HUNGER STRIKE, 3
IDEAS LOADING, 5
ASK AWAY, 9
CATAMOUNT CHASE, 10
ICE detainees go on hunger strike to protest jail conditions.
Idea Conference on March 2 will focus on innovation and entrepreneurship.
How getting advice is the best way to succeed in life.
Men’s hockey to skate against Vermont in Burlington.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2019
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY
YEAR XLVII. VOLUME XCVI. ISSUE IV
BU announces Aminé to headline spring concert Wu against MBTA fare increases
BY NATALIE PATRICK
DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
St udent Gover n ment announced just before midnight Wednesday that rapper Aminé will be the headliner for the spring concert, called 802.1, on April 5. Student Body President Devin Harvin said that a goal of his administration has been to increase the amount of events on campus for the entire student body. “We kind of realized there are only three events that people really come together for throughout the school year, and that’s splash, matriculation and commencement,” Harvin said. “So we wanted to change that narrative, and one of the ways we thought that we could do that was through music and through a concert for the entire student body.” This will be the first spring concert in five years, according to Harvin. Harvin explained that at midnight, Student Government hung posters around campus announcing Aminé would be the main event, and then Wednesday morning he sent out an official email to the student body. “We have about 80 people signed up as volunteers, we have about 1500 posters, and we’re just going to poster the entire campus,” Harvin said Tuesday, “and then by Wednesday morning when my email comes out to students, everyone will know that Aminé will be the artist.” The name? 802.1 is a nod to the campus Wi-Fi network. Harvin said he wanted it to be something significant to only BU students. “We wanted to play into that
BY JOEL LAU
DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
Students have the opportunity to audition to be an opener for the concert, Harvin said. Students and groups have until Sunday to submit a video audition. Harvin said this is so the concert can highlight the talent BU has, in addition to bringing in a popular musician. “We want to keep it in house,” Harvin said. “We want people to see the talents of different BU students and kind of it being we’re bringing in an artist, but you also get to see the talent BU has.” Suzie O’Michael, SG’s director of events, said SG collaborated
Boston Cit y Counci lor Michelle Wu released a petition last week protesting proposed increases to fare prices for the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. Wu’s petition calls for the creation of a free youth and senior pass and the establishment of a new, reduced fare for lower-income riders. The petition states increased costs would only push more riders off the T, which would increase congestion and worsen greenhouse gas emissions. “We are running out of time to transform our economy and society in the face of climate change, and the Greater Boston region is now confronted with the worst traffic in the nation,” Wu’s petition states. “The proposed fare increase represents a step in the wrong direction when we can’t afford anything less than aggressive progress forward.” The pla nned increases, announced Jan. 28, would increase prices by an average of 6.3 percent. Charlie Card bus fares will rise from $1.80 to $1.90, and T fares will go up from $2.25 to $2.40, according to the MBTA. Commuter Rail prices would also increase, depending on the rider’s distance from Boston. In total, the fare increases are projected to raise around $32 million dollars in 2020 and would be implemented on July 1, 2019,
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COURTESY OF DANIEL BENAVIDES/ FLICKR
Aminé at the SXSW Youtube Party in March of 2017. Aminé has been announced to be Boston University’s 802.1 Spring Concert headliner.
and kind of do something where if you don’t go to BU, you just don’t understand, and that’s OK because you don’t go to BU,” Harvin said. Harvin said that the use of the Wi-Fi name is also a meme because students know the Wi-Fi on campus is unreliable. SG Chief of Staff Tom Batson said the 802.1 theme will be worked into the set design that SG has created with their production company. “We have a great stage concert that works in the 802.1 slogan, and it should be a pretty formidable stage for the artist to work with
the crowd and for everybody to see,” Batson said. Batson said because this is the first year the spring concert is being thrown, members of SG knew they would not be able to find a venue large enough to fit all undergrads. Instead this year is more of a test to see how many students are interested in this kind of event. “This first year is really sort of a test run to make sure this is confirming that students want this for years coming forward,” he said, “and so we can make it happen on a yearly basis and continue to make it grow.”
Writing class introduced BUild Lab expands programming BY ALEX LASALVIA
DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
Along with the introduction of the new BU Hub general education program in the fall, Boston University introduced a revised version of the WR150 freshman writing seminar, called WR152 courses, that puts more of a focus on integrating multimedia skills to students. These WR152 classes are not a replacement for the existing WR150 format, but are another option for students to choose from. As with all of the freshman writing seminars, students are able to choose from a variety of class subjects. The WR152 classes will involve exploring the seminars’ topics using a format other than the research essay. These changes are a result of the introduction of the BU Hub, a new university-wide general education program that, according
to the BU Hub website, emphasizes working across disciplines to develop six essential capacities. The new program was officially instituted in the fall 2018 semester. BU’s Class of 2022 will be the first class held to the graduation standards of the new hub curriculum. WR152 classes give students a Digital/Multimedia Expression Hub credit in addition to the Writing, Research, and Inquiry and Research and Information Literacy credits that students get from the standard WR150 courses, according to Eric Jarvis, the program manager of the BU Hub. “The Hub is designed to ensure that all BU undergraduates develop the knowledge, skills, and habits of mind that will enable them to be lifelong learners and leaders in a rapidly evolving global CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
BY ALEX LASALVIA
DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
Boston University first opened the doors to its BUild Lab IDG Capital Student Innovation Center last February, and since then the space has served as a
workshop environment for students across the university to develop their ideas. This semester, the space is introducing three program series aimed at helping students form their ideas into feasible business plans.
RIKI STOUT/ DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
Boston University’s BUild Lab is undergoing changes one year after opening its doors. The space introduced three new program series this semester to help students form their ideas into business plans.
On Saturday, March 2, the BUild Lab is hosting its second annual Idea Conference. The oneday conference is for students in the Boston area to further delve into different aspects of innovation, according to the conference’s website. BU spokesperson Colin Riley said that the BUild Lab is special because it is open to all BU students. “If anyone has an idea, it’s a great place to germinate it, work with others who have different skill sets,” Riley said. “It’s a great way to move projects forward.” Riley said he believes the space has had a “tremendous” impact on campus over the last year. “There have been so many events, they have provided financial help to student groups. They can apply and receive funding for their ideas. They get financial CONTINUED ON PAGE 4