The Heights - 9/23/13

Page 1

HEALTH AT BC

FALL CONCERT

ALL TIED UP

FEATURES

ARTS & REVIEW

SPORTS

Students coach their peers seeking healthier lifestyles, B10

Jam band O.A.R. took the stage for UGBC’s Fall Concert at Conte Forum on Friday, A10

BC men’s soccer and No. 2 Notre Dame fought to an overtime draw on Saturday night, B1

www.bcheights.com

The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College Vol. XCIV, No. 30

HEIGHTS

THE

established

1919

Monday, September 23, 2013

Annual Boat Cruise sails smoothly Students gather at Boston Harbor for the yearly UGBC-sponsored cruise BY DEVON SANFORD Assoc. News Editor Boston College students donned sleek suits and semi-formal dresses for UGBC’s Annual Boat Cruise on Saturday night. The boat set sail around the Boston Harbor, with clear skies and a cool evening making a perfect setting for the event. “I think it was a success,” said Alisha Wright, manager of Heritage Programming for UGBC and A&S ’15. “People were having a g reat time— taking advantage of the photo booth, the outdoor deck, and the two dance floors.” The cruise was 30 tickets short of

DREW HOO / FOR THE HEIGHTS

Students gathered on a Spirit Boat Cruise ship Saturday night for UGBC’s annual event.

selling out. Over 550 students attended the event, which Wright considered a great number. DJ IDES, BC student Alexandre Bou-Rhodes, A&S ’15, and a disc jockey provided by Spirit Boat Cruise entertained the crowd for more than three hours on the multi-level ship. Students mingled on the top floor and on the outdoor decks. A buffet-style dinner was offered on the main floor, featuring chicken fingers and pizza, as well as cookies and brownies for dessert. There were minimal behavioral problems on the cruise, according to Wright. “We had close to no behavioral

problems which I’m sure made BCPD, our advisors, as well as myself pretty happy,” Wright said. “I was really impressed because one of our main goals of the last couple of years has been to reduce the number of transports at UGBC events, and we have been really successful at doing that.” The Annual Boat Cruise is one of four staple events—including the formerly-named ALC Ball, GLC Gala, and ALC Showdown—under UGBC’s newly structured Heritage Programming department. The “ALC” and “GLC” titles have been changed to “Annual” to present Heritage Programming as a unified division. Wright said that the title changes show that all students are

See Boat Cruise, A3

O.A.R. TURNS CONTE AROUND 1,100 tickets sold for Friday’s concert, main stage shifted to face three sections in Conte BY MARLY MORGUS Heights Editor AND

DEVON SANFORD

Assoc. News Editor

1

2

3 ALEX GAYNOR / HEIGHTS EDITOR

1. Alt-rock band O.A.R. (Of a Revolution) was the headline act at Friday’s Fall Concert. 2. Students were restricted to three sections of Conte Forum during the concert, and there was no standing room. 3. Boston-based indie hip-hop artist Moe Pope opened for O.A.R.

It was a bumpy start for the UGBC Fall Concert on Friday night. Despite efforts by UGBC to make a last-minute push of ticket sales—a promo code that offered students a $5 discount from the originally priced $30 ticket and persistent tweets and Facebook updates—7 p.m. saw only a smattering of students present for the opening act, Moe Pope. On Wednesday, Sept. 18, two days before the concert, UGBC decided to offer students a discounted ticket price in an attempt to generate higher ticket sales revenue. “We dropped the ticket price to promote the concert in a different way, seeing as the price change would affect sale volume,” said Matt Nacier, president of UGBC and A&S ’14. “Based off that change, we also realized that some students would feel that they were treated unfairly. So we are going to do a $5 discount for the 700 students who bought tickets before the discount, for another UGBC event.” Any student who purchased a ticket before Wednesday afternoon will be granted a $5 credit to any large-scale, upcoming UGBC event. The promo code, while an attempt to draw a larger audience on Friday night, was only used by three students. Nacier was disappointed by the low number of students who used the promo code. He attributed the minimal number of sales to a “lack of attention to the pub on the Facebook page.” The fall concert was one of three events under the titled “Fall Weekend”—the other two events being Thursday night’s BC2Boston Red Sox game and Saturday night’s Annual Boat Cruise. “Fall Weekend” was not a planned structure. When UGBC was left with no other option but to plan the Fall Concert and Boat Cruise on the same weekend, Nacier said

See Fall Concert, A3

Catholic student monthly to debut this Wednesday

Math dept. partners up with Tsinghua University

BY ELEANOR HILDEBRANDT

BY JENNIFER HEINE

News Editor This week marks the debut of Boston College’s newest student-run publication, the Catholic monthly The Torch. Led by Christopher Canniff, editor-in-chief and A&S ’14, Natalie Yuhas, interim managing editor and A&S ’16, and Stephanie Johnson, business manager and CSOM ’15, The Torch will release a monthly 16-page print issue, with its inaugural issue printing this Wednesday, Sept. 25. The Torch replaces The Observer as BC’s Catholic issues student publication. Canniff explained that his decision to cease publishing The Observer and start a new publication stemmed in large part from the way The Observer mixed politics with religion. “I took over [as editor-in-chief of The Observer] back in January,” Canniff said. “As a theology major, the one thing that

always concerned me was the way that the paper presented Catholicism, since it did call itself a Catholic paper—and recognizing that sometimes the other half of its mission, which was political, could end up twisting the religious side to fit a political view. So it was sort of a contentious connection of ideals in our mission that needed to be resolved, one way or the other.” In addition to the The Observer’s often-controversial pieces, Canniff said that declining staff numbers—from 60 contributors in the fall of 2010 to around 15 or 20 in the spring of 2012—made it clear that change was necessary. According to Canniff, he consulted with two faculty members—Margaret Schatkin, an associate professor in the theology department, and Susan Michalczyk, a professor in the A&S Honors program—and came to the conclusion that the best way to move forward was to focus more com-

Heights Staff pletely on Catholicism, and to change the publication’s tone. “The Observer, of course, was known for being rough and abrasive at points, and it’s not the best way to win anyone over to your side,” Canniff said. “So, if the pursuit was to be presenting the truth—if we failed to present the truth in charity, then we failed to present the fullness of the truth, because in God, truth and charity are one.” The Observer was founded in 1983, and Canniff said that he spoke with several alumni in the course of making his decision to discontinue its publication. One alumnus explained to Canniff why The Observer was founded. “It was a response to the way The Heights was at the time,”

See The Torch, A3

The Boston College Mathematics Department has become one of nine math departments in the nation to enter into a partnership with Tsinghua University in Beijing, a move that the University hopes will both contribute to the growth of the department and increase BC’s international visibility. Although the program does not currently carry course credit, it will enable faculty and possibly students to lecture and take classes at Tsinghua. “The vision is that BC faculty, if they want to, can go there for a few weeks over the summer, teach a course for graduate students, and even more advanced researchers, and if some BC graduate students want to go over as well, I think that would be possible,” said Solomon Friedberg, a Mathematics Department

McIntyre Endowed Chair and professor. “Probably they won’t carry formal course credit, they’ll be things people will do to learn advanced mathematics, which then the students might use in their dissertation, or to get a broader sense of an area of mathematics that is important to them. “In mathematics, you never stop learning, so post-docs might be interested as well,” he said. “If I were to go over and teach a course there, and somebody else was teaching a course, I might benefit from going to that course as well.” Although the program is aimed at graduate and doctoral students, Friedberg doesn’t rule out the possibility of opportunities for undergraduates. “Possibly we would have some very, very advanced undergraduates who could take advantage of it. That would be wonderful but I think that would be exceptional,” he said. “But

See Math Partnership, A3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.