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A conversation with the nurses who work the night shift at Health Services, B10
Four Boston College student bands rocked the Vandy Cabaret room last Friday night, A10
Women’s soccer heads to the NCAA Tournament second round after defeating Northeastern, B4
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HEIGHTS
THE
The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College
established
1919
Monday, November 18, 2013
Vol. XCIV, No. 44
Summer business program launched for non-CSOM students BY KAYLA FAMOLARE Heights Staff Beginning this summer, the Carroll School of Management (CSOM) will be offering a 10-week summer program running from June to August designed to give non-CSOM students the ability to gain knowledge of the business world. “The number of students coming into the Carroll School has skyrocketed in the
University continues fire cleanup
last two few years and what that has done has filled up a lot of our available capacity,” said Billy Soo, Accounting Department chair, who took the lead in developing the summer program. “Unlike the past where we could accept students into [CSOM], we just couldn’t do it anymore, we have reached the maximum.” The problem that Soo and the deans of CSOM are facing is how to accommodate students who wish to enroll in manage-
BY JOHN WILEY Heights Editor James Gallo, CSOM ’14, was working at Hillside Cafe on Monday, Nov. 11 when he noticed images of the Philippines populating his Twitter feed. Typhoon Haiyan—the largest such storm in recorded history—first made landfall in the Philippines that Friday, with a 25foot storm surge. The storm most significantly affected the Samar and Leyte regions of the Philippines, an area far south of Manila, which includes some of the nation’s poorest provinces. Early government estimates place the national death toll at 3,637. “I saw the devastation, and I messaged my advisor for RHA,” said Gallo, a vice president of the Residence Hall Association (RHA). “I said I want to raise money for the typhoon, like this is really bad, they need help—what do I do?” Gallo was advised to wait for the
See Fires Update, A3
Boston College will commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Gettysburg Address on Tuesday with a daylong event featuring a variety of speakers who will recite the address as well as offer their own thoughts on what the landmark speech means today. Sponsored by the History Department and the College of Arts and Sciences, the event organizers hope that the program draws a wide range of students to reflect on the historic day. “Gettysburg Address: 150th Anniversary” will take place from 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. in a tent on O’Neill Plaza. The speakers, who range from A&S Dean David Quigley to UGBC Executive Vice President Matt Alonsozana, A&S ’14, will first read the Gettysburg Address and then reflect personally on the speech for 15 to 20 minutes. The event organizers expect a diversity of reflections given the diversity of speakers, from professor Cynthia Lyerly, who will tie the theme of religion into her
BC’S RELIEF INITIATIVE is comprised of over 12 campus groups, and is collecting donations for Catholic Relief Services.
Goal: $10,000
Point Drive: $7,000 Online Donations: $3,000
organization’s e-board meeting on Thursday night. Unsatisfied with this timeframe, he contacted fellow RHA member Tadala Jumbe, A&S ’14, later that night, and the two began to develop the concept for a Typhoon Haiyan benefit concert. They brought the idea to Gerome Paradela, president of the Philippine Society of BC and A&S ’14, and discovered Paradela was already in talks developing a relief initiative with Matt Alonsozana, executive
3,637 Injuries
A BENEFIT CONCERT is scheduled for this Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Rat. Students will perform and donations will be collected.
Suggested Donation: $5
BY THE NUMBERS Deaths
12,501 Displaced
3 million
vice president of UGBC and A&S ’14. “We grew from a group of eight to a group of 30,” Alonsozana said. “We grew from three main organizations involved to, I want to say, more than a dozen.” The BC Typhoon Haiyan Relief Initiative developed from the individual ideas of students—it is an ongoing series of charity events, planned by representatives from a growing
See Typhoon Haiyan, A3
The Women’s Resource Center (WRC) concluded a weeklong blitz of events geared toward body image issues on Friday evening with a performance of Eve Ensler’s play The Good Body. Now that the Love Your Body Week event fliers are disappearing from the walls and kiosks around campus, the question arises—will Boston College students continue the dialogue? Julie AhnAllen, senior staff psychologist in University Counseling Services (UCS), said it’s difficult to have a prolonged campus-wide initiative about body image issues because it’s hard for many students to talk about such a sensitive topic publicly. She thinks that smaller initiatives, such as supporting friends who struggle with body image and not participating in negative conversations, can go a long way in sustaining the messages of Love Your Body Week. Emma Moriarty, co-director of Love Your Body Week and A&S ’14, said that outside of the week there is a strong need for a continued dialogue. The WRC offers a number of resources and facilitates weekly discussion groups that provide students with an intimate setting to talk about body image issues. “I have a lot of people who ask me, ‘What are the resources, and where can I go if I want to talk about these issues?’” Moriarty said. “There’s clearly a need for it.” Every Wednesday night at 5:30 p.m. in the WRC office, McElroy 141, sociology graduate student Emily Barko, GA&S ’14, and WRC staff lead an informal discussion group called Unsaid, which aims to explore and collaborate on issues of body image
See Love Your Body Week, A3
History department to honor Gettysburg address Heights Staff
Heights Staff
DAVID GUTTENFELDER / AP PHOTO
How you can help:
See CSOM Program, A3
BY NATHAN MCGUIRE
Destruction in the Philippines Typhoon Haiyan hit the Philippines on Nov. 9. It is the most powerful tropical cyclone ever to make landfall and has affected over 13 million people.
business jargon, I know the lingo, I can contribute to your firm,’” Soo said. The classes will be taught by an “all star cast,” as Soo described them. “We have basically gone to who teaches these core class in the regular semester and picking those who are favored highly by [current CSOM] students,” Soo said. “Really the best professors with lots of experience will be
WRC looks to maintain body dialogue
TYPHOON HAIYAN
News Editor
BY JENNIFER HEINE
will offer four core CSOM classes, including Portico, an introduction to business and ethics class, management, finance, and a condensed version of operations, marketing, and organizational behavior combined. Soo explained that these introductory courses will grant the students the experience they need to participate in the business world. “This program allows students to say, ‘I have all these core courses, I have this
BC TO MOBILIZES HELP VICTIMS OF
BY ELEANOR HILDEBRANDT The circumstances of three fires that were set in Boston College academic buildings last weekend are still under investigation as cleanup of the damaged areas wraps up. According to the BCPD blotter, which was released to the public on Nov. 11, a report of arson in Gasson Hall was filed at 9:46 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 9. Another report of arson in Stokes Hall was filed 13 minutes later, at 9:59 p.m. At 2:10 a.m. on Sunday, Nov. 10, an emergency alert was sent out to the BC community, stating that fires had been reported and asking anyone who had witnessed suspicious activity or had other relevant information to contact BCPD. The fire in Gasson, which was in a hallway on the second floor outside Gasson 200, resulted in a small mark on the floor but no other damage. According to University Spokesman Jack Dunn, the cause of that fire was burning papers, and it was quickly extinguished. The damage in Stokes, however, was much more extensive. Cubicles for at least five stations in Stokes 420 A-E, a graduate student area, were so damaged that they had to be removed and replaced. Books that were affected by the soot and smoke had to be removed to More Hall to be cleaned, and water damage affected portions of the second and third floors of Stokes as well. Classes that were using the two classrooms on the fourth floor had to be moved to Carney Hall. As of today, the Stokes cleanup is almost complete. “The final vacuuming and clean
ment classes, despite the limited number of spaces available. “The thought was, in the summer we have a summer program offering these CSOM core classes for those who cannot gain admittance to the school,” Soo said. “[The program] will make them more competitive, give them the background in business they need, because we cannot grant them a seat in CSOM.” Offered to rising juniors, the program
reflection, to professor Seth Jacobs, who will speak on the death of eloquence. For Alonsozana, the only student who will speak at the event, the Gettysburg Address takes on generational and even personal significance. “I was humbled to be asked to speak at this event,” he said. “As a second-generation American, I can think of no speech that better frames the reasons why my family decided to immigrate to this country from the Philippines. “Lincoln’s return to first principles and their reinterpretation to shape a new era should encourage the Millennial generation, one that eschews the formality and dressings of previous ones,” he said. “We need more leaders like Lincoln who are not afraid to make the simple, moral case for national identity.” Unexpectedly, the idea began in Rev. Jeremy Clarke, S.J.’s history course on modern China. “At many levels, the connection between the course ‘From Sun Yat-sen to the Beijing Olympics’ and a commemora-
See Gettysburg Celebration, A3
EAGLES EARN BOWL ELIGIBILITY ON SENIOR DAY
GRAHAM BECK / HEIGHTS EDITOR
BC football picked up its sixth win of the year on Saturday against NC State, becoming bowl eligible for the first time since 2010.