Exploring Mission Hill hotspot Green T Coffee

Every college student needs a caffeine fix. With Mission Hill serving as an ever-growing outgrowth of Boston city colleges like Northeastern, Wentworth, MassArt, Berklee College of Music, and MCPHS, it’s only natural that some savvy coffee connoisseurs have set up shop in the area. Green T Coffee, so named for its location alongside the MBTA Green Line stop Mission Park.

Searching for answers as to why so many students seek refuge inside the coffee shop, I took a camera into Green T and talked to some clients and a particularly creative barista about why it’s their go-to caffeination destination.

Header image: Monika Wahi, Creative Commons.

Divest NU mounts pipeline protest

Around a dozen Northeastern University students allied with Divest NU are repurposing pipelines in the name of protest, reports The Huntington News.

On Wednesday, Feb. 24, around college students marched down Forsyth Street and spilled into Centennial Common, carrying a “mock pipeline” (in actuality a black inflatable tube) above their heads with the slogans “Divest from climate chaos” and “Aoun – don’t be a fossil fool” scrawled on it in white.

As per the below video, which Divest NU posted to Facebook, the students were led by club members with megaphones, who initiated chants like, “Hey, hey, ho, ho, fossil fuels have got to go.”

The action, in part galvanized by Northeastern’s School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs voting unanimously in favor of divestment earlier in the week, is one of several recently undertaken by Divest NU, which has enjoyed swelling membership and public interest with the twin trending topics of the Standing Rock protests and climate change drawing a significant amount of attention to the organization’s anti-fossil-fuel agenda. The organization’s coalition of students, faculty, student organizations, and alumni has now convinced five schools to vote in favor of divesting college and university endowments from fossil fuel companies.

 

Here’s more, as per The Huntington News:

“This march is the beginning of our re-entering into the campus discussion on divestment, and restarting the conversation on our goals,” said Meghan McCallister, DivestNU member and a freshman environmental science and political science double major. “This semester we have a lot of people returning on campus from co-op and N.U.in so we think it’s important to re-engage people who weren’t able to engage with us last semester.”

Holding the administration accountable

Small steps are sometimes all we have.

To a politically active student on an exceptionally international college campus in one of America’s most liberal cities during what has been the most politically tumultuous year in decades, it can be discouraging to note the calculated inexactitude of President Joseph E. Aoun’s community addresses. These e-mail communiqués, typically distributed in the wake of a national tragedy or inflaming event, don’t err on the side of caution so much as wallow in platitude.

For example, in October, Hurricane Matthew’s destruction in Haiti garnered an e-mail from Aoun, calling for members of the university to “take action to support our community members” and urged students to offer assistance. Had the university followed up with any concrete or financial shows of solidarity with the devastated nation, the message would have rung a little less hollow.

The next month, a noted racist, xenophobe and chauvinist was elected president, marking the conclusion of a grueling, dispiriting campaign fueled by white supremacy, patent falsehood and pervasive scapegoating of minorities. Evidently loath to condemn the then-president-elect in any certain terms, despite the formerly apolitical repugnance of what his run for the White House had unleashed on public discourse, Aoun instead penned a paean to the university’s “inclusive and mutually respectful worldview.”

The vagueness of his gesture drew rightful criticism from on-campus group Students Against Institutional Discrimination (SAID), which released a letter calling for Aoun and the Northeastern administration to specifically condemn the bigotry and deleterious vitriol of the president-elect’s campaign—as well as the appointment of a noted white nationalist, Stephen Bannon, to his inner circle.

“Unified, respectful and inclusive communities are not created by chance,” the letter read. “Northeastern will need to do much more than send a five paragraph-long e-mail to truly create the type of community it boasts.”

Since then, Aoun has failed to respond to any of the steps laid forth by SAID in its letter, skirting around declaring Northeastern a “sanctuary campus” and taking no concrete steps to make Northeastern the safe space as which it often self-identifies. In many ways, he has looked beyond the pressing demands of the student body. He has not assigned an office or administrators to assist students affected by Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals and others lacking the privilege of citizenship (beyond WeCare), nor has he explicitly opposed the appointment of any nominees to President Donald J. Trump’s cabinet or administration.

And yet, as the Trump administration has blundered and blathered its way through its first month, Aoun may be on the verge of finding his tongue.

On Jan. 28, the Northeastern president released an e-mail addressing the executive order widely known as the Muslim Ban, acknowledging that its implementation came amid “times of distressing change and uncertainty” while reaffirming that Northeastern would continue to serve as a global community. Though adopting the same vague, non-offensive stance his past e-mails have taken, the communication at least made an attempt to address the culture of consternation Trump’s discriminatory worldview and policymaking has heightened. Luckily, it wouldn’t be Aoun’s final word on the subject.

Last Friday, Northeastern joined seven other universities in filing an amicus brief opposing Trump’s executive order on immigration, calling it in a sharply worded weekend letter “antithetical to our core values and completely unacceptable” while noting the university’s personal stake in the matter (with the ban affecting 250 Northeastern students and 31 faculty and staff members).

“To the 250 Northeastern students and 31 faculty and staff impacted by this executive order: Your story is my story,” said Aoun in the letter. “You have my unwavering pledge that your university will stand by you, safeguard you and be your home away from home.”

Let’s be clear: Aoun’s letter cannot be the end of his correspondence on this matter. The e-mail lacks specificity in terms of its failure to declare Northeastern a sanctuary campus, to propose tangible steps to support affected individuals or to unambiguously condemn the Islamophobic, isolationist rhetoric that constitutes the hateful undercurrent of this order.

And yet to a frequent critic of the administration, one disillusioned by its imprecise wording and demonstrated reluctance to take strong, proactive stances on key issues that directly impact its community members, Northeastern’s part so far in responding to the executive order holds a glimmer of promise. Whatever comes of the brief, and the lawsuit it pertains to (Louhghalam v. Trump, filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts), such a movement by a notoriously sluggish administration indicates that Northeastern may be more than a passive bystander in the fight for civil liberties set to unfold across the next four, perhaps eight years.

Furthermore, Aoun’s unexpectedly forthright tone indicates a potentially shifting administration, one that understands the value of confrontation. Sometimes small steps are all we have—and this is one. Northeastern is finally showing awareness that both its global community and the international reputation on which it’s built its reputation are under direct, ongoing threat. And if the school is to keep either, one thing is resolutely clear: It’s going to have to fight for them.

CC: Monika M. Wahi

Sally Yates fired as attorney general after defying Trump’s Muslim ban

In the midst of the controversy over the Trump administration’s executive order barring immigrants and refugees from seven Muslim-majority countries, Attorney General Sally Yates took a largely symbolic stand against the ban, ordering the Justice Department not to defend it in court. What followed was a violent, brusque dismissal that holds echoes of the Saturday Night Massacre.

At Copley Square protest, unity and volume in the face of Trump’s unconstitutional travel ban

Thousands took to Copley Square on Sunday to loudly protest the Trump administration’s ban on travelers from seven predominantly Muslim countries in the aftermath of a tumultuous night that saw federal judges from Boston and elsewhere stay parts of the order, which has been disavowed by many key politicians as unconstitutional.

Covering the protest on Twitter meant trying to capture the size and sensation of the protest, as well as individual gestures, protesters, quotes, and political statements made non-verbally. The immediacy of the platform lends itself to such an electric, dynamic setting – but the issues of uploading to Twitter in the midst of a dense crowd, almost all members of which are also online, means that some creativity in where a reporter places themselves is necessary.

Here are some highlights from Twitter, displaying swelling crowds, creative signs, and a prevailing spirit of perseverance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10 Twitters to follow for college accountability

If you want to keep abreast of what’s going on in the Boston collegiate sphere, you should be on Twitter, following a spread of accounts that serve as platforms for student-run college newspapers and publications. Here are 10 you should be prioritizing.

1. The Huntington News (@HuntNewsNU)

Northeastern University’s independent student newspaper regularly tweets with breaking news on campus in addition to the vast majority of its in-paper and online content.

2.  The Daily Free Press (@dailyfreepress)

Boston University’s independent student newspaper is a force on social media, providing breaking news updates, links to its stories, and other avenues for audience engagement.

3. The Harvard Crimson (@thecrimson)

Another active student publication, The Harvard Crimson maintains an active, interactive Twitter account that includes links to its biggest stories.

4. Harvard Magazine (@HarvardMagazine)

An independent voice in the Harvard community and throughout Cambridge, Harvard Magazine regularly discusses the most pressing structural and institutional issues facing Massachusetts’ most famed Ivy League school – and its Twitter is a great way to keep track of the editorials it runs.

5. The Mass Media (@UMBMassMedia)

Though less active than other student newspapers on Twitter, the Mass Media is still relatively timely in its social media presentation, and its perspective on the UMASS Boston community is unique.

6. The Heights (@bcheights)

The independent student newspaper of Boston College, The Heights maintains an active Twitter platform from which it shares the lion’s share of its print content.

7. The Boston Globe (@BostonGlobe)

This should go without saying – the Boston Globe provides better coverage of New England events, including inner-city turmoil and on-campus strife, than any other publication of its size. The Globe reports without any hint of bias on the goings-ons of all Boston institutions and often leads the charge for greater accountability.

8. The Suffolk Journal (@SuffolkJournal)

What the Suffolk Journal lacks in reach, it just about makes up for in specificity. Covering the bulk of news related to Suffolk University, including its major scandals, this paper is an intriguing look inside a less-known city college.

9. The Tech (@thetech)

MIT’s oldest and largest newspaper, as well as an independent one, is a great source of information about MIT and its assorted struggles and victories. In looking to expose the code of silence surrounding student suicide on its campus, The Tech was a trailblazer.

10. The Boston Herald (@bostonherald)

On some select occasions, the Globe will not be first. On those occasions, a good bet is that the Herald, another major New England publication, has scooped its better-known brethren. The Culture section of the Boston Herald is a particularly interesting place to find information about college campuses.

 

Boston-area colleges fail to embrace “sanctuary campus” movement

The election of Donald J. Trump has sparked nationwide calls by students to designate college campuses as sanctuary locations for the undocumented immigrants he has pledged to deport. And yet, despite advocacy within Boston-area universities aimed at getting colleges to formally declare themselves part of that movement, multiple administrations have proven slow or unwilling to embrace sanctuary status.

At Northeastern, initial demands by students to dub the university a sanctuary campus were met with an email from President Joseph Aoun calling for “unity, inclusion and respect” in response to the election, according to the Huntington News. Student groups like SAID (Students Against Institutional Discrimination) criticized his note as vague and called on him to name Northeastern a sanctuary campus – a demand that as of months later has gone unmet.

The sanctuary campus movement, a mirror of the wider sanctuary city movement that caught fire late last year after Trump’s controversial victory in the election, has called upon institutions of higher learning to label themselves protective environments for undocumented students, workers, and faculty. Such individuals would be impacted by the anti-immigrant policies that constituted a central focus of Trump’s campaign. Sanctuary schools would work to protect undocumented immigrants in their communities from deportations and raids by federal immigration authorities, through refusal to work with such authorities and other forms of active resistance.

In addition to Northeastern, students at Tufts University, UMASS Boston, Harvard University, Boston College, Boston University, MIT, Boston Conservatory, Emmanuel College, MassArt, and Berklee College of Music all signed petitions and held protests calling for their universities to become sanctuaries, according to a crowdsourced map of Boston on Fusion.

Like at Northeastern, student advocates for such designation have been met with lukewarm responses, if any at all.

BU President Robert Brown addressed in December a petition circulated at his school in December that called for a withholding of support for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, including by prohibiting the agency from entering campus.

“This is not a promise we can make, as the University must obey the applicable state and federal laws,” Brown wrote, as quoted in the Daily Free Press. “I can, however, assure you that the Boston University Police Department does not currently play any role in the enforcement of such laws and will not voluntarily assist the federal government in immigration enforcement.”

Harvard University President Drew Faust rejected the label altogether. “Sanctuary campus status has no legal significance or even clear definition,” Faust said in December, in a statement quoted by The Harvard Crimson. “It offers no actual protection to our students. I worry that in fact it offers false and misleading assurance.”

For many students and faculty, many of whom had backed the movement, Faust’s decision came as a disappointment. Allyson R. Perez, an organizer with Harvard’s Protect Undocumented Students group, spoke to the Crimson about it, calling the choice “extremely frustrating.”

As of press time, none of Boston’s top university administrations have accepted sanctuary status.

Harvard, MIT, Tufts, Boston University, and Northeastern administrators have all spoken in defense of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which protects undocumented immigrants who arrived as children. Trump has repeatedly promised to dissolve the program, which was put in place by preceding President Barack Obama.

 

 

 

 

Temporally subjective visions of news

It’s intriguing to look at the three provided videos (one from 1981, another from 1994, and one more from 2005) and examine how – even before the advent of at-your-fingertips mobile technology platforms and the cultural implementation of the Internet – those in the news industry were accurately predicting many of the conveniences and changes such revolutions would bring about. It seems evident that the importance of ease of access, made possible by virtual newspapers, was lost on no one, and the videos repeatedly touch, presciently so, on readers gaining access to their paper in their homes or on the go without needing to search for a newsstand. The revolutionary tablet technology was also highlighted by the videos, long before the iPad, even with its eventual name. Early on, people were predicting the embrace of customizable technologies, ones with the ability to filter news by type, adjust font size and other visual specifications, and provide access to news on the go. In the 1981 video, those working on taking their newspaper online did not see any massive financial upside to doing so. However, across that and the 1994 video, what’s missing is an appreciation for how dangerous and precedent-setting it would be to provide virtual versions of newspapers without perennial pay-walls or other ways to ensure subscribers/readers aren’t getting for free what had previously been sold. The most predictive of the videos, pertinent to the Museum of Media History, accurately predicts some of the most striking transformations of the media landscape, from the creation of virtually endless online data storage not dissimilar to iCloud or Google Drive, to the surge in “fake news” that a more participatory, public online platform for newsgathering seems conducive to cultivating. It does go a step further to predict massive, sprawling battles between media giants that end in mergers, such as the creation of Googlezon, but (so far) these alliances of necessity have not occurred in such public, striking ways.

On Administrative Accountability

It’s hard out there for a college newspaper. In today’s fast-paced, digitally revolutionized university sphere, information is at every undergraduate’s fingertips – and a cell phone is always closer than a newsstand. With the inexorable decline of print readership  comes packaged, for many student papers, diminished interest in funding print journalism, as well as budget cuts for those papers still tied to their respective administrations. Other factors, from fluctuating student interest to administrative interference, compound what feels increasingly like a battle to assert and maintain the basic need for some form of student-run publication.

And yet, despite such significant threats, the importance of a student publication’s role in holding its staff’s administration accountable cannot be dismissed. Publications written by and in part for students serve a key role in establishing active, intersectional dialogue about deeply important subjects that matter not just to students but also to faculty, administrators, prospective enrollees, and the larger communities surrounding inner-city schools. The ability of a student publication to write critically and thoughtfully about the administration with which its staff engages stands in stark contrast to publications maintained by universities, which without fail address only what makes for good press. Maintaining a publication devoted to public discourse, not public relations, is the only way students can reliably rally for accountability and hold their administrations to the highest standards of ethics and legality.

Important issues do manifest on college campuses, which often not unjustly feel like a microcosm of the larger society surrounding them with a diverse array of enrollees, faculty, staff, and administrative officers all adding nuance to one shared community. How institutions engage with (and in some ways perpetuate) such issues as (but not limited to) sexual assault, mental health issues, racial or ethnic discrimination, hate speech, and censorship will always be of keen interest to the student body.

Out of that interest comes the Boston Collegian, a blog devoted to highlighting such campus-specific issues, students’ attempts to spotlight them, and instances in which administrations either support or silence advocates for ameliorating those issues. The blog will cover issues specific to college campuses, utilizing a mix of its own reporting and that of largely or completely independent student newspapers The Huntington News (Northeastern University), The Daily Free Press (Boston University), The Tufts Daily (Tufts University), The Harvard Crimson and Independent (Harvard University), The Tech (MIT), The Suffolk Journal (Suffolk University), The Heights (Boston College), and Mass Media (UMASS Boston).

Photo Courtesy: Unsplash, Creative Commons.