The Heights September 28, 2015

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FEATURES

ARTS & REVIEW

SPORTS

Former roommates debate junior year housing, A5

The Avett Brothers and Of Monsters and Men were among many that rocked City Hall Plaza this weekend, B8

BC got back in the win column with a hard-fought victory over NIU, B1

BACK ON TRACK

HEIGHTS

www.bcheights.com

THE

The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College

established

Monday, September 28, 2015

Vol. XCVI, No. 31

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9P :8IFCPE =I<<D8E E\nj <[`kfi The Association of American Universities recently released a survey detailing the climate on sexual assault at 27 different universities across the countr y —B oston College was not included. The survey results found that 16.5 percent of seniors reported experiencing sexual touching or penetration as a result of physical force or incapacita-

tion. Senior girls reported experiencing this at a rate of 26.1 percent, while members of the LGBTQ population in the senior grade reported at a rate of 29.5 percent. Senior males reported at a rate of 6.3 percent. At BC, there has never been a community survey regarding the sexual assault climate on campus. The most re cent data come from the Cler y Act, which mandates that universities release data regarding crimes on campus. Between 2012 and 2013, the

reported incidents of sexual assault doubled—from five to 10. At the Women’s Center, director Katie Dalton estimates that per grade, 237 women will be sexually assaulted during their time at BC—a far cry from the 10 reported incidents annually. According to the AAU survey, the most common reason for not reporting an incident of sexual assault is the fear that it would not be taken seriously enough, or that nothing would be done. There is a stigma that can be attached to reporting incidents, Dalton said. “A lot of these assaults, based on national data, happen between ac-

quaintances, and when we think about Boston College, I think students are probably reluctant to disrupt any type of social circles that they’re in,” she said. Ideally, the number of reported incidents will go up as students become more aware, and then eventually level off as preventive efforts like Bystander Training take effect, said Catherine Larrabee, MCAS ’16, who is in her second year working at the Women’s Center. Larrabee is also a student representative on the University-wide sexual assault steering committee, which is the group that oversees Title

IX/Sexual Assault education, prevention, and response efforts at BC, and reviews policy, practice, and issues related to Title IX on campus. This past week, the Bystander Intervention Education program hosted a photo campaign in the quad with prompts that read “I will intervene because…” Over 500 people participated, Larrabee said, and the campaign reached thousands online. One of the sheets read, “I will intervene because it’s a social justice issue.” At BC, the Women’s Center aims

See Assault, A8

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JOSH MENTZER / HEIGHTS STAFF | AMELIE TRIEU / HEIGHTS STAFF

ÊGfgjË i\klie kf k_\ ?\`^_kj ]fi XeelXc ^XcX The Boston Pops Orchestra, under the direction of Keith Lockhart, performed Friday at the annual Parents’ Weekend scholarship fundraiser. See page B7.

JXii YifX[\ej ]fZlj n`k_ e\n ifc\ `e GifmfjkËj f]Ô Z\ 8[d`e`jkiXkfi cffbj kf \jkXYc`j_ fne c\^XZp k_ifl^_ e\n gfj`k`fe 9P IP;<I C<< =fi K_\ ?\`^_kj For a decade now, Boston College undergraduates have known Akua Sarr in her multiple, visible roles on campus: as the former freshman dean of the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences (MCAS), former director of the Academic Advising Center, and instructor in the Cornerstone Program and the African and African Diaspora Studies Program. Sarr now takes on a new role, having been promoted to vice provost of undergraduate academic affairs in August. One of her favorite parts of her old job, she said, was working one-on-one

with students on their academic plans, and their personal and career goals. As vice provost, however, Sarr anticipates her role will change a bit. “So far, I’m trying to get to know the job,” she said. “I know all of the people I’m working with, but I’m trying to get to know a little bit more about their programs and their departments and the missions of the different offices that I’m working with. I’ve had a lot of meetings with directors, folks in student affairs, and mission and ministry.” Sarr’s previous position as freshman dean focused specifically on first-year students and personalized academic counseling. “This job is going to be a little more broad than that, because I’ll still be working with the academic advising

See Sarr, A3

KATHLEEN MIKKELSEN / HEIGHTS STAFF

Readers going through relationship problems, workplace betrayals, attempts to recapture youth, and romantic flings can now accompany their lives’ ups and downs with drinks inspired by their favorite Shakespeare characters. Othello’s Green Eyed Monster, Kate’s Shrew-driver, and Maki-beth rolls are the latest Shakespeare-inspired literary contributions by a member of Boston College’s faculty. Earlier this month, associate professor Caroline Bicks of BC’s English department released Shakespeare, Not Stirred: Cocktails for Your Everyday Drama with Michelle Ephraim of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Published in the United States by Perigee Books—a division of Penguin—and in the United Kingdom by Scribe, the book compiles cocktail and hors d’ouvre recipes inspired by Shakespeare characters. Similar to Tequila Mockingbird, the work strives to bring Shakespeare to readers’ daily lives through humorous recipes, puns, and images. Bicks, a graduate of Harvard University who earned her Ph.D. from Stanford University, specializes in gender studies as well as the history of science. She has spent the bulk of her 13 years at BC teaching courses on Shakespeare, as well as classes on gender theory, including masculinity studies and the history of feminist thought. Her diverse skillsets and interests proved to be the catalyst for Shakespeare, Not Stirred. “I also have a background in improvisational comedy and have written humorous creative nonfiction pieces over the years,” she said. “I started a blog about six years ago with my good friend Michelle Ephraim … the blog, Everyday Shakespeare, was a place for us to have fun with the characters and plotlines we talked and wrote about all day in our academic lives.” Bicks’ and Ephraim’s joint blog served as a forum for their creative humor and their professional interests. It eventually led them to think about a larger commercial venture. “We had features like ‘Ask the Experts,’ where we’d ask Lady Macbeth, Gertrude, and Cleopatra to debate different parenting styles, for example,” she said. “It was a lot of fun for us, so we decided to create something in the spirit of the blog that we could market

See Shakespeare, A8


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