2-9-2024 Print Edition

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NEWS, 2

Coolidge Corner Theater introduces new accessibility features CE LE B RATIN G

FRIDAY, FEB. 9, 2024

FEATURES, 4

Questrom announces institute to promote business ethics OVE R

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YE A RS

O F

OPINION, 8

GAMES, 9

The misogynistic narrative of Taylor Swift’s relationship I N DE PE N DE N T

STU D E NT

Challenge yourself with the crossword puzzle J O U R NA LI S M

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY

YEAR LV. VOLUME A. ISSUE I

BEANPOT: Men’s Ice Hockey advance to championship against Northeastern University on Monday after beating BC 4-3

‘They don’t know who we are’: Part-time faculty union advocates for better treatment from BU BY KARYNA CHEUNG AND CHLOE CRAMUTOLA DFP Writers

When they aren’t teaching classes, Boston University parttime faculty remain on campus, handing out buttons with the message: “Call Bullsh*t. Make BU pay living wages.” They’ve designed flyers with provocative slogans: “Let them eat buildings” and “What’s eating your tuition dollars?” Part-time faculty consists of adjuncts, lecturers and instructors, according to BU Human Resources. Collectively part-time faculty unionized in 2015 and are still raising awareness about their current job instability, low wages and lack of institutional support as they feel that BU is unresponsive to their needs. “We teach the same courses, we have the same qualifications,” said Janet Bailey, lecturer in BU Metropolitan College. “And yet it’s been a very hard road trying to get BU to recognize that and treat us fairly.” As negotiations persist, so do their worries. The next contract has not yet been finalized, meaning that the part-time faculty have been working based on the agreements of a contract that expired in August. “[My students] don’t know that I’m any different from a professor who’s been here for 40 years,” said Andrew Smith, part-time lecturer in the College of Communication. “They don’t know who we are [or] what we’re paid. And the university loves keeping it that way, I’m sure.” BU spokesperson Colin Riley and Executive Director of Employee and Labor Relations Judi Burgess declined to comment,

Grab your bicycles, charge your scooters or stretch your legs. Just don’t expect the T to come down Commonwealth Avenue from Feb. 20 to March 8. And nearly all MBTA Green Line C branch services will be suspended, as will service on the D branch from Copley to Brookline

The Boston University men’s basketball team dropped a competitive game to Colgate University 74-64 after coming within one point with four minutes left on the clock. Colgate (16-8, 10-1 Patriot League) came into the game riding a seven-game winning streak and sitting atop the Patriot League standings.

Unfinished business for BU softball BY ELI CLOUTIER Senior Writer

Last season, the Boston University softball team won the Patriot League and reached the national tournament, finishing with a 52-10 record, including a stretch of 28 consecutive wins. But after failing to advance out of regionals, losing twice to Virginia Tech, the Terriers walked away wanting more. ANDREW BURKE-STEVENSON | DFP PHOTOGRAPHER

Janet Bailey, part-time-faculty union member of Boston University’s Metropolitan College. Part-time faculty, consisting of adjuncts, lecturers and instructors, are spreading awareness about their current job instability, low wages and lack of institutional support.

citing that BU does not comment on ongoing labor matters. Bailey said wages are a key point in the union’s efforts for parttime faculty. Due to inflation, $100 in September 2019 is equivalent to $119.58 in August 2023, a change of 19.58%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Parttime faculty’s wages haven’t matched this, instead increasing by 8.5% in that time, according to the 2019-23 contract. “We’re in a position where

we’re saying, at the very least, we should be kept up with the cost of living,” Bailey said. Total cost of attendance at BU has increased roughly 15.6% yearover-year from September 2019 to September 2023, according to prices from TuitionTracker. The union’s latest proposal aims to increase their salaries by 8.09% during the first year of their contract, according to the union’s counterproposal from December. BU offered the part-time faculty a quarter of that percentage: 2.5%,

Hills. Shuttle buses will replace all trains and the Route 57 Bus will be free from Kenmore to Babcock St. This is the fourth and longest suspension of service along B branch stations that serve Boston University since September, and is currently slated to be the longest in 2024. No trains ran through the Charles River Campus for days at a time in November, December and January. MBTA officials say these service pauses help crews eliminate

“speed restrictions” so trains can run faster and safer. Over a dozen slow zones were lifted since the surge in suspensions. But no track work was needed between Kenmore and Babcock Street during the previous shutdown, according to MBTA spokesperson Lisa Battison, and there’s no plans for it in the next one. Battison wrote in an email that there were two primary reasons for the outage. “Blandford Street, the stop just before Kenmore, is a critical above-ground access point for maintenance vehicles to enter the underground Green Line tunnel,” Battiston wrote. “Second, Babcock Street is the last place where Green Line trains from Boston College can turn around and make an outbound trip.” CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

BARRETT WALSH | DFP PHOTOGRAPHER

BY ANNIKA MORRIS Graphics Editor

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Get ready for the longest Green line shutdown since September BY MEGAN AMATO AND SAMUELE PETRUCCELLI Contributing Writer, Senior Writer

Men’s basketball falls to Colgate 74-64

Closed MBTA Green Line B-branch tracks and a shuttle bus that replaces train service between Babcock and North Station. The MTBA B, C and D lines will be suspended between Feb. 20 and March 8, making it the longest Green Line shutdown since September.

according to a counterproposal from management written in November. “They’re trying very hard to make sure that it doesn’t go to us,” Bailey said about BU’s tuition they get from students. Rachel McCleery, the lead internal organizer at Service Employees International Union Local 509, said BU has not adjusted their offer accordingly with tuition.

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Students face maintenance issues in South Campus residences BY LEIA GREEN Contributing Writer

An 11-second video changed the outlook of Zachary Taub’s career. A video of Boston University men’s basketball forward Otto Landrum waving “hi, Mom” on the court currently has over 7 million views — but it took Taub, a sophomore in the College of Communication, just 45 minutes to create.

Residents of Boston University’s South Campus voiced concerns about the recurring maintenance issues they face in their residences. Among these issues, mice infestations were one of the most prevalent. Malaika Ezetah, a junior in the College of Communication, had a recurring issue with mice in her apartment on Buswell Street last semester. Ezetah said BU Facilities Management and Operations came to her apartment about six times to address the issue before conducting an investigation where she said they discovered a large chunk of missing foundation, causing instability in her floors and a possible entrance for rodents. “[It was] a defeating process,” she said. “I wasn’t in my place often, so there would be stretches of time where pretty much every time I was able to stay in my apartment for a little bit, one [mouse] would pop out.” Ezetah said the whole situation made her lose trust in the abilities of BU facilities.

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Meet Zachary Taub, filmmaker behind viral ‘hi, mom’ video BY MARA MELLITS Investigative Editor

KATE KOTLYAR | DFP PHOTOGRAPHER


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