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The Heights

The News Site of Boston College

The Heights

The News Site of Boston College

The Heights

Election 2025: Local Duo Looks to Repeal Newton’s Winter Parking Ban

Election 2025: Local Duo Looks to Repeal Newton’s Winter Parking Ban

Carina Murphy July 10, 2025
As most Newton residents soak up the sun in the recent heat wave, Jeremy Freudberg and Peter Klapes have their sights set on the future—to snowstorms, freezing temperatures, and the rules that come with them. As co-leaders of the campaign to repeal Newton’s winter parking ban, they’ve rallied support for a repeal measure that will appear on the November ballot.
(Will Martino / Heights Editor)

BC Barred Student Organization From Endorsing Presidential Candidate, Emails Show

Nikita Osadchiy March 30, 2025
The College Democrats of Boston College, a registered student organization on campus, was barred from publicly endorsing and phone banking for Kamala Harris by University administrators five days before the 2024 presidential election, according to emails obtained by The Heights. 
(Jashodhara Jindal / Heights Editor)

U.S. Politics Has a Wu-Tang Problem

Tommy Roche March 30, 2025
I have tried to conceal my political opinions in my columns, but not anymore. It’s time to talk Wu-Tang. No, I’m not referring to some extremist group that takes its name from the iconic 1990s hip-hop group. I’m talking about how the rise of ironic political disengagement—embodied in a $35 Wu-Tang lawn sign—is killing America.
(Connor O'Brien / Heights Editor)

India’s Next Move in the U.S.-China Chess Match

Jose Garcia February 2, 2025
The chess match between China and the U.S. is far from over, and India should be perceived as a rook in the middle of the board, undecided on its allegiance. Maybe the answer does not lie in picking a side and falling into the depths of this zero-sum game, but in building a stable economy that allows India to reclaim as much independence as possible from this chess game.
(Connor O'Brien / Heights Editor)

BC Alum and U.S. Senator Ed Markey’s Inauguration Absence Was Undemocratic

Nick Voll February 2, 2025
Just two days later, President Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th president of the United States of America. BC’s most visible alumnus was noticeably absent from the ceremonies, presumably mourning the demise of his once proud basketball program. Markey, along with several other members of the Massachusetts delegation, including U.S. Representatives Bill Keating and Ayanna Pressley, consciously decided not to attend Trump’s inauguration.
(Parker Leaf / Heights Editor)

A Case for Compassion

Mary Zimmerman November 17, 2024
This morning, I started to write a radically different article. After a painful U.S. election, I wanted to issue a call to action and a plea for hope in the face of what seemed like utter hopelessness. The first paragraph quoted Emma Lazarus and the second lamented Arizona’s passage of Proposition 314. Frustration poured onto the page. Then I got an email. My friend died this afternoon.
(Ashna Potluri / Heights Staff)

Winston Discusses Religion and Media’s Role in Reagan’s Presidency

Ashna Potluri October 19, 2024

The religious imaginary, a collective sense of what provides purpose for citizens,  plays a large role in how Americans operate as a society—including who we choose to elect—according to Diane Winston,...

(Parker Leaf / Heights Editor)

Protest and Complacency at BC

Katie Spillane September 17, 2024
So, in this time of strife and action, why does it often feel like Boston College is incapable of taking action? In my experience, students here seem to believe there are many culprits to our problem of indifference—usually those with opposing viewpoints. And both sides point a finger at cancel culture. 
(Parker Leaf / Heights Editor)

Why We Should Understand the Enemies of the Western World

Jose Garcia February 28, 2024
The grand strategy of the world chessboard shifts and changes every day with the development of new interests and political campaigns. It’s foolish to dismiss attempts to understand fellow players because of a supposed moral high ground.
(Parker Leaf / Heights Editor)

On Voice, Vitriol, and Visions: A Lorikeet Among the Eagles

Andrew Lim October 22, 2023
The day before I wrote this—on Oct. 14—Australia went to the polls. Whether at the primary school a few blocks from my Melbourne home, 10,000 miles away via postal ballot, or the one Antarctic polling place at the far reaches of the earth, Australian citizens across the globe cast their ballots.
(Alyssa Anderson / Heights Editor)

Laundry Politics and the Great Laundry Debate of Gonzaga Hall

Elise Jarvis February 19, 2023
On a weekend night that should’ve featured chaotic decisions, my friends and I instead gathered for a debate. Under the fluorescent lights of Gonzaga Hall, we discussed a critical subject: the politics of the laundry room.
(Paige Stein / Heights Editor)

Party Leadership Risks a Rug Pull

Joseph Baldwin February 12, 2023
Early into the 118th Congress, both houses have already found themselves steeped in political drama—from House Speaker Kevin McCarthy's trials and tribulations to changing political loyalties in the Senate.
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