The Oswegonian

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U.S.-Japan Relations

Japanese professor reviews the histories of both countries

Friday, March 13, 2015

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF OSWEGO STATE UNIVERSITY • www.oswegonian.com

VOLUME LXXXI ISSUE VI SINCE 1935

Adjuncts consider salaries unfair

Some Oswego State professors still not tenured after years of teaching multiple classes Christina Madera Staff Writer news@oswegonian.com Adjunct professors make poverty level wages while college tuition continues to rise annually. Adjuncts, or part-time professors, make up around 76 percent of all college professors, according to the American Association of University Professors. Adjuncts are typically allowed to teach two to four courses per semester for an average pay of $2,700 per threecredit course. At Oswego State, an adjunct professor is typically limited to teaching two courses a semester at $2,952 per course. That totals to an annual salary of less than $12,000, which is right along the lines of minimum wage employment. A United University Professions

contingent officer and visiting assistant professor at Oswego State’s campus, Cynthia Fuller graduated from Oswego State, started teaching on the campus in 1992 and is still not on the tenure line. “I was asked to teach one class. Then it turned into two, three, and then four,” Fuller said. “So I am considered to be a full-time contingent faculty member... that means you can’t have tenure. So you’re going by semester or one year contracts as I’ve got.” Oswego State’s teaching staff is comprised of 227 or about 39 percent adjunct professors who teach one to three classes per semester, about 12 percent are contingent or “visiting assistant professors” who teach four classes per semester and about 50 percent are tenured professors.

See ADJUNCTS, A6

Rep. Katko visits Oswego; talks economy Luke Parsnow News Editor lparsnow@oswegonian.com

Lily Choi| The Oswegonian

Rep. John Katko held a listening session in the city of Oswego last Wednesday, who along with a group of local panelists, addressed economic development in Oswego County. Moderator Jim Grimshaw, the director of the Office of Business and Community Relations at Oswego State, opened the discussion by welcoming Katko and the four featured panelists. The panelists consisted of Zelko Kirincich, the executive

director of the Port of Oswego Authority, Theresa Himes, owner of Bosco and Geers Food Market and Pat Carroll, business manager at United Association of Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 73, and Michael Treadwell, executive director of Operation Oswego County. Katko then made an opening statement, saying he had made a campaign pledge to make an appearance in the area more often and he wants to maintain that pledge. “I think economic development is the

See KATKO, A4

President Stanley hears out student-related issues

Students attend first-of-its-kind conversation with the president; more planned in future Brian Krosky Staff Writer news@oswegonian.com

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Last Monday night in the Marano Campus Center Auditorium, Oswego State President Deborah Stanley hosted her first “Conversation with President Stanley,” which lasted just over an hour-and-a-half. “It’s important to hear the voices of the students directly,” Stanley said. “We give students a lot of ways to give feedback, but a direct student-to-administrator conversation, there’s nothing like it.” Present with Stanley were many of her colleagues, including the president’s council. Students who attended were a mixture of

Calendar...........................C2 Classified..........................C7 Crossword.........................C6 Contact Info......................A2 Laker Review.....................C1 News.................................A1 Opinion............................B5 Sports...............................B1 Sudoku.............................C6

upper and lower classmen, and they asked a variety of questions that had to do with many on-campus events. One of the main topics discussed was the spring concert this year, and the university’s attempt to try and strip away the notorious culture of Bridge Street Run. After last year’s chaos that ensued in the town of Oswego, including multiple injuries, 27 arrests and three Oswego State student deaths from heroin overdose, the Oswego Common Council voted to ban Bridge Street Run for 2015. “The Bridge Street Run culture we don’t want that on campus,” Stanley said. Stanley continued to say that she wanted

See STANLEY, A5

Taylor Clock | The Oswegonian President Deborah Stanley made an appearance last Monday to ask students what their on-campus concerns were.

Laker Review

Opinion

Sports SECOND CHANCES

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Justin Dubrow | The Oswegonian

SYRACUSE SANCTIONS

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Photo by Michael Davis of the Syracuse New Times

BREAKING OUT

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Photo provided by ew.com

Centro budget cuts might affect Oswego State Kimberlyn Bailey Staff Writer news@oswegonian.com

Centro officials are considering eliminating some bus services to amend for a $4.5 million budget gap, including some services offered to Oswego State students through Centro’s yearly contract with Oswego State. Centro has contracts with Oswego State, Syracuse University and Le Moyne College. Oswego State’s yearly contract with Centro, however, is the most extensive of the three. Students’ yearly $97 Student Association fee allows students the privilege to a green sticker on their IDs that serves as their boarding pass for numerous services. Students get rides included in the SA fee around campus and around the city of Oswego, and free express rides to and from Syracuse Tuesday through Friday on the 446X route and Thursday through Sunday on the 246 route. Although routes around campus are often overcrowded, routes to and from Syracuse are rarely even half full. The 246 route is only used by a few students except before breaks and on weekends. The 446X route started this year to accommodate students taking courses at Oswego State’s Metro Center in downtown Syracuse, and rarely transports more than a handful of students. Despite the extent of services offered to Oswego State students and how under-utilized they are, service cuts will not drastically affect students. According to the proposed cuts, however, there could be some noticeable changes. Commuting students from Mexico and Fulton might feel some impact. Mexico and Fulton services might be consolidated, leading to less frequent trips for commuting students from those areas. Sunday services connecting Oswego, Fulton and Syracuse via the 246 route could be cut altogether. Sunday services are superfluous to many students, amounting to little more than a way to get to Destiny USA and back on a Sunday. Many students, however, use Sunday services to come back from weekend train trips to their hometowns via Syracuse’s Regional Transportation Center. This could force students to take overnight train trips to Syracuse on Sundays to catch a Monday morning trip to Oswego to be on time for class. Centro officials could not comment on whether Sunday service cuts would make an exception to accommodate the commute for

See CENTRO, A3

Oswegonian.com BACON FEST

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