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Huntington News Photo by Scotty Schenck
Photo courtesy 3 Graces Productions
Photo by Brian Bae
The
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THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE NORTHEASTERN COMMUNITY
www.HuntNewsNU.com
For the students, by the students since 1926
November 12, 2015
Center Students protest for adjunct rights to assist veterans By Scotty Schenck Photo Editor
The opening of the Center for Advancement of Veterans and Servicemembers (CAVS), dedicated to helping student veterans find job placements, was announced by Northeastern University on Wednesday. Philomena Mantella, senior vice president and CEO of Northeastern University Global Network, presented a plan for the development of the center during the Veterans Day service at the Egan Research Center. The goal of the center is to combat the increasing unemployment rate among veterans after leaving service. “Our new center, CAVS for short, will take advantage of Northeastern’s global network of 3,000 employers, our No. 1 ranked career services office, career development and experiential learning to handle the problem of veteran employability,” Mantella said. “It will be our major focus.” Director of Veteran and Military Services for Northeastern and former service member Andrew McCarty stood for applause during the ceremony when he was named director of the center. “It’s a population near and dear to my heart, being a veteran,” he said. “The most significant challenge to veterans is employment. Employment, Page 2
Photo by Brian Bae
On Tuesday, roughly 60 Northeastern students protested across campus against the universitiy’s treatment of adjunct professors.
A mass of protesters chanting pro-worker slogans and carrying orange-emblazoned signs stared down Green Line trains outside
Northeastern University (NU) on Tuesday afternoon. Demonstrators from the student group Empower Adjuncts blocked service on the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) E Line for 25 minutes in solidar-
similar fate. The MBTA has begun implementing a Winter Resiliency plan, promising to keep trains more functional throughout the season. The city’s Public Works Department (BPW) has instituted policy changes and stocked up on equipment it says will help fight the effects of blizzards and snow drifts.
Last winter, the city was unprepared for the record 110.6 inches of snowfall it received. For the fiscal year, officials budgeted $18.5 million for snow removal, but by midFebruary had spent $33 million. Snow piles overwhelmed streets, and a myriad of problems plagued the transit system. Winter, Page 6
By Sam Haas City Editor
Boston plans for snowfall By Rachel Morford News Correspondent
One year removed from a winter of record-setting snow totals, blocked streets and broken trains, city officials and the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) are preparing for the season early in hopes of avoiding a
ity with adjunct faculty at NU, who have spent the last year negotiating for a contract with university officials. “The fact that this has gone on for so long is unacceptable,” Alissa Zimmer, protester and third-year
environmental studies and political science major, said. “The administration has done nothing to move the collective bargaining process forward. We feel it is necessary for us to perform civil disobedience for Professors, Page 2
Photo by Scotty Schenck
People of all ages gathered in Cambridge for a 24-hour videogame marathon to raise money for the Boston Children’s Hospital.
Gamers fundraise for local hospital By Liam Hofmeister Inside Editor
Photo by Scotty Schenck
The City of Boston and MBTA are implementing a number of new plans, including new equipment and an increased budget, to avoid the chaos that accompanied last year’s massive snowfall.
It was his 15th hour of near-uninterrupted gameplay and Johnny Nyugen, a videogame streamer from Leominster, needed to move. He left his laptop at 11:30 p.m. and walked with an ache of inactivity coursing through his body.
“I just need to get the blood flowing and the bones moving again,” Nyugen said. “Only nine more hours.” After a short break, Nyugen returned to his computer – back in line with the 20 other remaining gamers – mounted his headphones and became absorbed in “League Videogames, Page 7