The Heights will return on October 16th. Happy Columbus Day Weekend! THROUGH THE LENS SCENE The story behind Steve Rosenfield, creator of the “What I Be” project, C1
www.bcheights.com
hockey preview The 2014-15 season marks the start of a new era for Boston College hockey. Check out our Hockey Preview, B1
HEIGHTS
THE
The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College
established
1919
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Vol. XCV, No. 35
Students adjust to the costs of living off campus BCPD chief ResLife seeks to make the necessary financial accommodations for off-campus students BY MARY ROSE FISSINGER Special Projects Editor AND
NATHAN MCGUIRE
Asst. News Editor
Editor’s Note: This story is part of an ongoing series about off-campus housing.
JORDAN PENTALERI / HEIGHTS GRAPHIC
For many students, moving off campus is a welcome teaser for adult life: there are no resident assistants, no security desks, and a healthy sampling of non-Boston College students in the homes and apartments nearby. This additional freedom comes at a cost, however—a cost that may not surpass that of living on campus, but is certainly more visible. Food, utilities, and the cost of rent are no longer folded into a single, handsome sum, but must be paid regularly and by deadlines. This proves an adjustment for most students, but can be even trickier for those receiving financial aid from the University.
BC can provide students with financial assistance for the duration of the school year, which amounts to about 30 weeks. Aid is calculated via a straightforward formula: cost of attendance minus family contribution, with cost of attendance taking into account room and board for on campus students, or the estimated equivalent for off-campus students. This estimation varies based on the type of living arrangement the student has found off campus and takes as its basis the median price of accommodations of that type, determined on a year to year basis. It also factors in an average price for groceries and utilities, as well as miscellaneous other costs. When arriving at the cost, the Office of Residential Life operates under the assumption that students will be sharing a room in their off-campus home or apartment, based on the logic that nearly all on-campus stu-
See ‘What I Be,’ A3
See Clery Act, A3
BY ELEANOR HILDEBRANDT Editor-in-Chief
Editor’s Note: This story is part of an ongoing series about the accessiblity on campus.
See Disability Access, A3
AMELIE TRIEU / HEIGHTS STAFF
On Monday night, photographer Steve Rosenfield discussed his ‘What I Be’ project to more than 300 students in Devlin 008.
Photographer seeks to confront insecurity Heights Staff It’s not often that a person’s emotional and social insecurities are broadcasted on Facebook. The ‘What I Be’ project created by photographer Steve Rosenfield, however, aims to empower people by doing just that. This past Monday, Rosenfield came to Boston College and photographed students who wrote their biggest insecurities on their hands and faces, with the intent of helping them confront and reclaim those insecurities through photography and social media.
The pictures were then posted to Rosenfield’s Facebook page, Ganesh Photography. The pictures each have a caption written in the same format: “I am not my ____.” Each of the 73 BC participants ended the sentence with his or her own insecurity. The project, which consisted of about 80 percent women and 20 percent men, was unveiled Oct. 6 in Devlin 008 with more than 300 students in attendance. After Rosenfield discussed the history of the project, several student participants also reflected on their experiences regarding socially driven points
News Editor
of inadequacy or concern. In 2002, Rosenfield quit his job at a computer company and started traveling. He picked up photography in 2006 and eventually began photographing different musical acts such as Norah Jones and Macklemore. Although he loved being able to support himself through photography, Rosenfield said, he wanted to do more. He initially wanted the project to be contained to just 150 people, but once he ran the
See Off-Campus Housing, A3
Students, admins work to address disability access
BY CAROLYN FREEMAN
BY CONNOR FARLEY The latest figures reported in the University’s Annual Disclosure of Crime Statistics—a public report federally mandated under the Clery Act—show an increase in the number of forcible sexual assaults reported at Boston College in 2013. Last year, 11 instances of sexual assault were reported to the University, a rise from five in 2012 and seven in 2011, all of which were documented as having occurred in dorms or residential facilities, and only two over the last three years as having occurred off campus. “The increase in the number of reported sexual assaults may be due in part to the increased national focus on sexual assaults and greater awareness of resources at Boston College,” said Chief of BCPD John King, who oversees much of the University’s coordination of sexual assault response policies, in an email. “In cases where BCPD is involved, we provide support for the survivor, facilitate access to resources, investigate the case, and assist with any court-related matter.” According to the University’s latest iteration of Student Sexual Misconduct Policy, students seeking to report a sexual assault are encouraged to do so through three types of primary contact groups: anonymous resources such as BC’s hotline for anonymous reporting Sexual Assault Network (SANet); confidential resources, such as a pastoral or professional counselor in University Counseling Services (UCS); and private resources, such as the Women’s Center, Office of the Dean of Students (DOS), Student Affairs Title IX Coordinator Katherine O’Dair, or BCPD. BC’s Required Disclosures and Reports of Campus Safety and Security Policies define Clery Act crimes as consisting of murder, non-negligent manslaughter, negligent manslaughter, forcible and non-forcible sex offenses, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, motor vehicle theft, arson, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking—all federally mandated to be publicly reported under the act. According to King, under circumstances in which BC’s help-seeking policy has been invoked, BCPD officers are trained to perform any necessary immediate medical care to students exhibiting signs of injury until the arrival of Eagle EMS or third-party emergency medical technicians. “The initial priority is to ensure that proper medical assistance and support are obtained,” King said regarding additional measures taken by the University for students
Accessiblity concerns persist at BC
For most students, a small wheelchair symbol embossed on a pole with the words “Lyons Hall” and a left-facing arrow will quickly blend into the rest of the Quad. The fact that the construction space next to St. Mary’s Hall seems to fill with the same stone planters flanking O’Neill Plaza will hardly register. These are easy oversights for some, but critical pieces of information for others—they give students with disabilities the information necessary to access Student Services, or make them wonder if they’ll have to traverse the full perimeter of the plaza in order to gain access to St. Mary’s once it reopens. Before the beginning of fall semester, signage was added around campus in order to make disability-accessible routes more obvious, a new webpage detailing the school’s disability resources was added to the University’s homepage, and a door was added on the second floor of O’Neill Library to eliminate the need for stairs when moving across the atrium. O’Neill also replaced Bapst Library as the latenight study space. Accessibility was a factor in the decision to keep it open continuously from Sundays through Thursdays, according to University Librarian Thomas Wall. Some students, though, say these changes are barely scratching the surface of problems surrounding access at Boston College. Maryan Amaral, LGSOE ’18, attended BC as an ablebodied undergraduate. She now uses an electrical scooter or a wheelchair to get around, and, upon returning to BC, noticed a host of accessibility issues. “There needs to be a large change in infrastructure,” Amaral said. “There’s a need to communicate with all the students and make accommodations for everybody under 504.” Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 guarantees rights to individuals with disabilities. BC is subject to Section 504
talks Clery crime figures
Former Greek PM speaks on global collaboration BY ANDREW SKARAS Heights Editor Whether it is containing the spread of Ebola or combating economic crises, international organizations could play a critical role in solving society’s greatest difficulties, but instead often force countries to face them alone, said George Papandreou, former prime minister of Greece, at Boston College yesterday afternoon in Robsham Theater, as a speaker in the Winston Center on Leadership and Ethics’ Clough Colloquium. The son and grandson of Greek prime
ministers, Papandreou drew on his experience of leading Greece through “the center of the financial and economic storm” between 2009 and 2011 to provide perspective on global governance, collective responsibility in the face of crisis, and the role of institutions in creating necessary change in a society. When he took over as prime minister in the fall of 2009 at the helm of the PASOK, the social-democratic left-of-center party in Greece, Papandreou found that the government was in a much worse financial state than his predecessor
See Papandreou, A2
EMILY FAHEY / HEIGHTS EDITOR
Last night, the Winston Center hosted former PM George Papandreou in Robsham Theater.