemn event with a joke about his time at BC and by acknowledging how humbled he felt speaking at his alma mater. Humor and humility remained common threads throughout his talk, as he explored his own experiences within the Catholic chaplaincy and the U.S. Navy. Though Keane acknowledged the shock that some feel at seeing a Jesuit in uniform, he maintained that Jesuits can easily pursue their missions while serving as chaplains. He cited some earlier examples of Jesuit chaplains, such as Superior General Diego Lainez, who succeeded Ignatius of Loyola, and the very founder of BC, Rev. John McElroy, S.J. “A Jesuit in the military chaplaincy is actually
perfectly consistent with our history and our spirituality,” he said. In accordance with the Jesuit principle of traveling to the farthest corners of the earth to serve where needed, as a member of military service, a chaplain is able to do just that. As a chaplain, Keane traveled to six continents and served a wide range of people. Keane also applied the principles of the U.S. Navy, such as “improvise, adapt, and overcome” to his own Jesuit mission in order to gain the attention of one of his superiors. “Learning new tricks, and adapting to unfamiliar surroundings, are behaviors not unknown to Jesuit missionaries,” Keane said. Despite the fact that 25 percent of all military members identify themselves as Catholic, only 8 percent of
See Veterans Day, A3
One hundred and fifty students adorned in teal t-shirts with the slogan “I love my body” are making their way around campus this week, donning their shirts in support of the Women’s Resource Center’s Love Your Body Week. “Seeing 150 or so other people saying, ‘I love my body,’ gives other people permission to say, ‘I love my body too,’” said Emma Moriarty, co-director of the week and A&S ’14. During each of the WRC’s events in the past three days, those teal t-shirts have mixed in with lecture halls full of other students and faculty. To kick off the week’s events, director of the Women’s and Gender Studies program Sharlene Hesse-Biber gave a talk Monday night on her book, The Cult of Thinness. Her speech investigated the roots of eating disorders, how they manifest themselves, and why they are so prevalent, especially at Boston College. Immediately following this event, at BC Ignites on Monday evening, four female student speakers shared personal stories about their struggles with body image. Each speaker brought a unique experience to the podium, revealing how body image issues can manifest themselves in a variety of ways and intensities.
See Love Your Body Week, A3
McElroy chef honored as Cook of the Year Mazier, 30-year vet of BC Dining, is first winner from a college BY ANDREW SKARAS Asst. News Editor When Marlon Mazier started working for BC Dining Services 30 years ago, he began as a dish washer in what is now the Player’s Club in Walsh Hall. Now, he serves as the first line cook in McElroy Commons and was recognized in October by the Massachusetts Restaurant Association (MRA) as Cook of the Year. On Tuesday, Bob Luz, president of the MRA, came to BC to present the award to Mazier, who could not make it to the award ceremony in October. At the presentation in the kitchen of McElroy, Mike Forcier, general manager
of Dining Services in McElroy, introduced Mazier and praised his work in the kitchen. “What we say all the time about Marlon is that he makes my job and the managers’ job so easy,” Forcier said. “If Marlon could get the combination to the safe, I wouldn’t even need to come in in the morning because he really does do a great job running the staff, running the place. Although he won Cook of the Year, he clearly goes far well above cooking.” Before presenting the award, Luz explained the range of the membership of the MRA and the competition that Mazier faced. In the food and beverage industry, there are over 15,000 operators employing over 300,000 workers. He described the nomination and selection process and the competition Mazier faced. “Passion was the word that always came
out in all the feedback [the selection committee] saw about [Mazier], service to the guest, and most importantly, service to [his] team,” Luz said. “This is the first time this has ever gone to a non-traditional restaurant.” After Luz presented the award, Mazier gave short remarks thanking his crew and BC Dining Services in McElroy. As the first cook, Mazier is responsible for running the day crew in McElroy. Giving background to his responsibilities in the kitchen, Forcier said that Mazier is the person that the managers look to for guidance and leadership. “He puts people in the right places and he builds morale here,” Forcier said. “His leadership is one of the reasons I believe we are so successful. He is so much more than his title as ‘first cook.’ He is a great delegator. He
See Mazier, A3
Heights Staff “Earthquake observatories have become much more than just bricks and mortar of a building that records earthquakes,” said associate professor of earth and environmental sciences Alan Kafka, who was recently appointed as the new director of the Weston Observatory, which is located 10 miles away from Boston College’s main campus. “We’ve evolved into being an intersecting network, social and technical network, communications network, all about earthquakes and earthquake information.” As a geophysicist with a specialty in seismology, Kafka acknowledges the Weston Observatory as part of the long Jesuit legacy and an active, ongoing earthquake research institution since the early
1930s. Although nowadays seismographs are digitally transmitted through computer systems not only in the building but also around the New England region and on a global scale, the observatory has also been carrying on the tradition of recording worldwide earthquakes on paper using older instruments. “This is our lab,” Kafka said. “It’s Boston College just as the lab down the hall for geochemistry.” Emphasizing the Jesuit interest in seismology throughout history, which prompted Jesuit scientists to undertake the project not long after the development of seismographs, Kafka attributed the observatory’s sustainability to the extensive network of professional scholars around the world. “It’s deeply rooted in the history of Boston College,” he said. “Part of why I say it’s a priceless resource is that we are one of the Jesuit earthquake observatories
Students awarded $10K to produce film on loyalty BY JENNIFER HEINE
Kafka named new director of Weston Observatory BY SOO JUNG RHEE
PHOTO COURTESY OF MAX PRIO
Adisa Duke and Max Prio are part of a BC student group making a Hyundai commercial.
Heights Staff
SANJAY SETRU / FOR THE HEIGHTS
Professor Alan Kafka was recently appointed the observatory’s new director. that has maintained and moved forward into the 21st century.” The observatory research covers all aspects of earth science, primarily studying earthquakes in the Eastern U.S.—their predictions and monitoring of the earthquakes in the New England area serve as an education and public outreach branch.
See Kafka, A3
Five undergraduates in the Boston College Film Department have become finalists in Hyundai’s “Lens of Loyalty” film contest, comprising just one of seven university teams awarded $10,000 to produce a short film. As one of Hyundai’s 25 sponsored collegiate football programs, BC was offered the opportunity to enter the contest earlier in the year. John Michalczyk, a professor in the Fine Arts Department, first contacted the five students—Max Prio, CSOM ’16; Stephan Panico, A&S ’15; John Blanford, BC ’13; Adisa Duke, A&S ’15; and Nick Genovese, A&S ’16—earlier this year. “We had known each other and worked with each other before,” Prio said. “We just knew how passionate we were about film, and thought it would be a productive, creative team.” In order to enter the contest, the team wrote a 500-word treatment outlining their idea for the film, then given the opportunity to execute it, and based on their piece, the five became one of only seven teams
selected to win the $10,000. In keeping with the contest’s theme of loyalty, the students created a story centered around lifelong loyalty to BC. “It’s the story of a Superfan at birth, whose parents bring him to his first BC football game, then we see him in his life as he grows older, and it comes full circle when he had his first child, and brings her to her first football game,” Prio said. He described the whirlwind that followed their success. Although each of the finalists was granted 40 days after the announcement to create the film, the BC team ended up with closer to 20, after the process of obtaining the money and equipment. Additionally, because of the size of the Film Department at BC relative to that of some other universities, the team needed to rent some of the filming equipment. But the situation has also stimulated a generosity the team hadn’t expected. “I’ve made maybe 50 phone calls to different companies and told them what we’re doing, told them about the whole project, and they’ve really helped us in so many
See Film Competition, A3