INDEX
INSIDE
Vol. CIV, No. 2 © 2022, The Heights, Inc. www.bcheights.com Established 1919
THIS ISSUE
NEWS...........A2 ARTS...........A8 METRO........A4 OPINIONS.....A10 MAGAZINE....A7 SPORTS.........A11
www.bcheights.com
Monday, February 7, 2022
Chestnut Hill, Mass.
METRO
MAGAZINE
Newton North Principal Henry Turner creates conversation spaces for students to discuss critical social issues such as race.
Deputy Managing Editor Emma Healy shares her recipe for raspberry swirl scones.
A7
A4
Doug Jones to Guide St. Ignatius Parish Begins Talks SCOTUS Nominee To Deepen Ties With University BY ERIN SHANNON News Editor
Former U.S. Senator Doug Jones, the current Jerome Lyle Rappaport distinguished visiting professor at Boston College Law School, will act as a “sherpa” for President Joe Biden’s Supreme Court nominee, guiding them through the confirmation process in the Senate. “I’m taking a leave of absence from everything except my Boston College School of Law gig and will become an adviser to the president regarding the … Supreme Court nomination that’s coming up, so I’m very excited about that,” Jones told The Heights on Eagle Eye. After defeating Republican Roy Moore—a former judge accused of sexually assaulting minors—in a 2017 special election, Jones became the first democrat to hold a Senate seat in Alabama since 1997. Jones is also a former U.S. Attorney known for prosecuting two members of the Ku Klux Klan for the 1963 Birmingham church bombing that killed four Black girls in the late ’90s. Ken Kersch, a political science
professor at BC, said Jones’ political experience and Alabama upbringing could have been factors in his appointment to the role of “sherpa”—formally titled the nomination advisor for legislative affairs. “It seems to me obvious that he’s someone, first of all, who has a lot of political skills and has served in the Senate with many of the senators on both sides of the aisle, and he is respected and well liked,” Kersch said. The advisor role serves to establish connections between the nominee and senators who will ultimately vote to confirm them, according to Kersch. “So the guide, especially in the case of Jones, is a political job,” he said. “Its job is to introduce the candidate to individual senators, in significant part, [to] find common ground.” R. Shep Melnick, a political science professor at BC, said the advisor role may also have to strategize about media coverage and prepare the nominee for congressional hearings.
BY JULIA KIERSZNOWSKI Special Projects Editor
Boston College and the Jesuit Parish of St. Ignatius of Loyola have begun discussions “to explore deepening the partnership” between the
See Jones, A2
University and the parish, according to a letter addressed to parishioners on Sunday. “The benefits to the parish range from collaboration on spiritual and educational endeavors to help with parish facilities and operations,”
MADDY ROMANCE / HEIGHTS SENIOR STAFF
SPORTS
reads the letter, which is signed by the parish pastor Joe Costantino, S.J., and the Parish Pastoral Council. “With the support of the Jesuit Provincial, the pastoral leadership of St. Ignatius Parish and Boston College have opened discussions to explore deepening the partnership we already enjoy and bringing it to a new stage.” Since its founding in 1926, St. Ignatius Parish has operated as an entity separate from BC, falling under the leadership of the Archdiocese of Boston. Despite this separation, there has been much collaboration between the two institutions, Costantino said in an interview with The Heights. “BC uses the church for all sorts of programs, classes, [and] masses,” he said. “Many of the weddings and baptisms we do are also of BC alums. And all our internet, our emails, are all BC. They help with our buildings and help with consulting about different things. … So there are so many ways in which we have collaborated with these different programs and offices here at the school.”
See St. Ignatius, A2
ARTS
McMullen Displays Innovative Photos BY JOSIE MCNEILL Assoc. Arts Editor
Walking into the McMullen Museum of Art’s new exhibit, Martin Parr: Time and Place, visitors encounter a photograph of Parr’s head protruding from the mouth of a shark, offering immediate evidence of the artist’s unique perspective. The exhibit, which opened at the
McMullen Museum of Art on Jan. 31, is the most comprehensive show of Parr’s work on display in the U.S. Through the lens of Parr’s camera, the photographs in the exhibit, which will be open through June 5, portray themes of the modernization of Ireland and the impact of tourism.
See McMullen, A8
Preview of the 2022 Beanpot STEVE MOONEY / HEIGHTS EDITOR
BC Will Take On Northeastern in the First Round on Monday See A11
ANEESA WERMERS / HEIGHTS STAFF