The Heights 09/19/2013

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MOVING ON

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WRECKING BALL

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Matt Humphrey takes his shot at the NBA after playing at three schools, A10

Former U.S. Senate candidate Martha Coakley looks to start anew in bid for governor, B10

The controversial Miley Cyrus video sparks a discussion of celebrity culture, B1

www.bcheights.com

HEIGHTS

THE

The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College

established

1919

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Vol. XCIV, No. 29

MORE DEMOLITION PLANNED

UGBC lowers Fall Concert ticket prices BY DEVON SANFORD Assoc. News Editor

IMAGE COURTESY OF EINHORN YAFFEE PRESCOTT

Pictured above is an architectural rendering of the new building that the University plans to construct on the site where More Hall currently stands.

After standing vacant for more than a year, More Hall is slated to be torn down in the spring, pending approval from the City of Boston BY ANDREW SKARAS Asst. News Editor Since the spring semester of 2012, when the University Advancement Office moved to the Cadigan Alumni Center on Brighton Campus, More Hall has remained empty. This month, Boston College expects to receive permits from the city of Boston to begin building the first new residence hall on campus since the completion of Stayer Hall in 2004. Over the past few years, BC has worked with architects and designers to come up with a schematic design for the new building. According to Executive Vice President Pat Keating, BC is currently in the process of doing cost estimates. The building will have four- and six-person apartments with kitchens. It will be five or six stories tall and house approximately 480 stu-

dent beds. In addition to dorm rooms, the new building will also house lounges, seminar rooms, music practice rooms, and an apartment for a faculty member or Resident Director. Additionally, the building will house University Health Services. “We are going to move the health services to the south wing on the ground floor,” Keating said. “It will have examining rooms, overnight stay rooms, and all the facilities that support the health service. It will be a modest improvement in the size of their space and an improvement in the quality of the space. We think this is a particularly good location.” Although the building has been in the Institutional Master Plan (IMP) since the plan’s approval in 2008, work on the University-neigh-

See More Hall, A3

QUICK FACTS LOCATION Site of More Hall NUMBER OF BEDS 480 TYPE OF APARTMENTS Four- and six-person OTHER FEATURES University Health Services Music practice rooms Study lounges Seminar rooms

Yesterday afternoon, UGBC announced via Facebook that Fall Concert tickets will be on sale for 25 dollars—5 dollars less than the original ticket price of 30 dollars. Tickets for the concert, which will feature alternative rock band O.A.R., Boston-based indie hip hop artist Moe Pope, and student DJ Alex Perez, A&S ’14, will be sold at the discounted price for a “limited time only,” according to UGBC’s Facebook Page. Matt Nacier, UGBC President and A&S ’14, declined to comment on the change to ticket prices or on current ticket sales when contacted by The Heights. Tickets went on sale last Wednesday, Sept. 11 at 9 a.m. When asked about ticket sales at the UGBC Student Assembly meeting on Tuesday night, Nacier responded that sales were “pretty dismal.” On Sept. 15, UGBC hosted a contest on Twitter for free tickets. The winners were announced last night. Michael Santisi, A&S ’17, Stephanie Ng, CSOM ’15, and Cassidy Gallegos, LSOE ’16, each won a free ticket to the concert. The Fall Concert is this Friday, Sept. 20, at 7 p.m. in Conte Forum. The concert will be preceded by a carnival sponsored by Nights on the Heights, featuring photo booths, minigolf, barbeque, customizable hats, and glitter paint. Doors for the concert will open at 6 p.m. and close at 8 p.m. Tickets remain on sale online through Robsham Theater. 

Lynch School faculty awarded NSF grant for training local math teachers BY NATHAN MCGUIRE For The Heights The National Science Foundation recently awarded faculty from the Lynch School of Education (LSOE) and the mathematics department a $1.6 million grant to fulfill a project that will train and support teachers in high-need schools in the Boston area. The project, called “Exemplary Mathematics Education for High-Need Schools,” will be a collaborative effort between LSOE

associate professor Lillie Albert, associate professor of mathematics CK Cheung, and the James P. McIntyre Professor of Mathematics Solomon Friedberg. While students in Massachusetts have recently scored competitively on international math exams, Friedberg points to a persistent socioeconomic achievement gap as concerning. “[We can] do more to give everyone the chance to succeed,” he said. One of the main goals of the project will be to produce excellent teachers to serve high-need schools where achievement

gaps are most persistent. Two programs, the Teaching Fellowship and the Master Teaching Fellowship, will work together to achieve this goal. The Teaching Fellowship program will allow eight aspiring teachers to earn their M.S. in teaching degree during an intensive one-year program that will enable them to develop a deep understanding of mathematics. The project will work with the existing Donovan Scholars Program to recruit the candidates, according to Albert. Math for

OIP hosts annual study abroad fair

chose to require four to five years experience because that’s when we believe teachers make decisions to leave the field,” Albert said. She says she hopes the program will encourage these teachers to continue teaching. The grant provides all 16 fellows with a $10,000 stipend for each year of the fellowship, providing they agree to serve in high-need schools for all five years. The Teaching Fellows will teach in the

See NSF Grant, A3

UGBC renames boat cruise, aims to keep event’s integrity BY DEVON SANFORD Assoc. News Editor

BY SARA DOYLE For The Heights Conte Forum took on an international character the e vening of Wednesday, Sept. 18, as students visited Conte Forum for the annual Study Abroad Fair. The session provided a chance for students to learn more about the opportunities for studying abroad available to them. Representatives from the various academic programs, BC’s Office of International Programs (OIP), the Scholarship and Fellowships department, and programs for obtaining passports, were on hand to answer questions. Justyna Jochym, a representative of Jagiellonian University in Poland, had been at the Study Abroad Fair last year as well as this year to discuss the programs available to students at the University. Jochym remarked that the student body at Boston College is generally very enthusiastic about

America Boston, a local nonprofit network of teachers and leaders, has partnered with Boston College to assist in the recruitment process as well. The Teaching Fellows will be supported and mentored by eight experienced teachers in the Master Teaching Fellowship. The goal of the mentorship will be for the experienced teachers to “bring [their] specialty and experience to the new teachers,” Cheung said. The Master Fellows will have four to five years experience in teaching. “We

JENNIFER BISHOP / FOR THE HEIGHTS

Students gathered in Conte Forum on Wednesday evening for the annual study abroad fair. studying abroad. “Since we’ve been coming here, we’ve been getting a lot of interest from Boston College students,” Jochym said. “It’s quite the event.” Jochym described the available pro g rams at Jag ielloni an University, mainly of interest for students interested in political science and the humanities. Next year, she said, there will be a program on the Holocaust and Totalitarian Systems. Jochym said that the fair is a good way to tell students about available programs.

“We have a lot of personal contact with students,” Jochym said. “It lets us close in on that distance that students experience looking on the web.” Michelle Teague, A&S ’14, visited the University of Queensland in Bisbon, Australia for a semester in the International House. “Definitely go to the University of Queensland,” Teague said. “That’s the best advice I’ve ever given.” As to the highlights of her trip, she cited the

See Study Abroad Fair, A3

Last year, UGBC voted to transform the AHANA Leadership Council (ALC) and the GLBTQ Leadership Council (GLC) from independent bodies within UGBC into representative boards under Diversity and Inclusion. As a result of these structural changes, the staple events of ALC and GLC—including the formerly-named ALC Boat Cruise, ALC Ball, GLC Gala, and ALC Showdown—are now combined in the Heritage Programming department, and the “ALC” and “GLC” titles have been changed to “Annual.” Alisha Wright, manager of Heritage Programming for UGBC and A&S ’15, said that the title changes are intended to present Heritage Programming as a unified division. “We wanted to change the names to reflect the unity of our new group,” Wright said. “With a lot of the structural changes we made, especially within programming, we wanted to work more as a team and we wanted the names of the event to reflect that.” Vice President of Programming Denise

Pyfrom said the events will continue to celebrate the diverse AHANA and GLBTQ communities. “We really want to stress the fact that the integrity of our events is still there,” Pyfrom said. “We are working with the counsels directly to make sure that they feel represented in our events. We want to make sure that the groups who originally created the events know that we have their best interests at heart.” Heritage programmers will continue to work closely with their respective counsels, despite the change in UGBC structure. “We put these four large-scale events under one division because they garner the most student population out of any events in GLC and ALC history,” Wright said. “In the past we have had trouble with attendance at these events so we wanted to put them in a division where we could solely focus on them and figure out how we could better market [them] to the student body. These decisions were made to show that the events are for all students to celebrate the AHANA and GLBTQ communities.” Members of the student body and BC

See Boat Cruise, A3


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