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The Maroon April 28, 2023 Issue

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Loyola University • New Orleans • Volume 101 • Issue 11 • April 28, 2023

THE MAROON For a greater Loyola

Former Loyola athlete opens up about mental health struggles By Eve McFarland ecmcfarl@my.loyno.edu @evemcfarland6

Myles Burns, who was a part of the team at Loyola that won the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics Men’s Basketball Championship last year and named MVP of the National Tournament his senior year here at Loyola, used his last year of eligibility to play at the University of Mississippi for the 2022-2023 season. “The coaching and the environment, it’s a much bigger stage against much different competition,” he said. “Bigger, stronger guys [who are] more athletic from all positions.” Myles expressed how hard it was to go into a new environment with so many different new factors after being at Loyola for four years. He had to have more mental solitude which took hard work and discipline to push past the new challenges he was faced with, he said. One of the challenges was dealing with a larger social media presence. “If you sneeze wrong in the game, or, you know, have the game you aren’t supposed to have, people are going to

criticize you for it, and there is no way of avoiding it,” Burns said. “You kind of just have to be mentally sound.” Looking back, Burns said he experienced a lot of people criticizing him at Loyola, but at Ole Miss, he received “twice, three times, maybe four times as many people doing that on a totally different level.” “If you win or lose a game, people sometimes will send you death threats,” he said. “Or people place their bets, and you got all these betting pages tagging you on social media. And you can’t respond, obviously, because you can get in trouble or get suspended or possibly lose your scholarship.” Burns said that he was not in a good mental space because he wasn’t used to all the backlash from social media and from the coaching he received at Ole Miss. According to Burns, his new head coach did not give the team positive reinforcement, and showed love by giving the least amount of compliments he could. He said that his coach was old school, and when things didn’t work out, he was on their heads.

See ATHLETE, page 4

Students protest to reinstate only Black English professor By Maleigh Crespo macrespo@my.loyno.edu

English junior Crow Carson was choosing their fall 2023 courses when they realized that no classes were being taught by African-American studies professor Scott Heath, the only Black professor in Loyola’s English department. Initially, Carson said they thought Heath made the decision to leave Loyola, but later found out from a letter that Heath sent to students that explained the reason for his absence was that the university did not renew his contract for the fall semester for reasons the English

department has not yet clarified. Loyola’s chapters of the Young Democratic Socialists and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, alongside many of Heath’s students, like Carson, joined forces to advocate for Heath’s reinstatement. Together, they wrote an open letter and created a petition to support Heath’s reinstatement that was shared via social media. To date, the petition has over 600 signatures from students to people across the greater New Orleans area.

See HEATH, page 2

Courtesy of UNITE HERE Local 23

Sodexo workers win majority to unionize By Aron Boehle & Kloe Witt atboehle@my.loyno.edu kgwitt@my.loyno.edu

Loyola’s Sodexo employees have won the petition to move forward with their unionization after almost a year-long struggle, according to a union representative at the labor spring event held on-campus. Although union organizers have secured the majority necessary to unionize, they are working to get more signatures to secure a larger mandate and increase their leverage during negotiations. By April 28, the union’s cards will be counted and the union will be instated, allow-

ing the workers to collectively bargain with Sodexo. Samantha Henry, a Loyola Dining employee, said she is eager for the union to be instated. “I’m excited, I’m ecstatic,” Henry said. Henry said she is hoping to use the collective bargaining that a union provides to get better benefits and better pay. “We don’t receive any benefits when school is closed for the summer,” Henry said. “As far as pay, we’re doing a lot of work with no pay,” Additionally, Henry said she’s hoping to see a better workplace environment. “And maybe they’ll just respect you a little bit more,” she said. “I just believe

that we need to be treated more fairly.” Charles Casrill, general manager of Loyola-Sodexo, said that Sodexo respects their worker’s rights to unionize. “Sodexo respects the rights of our employees to unionize or not to unionize,” he said. But workers have said that Sodexo has used tactics to limit unionization efforts. For example, Sodexo’s operations director Robert Heidingsfelder posted a Maroon article about the union on his door, which workers said was an effort to intimidate the workers and organizers who discussed unionization efforts and met with the newspaper.

See SODEXO, page 2

Camilla Johnson and Crow Carson, students of professor Scott Heath, speak at a protest on April 26, 2023. Students are advocating for the rehire of Heath. Maleigh Crespo/ The Maroon

NEWS 2 | CRIME MAP 3 | PUZZLES 3 | SPORTS 4 | WORLDVIEW 5 | LIFE & TIMES 6 | EDITORIAL 10 | OPINION 9 & 11

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