The Heights February 18, 2016

Page 1

DAUGHTER OF THE DESERT

HERE TO HELP

DANCE THE NIGHT AWAY

SPORTS

METRO

SCENE

Freshman Makenna Newkirk is making a name for herself on the ice at Kelley Rink, B8

New Harvard startup aims to empower students, A5

Liam Connolly and Andrew Troum discuss being the only boys in BCID and DOBC, respectively, B3

www.bcheights.com

HE

The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College

established

1919

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Vol. XCVII, No. 9

UGBC Elections <<<

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The Elections Committee voted on Nikita Patel, CSOM ’17, and Joseph Arquillo’s, LSOE ’17, appeal to be added to the presidential ballot on Wednesday night. The Committee declined their request to extend the nomination deadline, which was originally set for Jan. 29. No other teams can be added to the ballot at this point. In the appeals process, the Elections Committee can only look at new information and whether its original decision was

conducted fairly, according to Rachel Mills, co-chair of the Elections Committee and MCAS ’16. The only new information that the Committee received were emails from students in support of Patel and Arquillo’s campaign. The Committee decided that the new information was not enough to change the original decision of the Committee, Mills said. Earlier, the Committee said that Patel and Arquillo’s run would not be fair to the campaigns that turned in their nomination materials on time, including 250 student signatures. The Committee also believes that there is sufficient competition between the two remaining teams—Anthony Perasso,

LSOE ’17, and Rachel Loos, MCAS ’18; and Olivia Hussey, current UGBC executive vice president and MCAS ’17, and Meredith McCaffrey, MCAS ’17. “After careful consideration, the Elections Committee has decided to uphold our previous decision to not extend the presidential nomination deadline,” the Elections Committee said in an email. “We feel that it is important to stand by the rules outlined in The Elections Code.” Patel and Arquillo submitted their written appeal to the

See UGBC, A3

ABBY PAULSON / HEIGHTS EDITOR

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Students interested in working in sports business will have a networking event of their own. Organizations like the Associated Press, the Boston Celtics, the Boston Red Sox, ESPN, New Balance, Nike, PGA Tour, The Boston Globe, and Under Armour will all attend the Sports Business Society of Boston College’s “SBS,” an inaugural Sports Business Networking Event on Feb. 22. The event will run from 6-9 p.m. in the Murray Function Room, Yawkey Athletic Center, and will give students the opportunity to network with business executives. “Knowledge is invaluable. Networking is essential,” Wan-Yi Sweeting, MCAS ’17, a member of the Sports Business Society Executive Board and head organizer for the event, said in an email. After working with Serena Williams’ agent in Paris over the summer, Sweeting learned the importance of networking in order to get a job. This inspired Sweeting to create the SBS event, giving her fellow students a chance to connect and network with different sports

businesses. “BC usually has career fairs for accountants, finance majors, marketing majors etc...but nothing along the lines of sports,” Sweeting said. Norby Williamson, ESPN Inc. executive senior vice president of production, program scheduling, and development, will be the keynote speaker for the event. Williamson will share his experience in the sports business industry with students, offering advice to those who want to break into either the sports or entertainment industries. He will introduce each of the 23 guests from the 18 different companies that are attending the event. “It’s both a serious but energetic environment, because having our keynote speaker as the facilitator for the speednetworking event is going to be a lot of fun,” Sweeting said. Similar to a musical-chairs setup, attendees will be able to “speed-network” with the different companies, facilitated by Williamson. Students will have an allotted 15 minutes with one or two representatives from a sports business at an assigned table before switching at the sound of music. Each table will have eight students. “I want to force students into a situation where they had to talk to the

See SBS, A3

PHOTO COURTESY OF BC.EDU

8 E\n ?fd\ ]fi 8jg`i`e^ A\jl`k Jkl[\ekj Pflk_j `ek\i\jk\[ `e gi`\jk_ff[ ZXe Xggcp 9 P J ?8EEFE C FE>NFIK? ?\`^_kj JkX]] For over a year, the Office of Residential Life and the Jesuit community has been working on a new initiative that will provide male Boston College students with a living space where they can explore the option of becoming a Jesuit. The Loyola House is expected to open in the fall semester of 2016, and

it will be a residential option open to both undergraduate and graduate students. Rev. Casey Beaumier, S.J., the director of the Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies, will be the leading director of the program, and Francisco Sassetti da Mota, a Portuguese Jesuit who is currently studying at the School of Theology and Ministry, will accompany him. According to Beaumier, other Jesuits from Saint Mary’s Hall and the Peter Faber Jesuit Community will also be involved in the program. The program was proposed as a way for young men studying at BC to

discern whether the Jesuit lifestyle is one that they are seriously interested in. The programming that takes place in this house will give the residents a spiritual experience that is, in certain ways, similar to a priest’s. The students will be encouraged to focus on the notion of living in a community, which means there will be various activities for them to participate in. Some of these activities include service projects and weekly dinners, and they are meant to give residents an idea of what it is like to

See Jesuits, A8

UGBC Elections <<<

=fc\p# DZ:Xik_p :XdgX`^e N`k_[iXnj =ifd L>9: Gi\j`[\ek`Xc IXZ\ 9P K8PCFI JK% ><ID8@E 8jjk% E\nj <[`kfi The Elizabeth Foley, MCAS ’17, and Joseph McCarthy, CSOM ’17, campaign withdrew from the Undergraduate Government of Boston College presidential race Monday evening. This decision leaves two teams in the running—Anthony Perasso,

LSOE ’17, and Rachel Loos, MCAS ’18; and Olivia Hussey, current UGBC executive vice president and MCAS ’17, and Meredith McCaffrey, MCAS ’17. In a statement from the campaign, the Foley-McCarthy team said that its withdrawal was due to unforeseen personal matters. Neither students nor administrators encouraged them to withdraw from the race,

the team said. “This, unfortunately was the best decision for us and we hope the student body of Boston College can understand that we could not have predicted or prevented these issues,” the team said in an email. Despite the Jan. 29 deadline for teams to enter the race, Foley and McCarthy are encouraging the Elections Committee to ac-

cept the nomination of other campaign teams to ensure that the presidential race remains competitive. The Elections Committee met on Wednesday night, however, to discuss the matter and declined to extend the nomination deadline. The presidential election will continue as planned with only two teams of candidates.

“An election without diverse and representative candidates is not an election at all; it is an injustice to the student body and the candidates,” Foley and McCarthy said in their statement. The Hussey and Perasso teams will launch their campaigns on Feb. 21, and students can vote for UGBC president beginning Mar. 2.


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