The Heights 10/20/2014

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SOCIAL JUSTICE

CORONA AND RATS? FINDING THE MIX

FEATURES

ARTS & REVIEW

SPORTS

One organization unites dozens of issuebased clubs on campus, B8

Shwayze and Will Bolton performed an unlikely concert in a BC dining hall, A8

Football mixes up the playbook against Clemson but can’t handle the Tigers in the end, B1

www.bcheights.com

HEIGHTS

THE

The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College

established

1919

Monday, October 20, 2014

Vol. XCV, No. 38

CSOM to hold global conference

Pulitzer award alum to talk at BC BY CONNOR FARLEY

BC’s Center for Corporate Citizenship will host managment program

News Editor

B Y J ULIE O RENSTEIN Assoc. News Editor

Boston College will play host this week to corporate managers from around the world for the Corporate Citizenship Management Intensive Program, run by the Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship based in the Carroll School of Management (CSOM). From today through Friday, managers specifically responsible for executing responsible business practices within their respective organizations will attend lectures , analy ze case studies, and participate in small group activities to enhance their skills in developing strategies for corporate citizenship, according to the center’s website. Dean of CSOM Andy Boynton, lecturer within the marketing department Bridget Akinc, and professor of organizational studies Mary Ann Glynn, as well as other members of the CSOM faculty, are among those who instruct managers who seek the center’s services. They are joined by several teaching fellows and the center’s executive director and part-time CSOM faculty member, Katherine V. Smith. The concept of corporate citizenship that the program and the center, in general, focus on emphasizes compliance with the spirit of the law, ethics, and international norms. The center conducts primary research on its member companies’ fields and provides advisory services on how those companies can better their business practices to reflect high standards of

ALEX GAYNOR / HEIGHTS SENIOR STAFF

Campus School settles back in BY CONNOR FARLEY News Editor The 2014 spring semester was a tumultuous one for the Campus School of Boston College. After facing a seven-consecutive-year decline in enrollment and operating within facilities comparatively smaller than nearby Kennedy Day School (KDS)—a Brighton-based school for special needs students between ages 3 and 21 located within the Franciscan Hospital for Children—the Campus School was under extensive consideration by the University for relocation. Parents of Campus School students, however, were unenthused about the possibility. The relocation would have not only involved the transferring of students to a separate, non-BC owned medical facility, but also the merging of two programs—KDS and Campus School—within one building. Although THE Campion Hall space for the Campus School was less technologically equipped than KDS, many parents of Campus School children advocated against the program merger, largely on the premise that substituting a special collegial learning environment for a more hospital-ori-

ented one would detract from both student and volunteer experiences. The controversy surrounding the evaluation reached a zenith during the late winter months of last semester, when the students and families of BC’s Campus School held a prayer service in St. Ignatius Chapel for the continued stay of Campus School students on BC grounds. Attendees for the ceremony—including siblings of students, volunteers, and faculty members, numbered in the hundreds—all gathered to listen to volunteers’ stories and parental testimonies on the importance of having their children overseen within a University context. Nearly three weeks after the prayer service, following months of shared examination, the University announced that the Campus School would stay in Campion Hall, ending its consideration of a merger with KDS and thus a restructuring of the Campus School program. “The Campus School parents asked for an opportunity to keep the campus school at BC, increase enrollment, and balance the school’s budget, and we have agreed to give them this opportunity,” said then-Interim Provost

See Campus School, A3

See Hobson, A3

See Corporate Citizenship, A3

Burns Library opens new classical literature exhibit BY NATHAN MCGUIRE Asst. News Editor

Through the end of December, the Burns Library will display an exhibit showcasing a small sampling of classical books published in the Everyman’s Library (EML) series, a project that aimed to create a collection of 1,000 volumes of classical literature that would appeal to every type of reader. The EML was first conceived in 1905 by the British publisher Joseph Malaby Dent and editor Ernest Rhys, according to the Burns exhibit’s website. The project’s goal was to create an affordable collection of some of the world’s greatest texts

In a statement circulated last week by English professor Carlo Rotella, the Boston College English department has announced that it will host Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Will Hobson, BC ’06, to speak with students on his investigative writing experiences as formed during his academic undertakings at the University. A graduate from BC with a major in English, Hobson, now 29, began his journalism career through several positions with a number of local news publications, including post as a correspondent for the Philadelphia Inquirer, and staff positions at Panama City News-Herald and Daytona Beach News-Journal. It wasn’t until 2011 that Hobson would join the Tampa Bay Times—the news outlet through which he would later earn a Pulitzer Prize in local reporting for his coverage of homelessness and government misspending throughout the Hillsborough County area. Hobson was awarded the prize alongside colleague and fellow investigative reporter Michael LaForgia, who began writing for the Tampa Bay Times in 2012 and also helped expose government corruption on spending for the homeless across Hillsborough County. Defined by the Pulitzer Prize Board as an award for a distinguished example of coverage regarding significant issues of local concern, the award for local reporting was given to the two journalists for an extensive and lengthy investigation of living housing conditions for the homeless as funded by local government tax dollars. The stories revealed a longoverlooked absence of government concern for the county’s considerably

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that appealed to students, professionals, and everyday workers. J.M. Dent started publishing the collection in early 1906, but the World Wars and the Great Depression slowed down the process so much so that it took until 1956 for all 1,000 volumes to be published. The series was re-launched in the 1990s after J.M. Dent was sold in 1988. The collection can still be purchased today. The Burns exhibit, which started this month and is curated by Andrew Isidoro, an assistant at Burns Library, displays a handful of EML volumes that the library

See Everyman’s Library, A3

EMILY FAHEY / HEIGHTS EDITOR

BC lets victory slip through its hands EMILY FAHEY / HEIGHTS EDITOR

The new ‘Everyman’s Library’ display will run from October to the end of December.

Against No. 24 Clemson, the Eagles changed up their play calling in an attempt to charge past the Tigers’ defense. The offense’s success varied, though. Running back Tyler Rouse and wide receiver Josh Bordner dropped passes from quarterback Tyler Murphy at crucial points in the game, as BC saw its fourth quarter lead give way to a 17-13 Clemson victory, B1


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