Skip to main content

The Heights, May 2, 2022

Page 1

INSIDE

INDEX

Vol. CIV, No. 11 © 2022, The Heights, Inc. www.bcheights.com Established 1919

THIS ISSUE

NEWS...........A2 ARTS...........A8 METRO........A4 OPINIONS.....A11 MAGAZINE....A6 SPORTS.........A13

www.bcheights.com

Monday, May 2, 2022

Chestnut Hill, Mass.

OPINIONS

MAGAZINE

Columnist Evy Knouse presents a comprehensive guide to what your favorite Glee character says about you.

Herrd founders and BC students reflect on the role that the anonymous app plays on campus.

A6

A11

‘He is Boston College’: Jerry York’s Lasting Legacy By Megan Gentile Sports Editor

When Tommy Cross arrived on the Heights for his official visit with Boston College men’s hockey while he was in high school, he showed up with expectations of being overwhelmed with state-of-the-art facilities and high-profile alumni right off the bat. “ When I’d go to visit other schools … the first person they’d introduce you to, sometimes it was a big former player that was in the NHL, or they’d introduce you to the strength coach, or they’d show you the new hot tub, cold tub,” Cross said. But for Jerry York, none of that mattered. “On our visit to BC, the first stop after we met Coach York, he took us to meet Father Tony Penna,” Cross said. “It was so important for him to take us there immediately.” For York , BC ’67, more than locker rooms or fancy equipment,

relationships are what matter most. “I don’t think it’s buildings. I don’t think it’s campuses. I don’t think it’s where you are,” York said in his 2019 speech following his acceptance to the Hockey Hall of Fame. “It’s the people that you are involved with that make a place special.” A s the winningest coach in NCAA hockey history, York made an impact at BC from the time he

News

Scammers Target BC Students

By Erin Shannon News Editor Sofia Laboy Asst. News Editor

Philip Guarino, a career coach at the Boston College Career Center, picked up his phone on March 1 to answer what he assumed would be a normal call. “I introduced myself on the phone, expecting it to be a typical call from a college student to the Career Center,” he said. “And then the student asked, ‘Have we met before?’ And I said ‘No, we have not met before.’” According to Guarino, the student said she received an email inviting her to apply for a job at BC from someone using his name. Later, as the student waited in line to buy four $100 gift cards for the job, she began to ques-

tion its legitimacy, Guarino said. She then decided to call Guarino’s desk phone. “At that moment … the student who realized that she had been scammed was able to confirm she had been scammed, and I then realized why she was calling,” Guarino said. This unexpected phone call is just one example of a larger pattern at BC. David Escalante, BC’s director of computer policy and security, said that online scammers have been targeting BC email addresses, promising students jobs that pay upward of $350 per week. “Many students who fell for this lost hundreds of dollars, and several students lost thousands of dollars,” Escalante said.

See Scam, A2

arrived as a player in 1963 to his retirement in April after 28 years. While his resume boasts nearly

every accolade and accomplishment a hockey coach could gather, the memories and stories of his players

and colleagues prove that York’s legacy at BC is not just about a filled trophy case, but rather, his impact off the ice. York returned to the Heights as a head coach in 1994 after a seven-year s t i nt a s the head coach at Clarkson from 1972–79 and 15 years at Bowling Green from HEIGHTS ARCHIVES 1979– 94. He found success at Bowling Green, winning a national championship in 1984, but his return

to BC in 1994 was a homecoming and a chance to coach at his alma mater—something he had always dreamed of. “In ’94, when Father Monan brought me up to his residence on College Road and sat me down … he says, ‘Jerry, I’d like you to become the next head coach at Boston College,’” York said in his retirement press conference on April 20. “That was probably the most memorable moment—that night. It was something I always aspired to.” York’s return to BC came amid a tumultuous time for BC men’s hockey. Coaches had been in and out of the program, and the Eagles were on the heels of two losing seasons. BC went 7–12–5 in Hockey East under former head coach Steve Cedorchuk in the 1993–94 season before Mike Milbur y replaced Cedorchuk in March 1994. Milbury only lasted three months, abruptly departing in June, and from there, York took over.

See York, A13

Metro

SCREENSHOT BY CONNOR SIEMIEN / HEIGHTS EDITOR

Newton to Receive $2.12 Million from Opioid Settlement By Sahithi Thumuluri Heights Staff

The City of Newton will receive over $2 million after Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey and 13 other state attorneys general accepted a settlement offer from

pharmaceutical companies for their role in the opioid crisis, according to Mayor Ruthanne Fuller’s April 7 newsletter. “I promised the people of Massachusetts that the opioid crisis would be a top priority, that we would hold the bad actors accountable, and

that the billion-dollar companies who got rich off the suffering in our communities would pay,” Healey said at an April 5 press conference. “This is a huge win for people in Massachusetts.”

See Settlement, A5


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
The Heights, May 2, 2022 by The Heights - Issuu