ESTABLISHED 1826 — OLDEST COLLEGE NEWSPAPER WEST OF THE ALLEGHENIES
TUESDAY, MAY 3, 2016
Volume 144 №52
Miami University — Oxford, Ohio
Contingents’ status impacts quality of education Lack of job security, academic freedom to blame
Professor,
second class Second in a series FACULTY
MEGAN ZAHNEIS NEWS EDITOR
Miami students pay more for their education than nearly any other publicuniversity students in the U.S., yet they are increasingly taught by faculty who enjoy neither the job security nor the academic freedom of tenured college professors. That has subtle but significant effects in the classroom, according to both tenured
professors and faculty members called “contingent”— those who work on part-time or short-term contracts who can never be sure how long their jobs will last. The contingent class — which includes visiting assistant professors, who sign annually renewable contracts with five-year caps; instructors, who are hired year-to-year; and per-credithour, or adjunct, faculty — comprised 26.1 percent of Miami’s total instructional staff in fall 2015. This reliance on CONTINGENT » PAGE 5
Miami workers lament low wages, clique culture WORKERS
TESS SOHNGEN
SENIOR STAFF WRITER
A number of housing and dining employees at Miami say the university falls short in the compensation and treatment of its workers. The mean starting salary for Miami janitorial staff and cleaners in 2015, $10.16 per hour, falls within the lowest 10th percentile among na-
tional averages for the profession — $13.97 per hour — according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Food preparation and serving-related occupations at colleges, universities and professional schools have an average wage of $15.57 per hour and $32,380 annually, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. AFSCME » PAGE 3
RENEE FARRELL PHOTO EDITOR
On Saturday, MAP held “Springfest,” where The All American Rejects rocked Millett Hall. The show ended with their hit song “Gives You Hell,” a Miami hockey jersey and a stray bra, thrown at lead vocalist Tyson Ritter.
Visa laws restrict international labor MU students seek better hours, higher pay and familiar community off-campus GLOBAL
JACK EVANS NEWS EDITOR
OLIVIA LEWIS
THE MIAMI STUDENT
When faced with sometimes inflexible or insufficient hours and comparatively low pay at on-campus jobs, many international students are left
with a difficult decision to make: break the law and put your visa on the line, or continue to work at a job that may not deliver. The F-1 visa is the standard academic visa provided to international university students, according to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services website (USCIS). The
visa tightly controls an international student’s ability to seek employment outside of the university that the student attends. The standard penalty for breaking the F-1 working regulations is to have your visa revoked by USCIS. Students may apply for reinstatement, but that process is not a sure bet. If they are denied, the student will often face deportation. In regards to on-campus
GUN WALK PROMPTS COUNTER-PROTESTS GUNS
KAROLINA ULASEVICH THE MIAMI STUDENT
MARY SCHROTT NEWS EDITOR
Saturday afternoon, on the corner of Campus Avenue and High Street, approximately 15 Miami students and faculty members stood in protest of an open carry march directed by Jeffry Smith, a firearm instruc-
tor and concealed carry activist from Cincinnati. The counter protesters stood in the rain under umbrellas, holding signs with messages of opposition and playing Bob Dylan songs on guitar. Some were even wearing homemade T-shirts reading “Don’t Shoot” with a bullseye drawing. “There was music, OPEN CARRY » PAGE 3
EducationCounsel meetings continue diversity discussion DIVERSITY
MEGAN ZAHNEIS NEWS EDITOR
RENEE FARRELL PHOTO EDITOR
On Saturday afternoon, Jeffry Smith, a gun rights advocate and activist, led an open carry walk. Smith performed the walk in order to raise awareness about the right of citizens to openly carry firearms.
In late April, Miami University hosted educational consulting firm EducationCounsel for a series of sessions on diversity issues at Miami. More than 200 students, faculty and
staff attended over four days of meetings with 15 campus organizations and committees. The conversations have been a long time coming, said campus officials, and, once EducationCounsel issues a formal report of its findings, CONSULTANT » PAGE 9
employment, there are a number of work obstacles that only international students face, such as restrictions outlined in Title 8 of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Code of Federal Regulations, said Molly Heidemann, assistant director of International Student and Scholar Services. International students can’t work for an organization other INTERNATIONAL » PAGE 3
Mock Trial takes 3rd at Nationals COMPETITION
MAGGIE CALLAGHAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
On April 15, the Miami University Mock Trial team travelled to Greenville, South Carolina to compete in the National Championship Tournament. This was the team’s ninth consecutive appearance for the National title. “This year was different than the other years,” said Miami senior and co-captain, Najeeb Ahmed. “We only had three weeks to prepare for a new case.” Ahmed explained that in past years, the case for Nationals would be released much further ahead of time. However, the team worked diligently before heading to Greenville, spending four DEBATE » PAGE 5
NEWS p. 2
NEWS p. 2
CULTURE p. 4
OPINION p. 6
SPORTS p. 10
ODA CONTINUES SEARCH FOR NEW DIRECTOR
CONSTRUCTION TO CONTINUE OVER SUMMER
PAST CULTURE EDITOR SAYS HER GOODBYES
FSB PROFESSOR WEIGHS IN ON LAWSUIT
MIAMI ENDS WINNING STREAK AT MAC
Yvania Garcia-Pusateri, Kelley Camille Kimple and Sherlonda Clarke hold forums
North Quad, Martin Dining Hall renovations to be completed for fall semester
Through the lens of “The Office,” Britton Pereleman reflects on her time at MU
Daniel Herron deconstructs the events that culminated in a gender-discrimination case
RedHawks fell to Western Michigan University 4-2 in semifinals
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