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Tournament tourism

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Mon, Mar 25, 2024 11:44 AM

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Also: Wu's White Stadium win; BU grad student workers on the picket line March 25, 2024 ??

Also: Wu's White Stadium win; BU grad student workers on the picket line [Donate ❤️]( [View in Browser](  March 25, 2024 ☀️ Mostly sunny, with a high near 42. Good Morning Boston, Get ready to see a lot of UConn fans — and [one mildly superstitious coach]( — walking around the city. - A slam dunk: For the first time since 2018, the NCAA men's basketball tournament is descending on Boston. TD Garden will host three games — the East region's Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight rounds — later this week. That means thousands of March Madness fans and students are booking flights and hotels to Boston, a welcome sight for the hospitality industry during a typically quiet time of year. - Who's coming to Boston? The big local draw is UConn, the tournament's defending champion and top overall seed. The Huskies [dominated]( in their first two games and will play No. 5 San Diego State on Thursday at 7:39 p.m. That will be followed by another game the same night between No. 2 seed Iowa State and No. 3 seed Illinois, tipping off after 10 p.m. (Hopefully, the Garden stocks up on Dunkin'.) The winners of those two games will face off Saturday to determine who goes to the Final Four. - Can I get tickets? Yes, but it will cost you a small fortune. [Tickets]( for nosebleed seats — think the last two rows of the balcony — for a single game Thursday start at over $400. - So, what do we get out of it? Meet Boston, the region's tourism bureau, estimates the tournament will pump $17.6 million into the local economy (around half of the impact of the big Army-Navy game in Foxborough last fall). UConn's proximity and the number of alums in New England help that number, according to Meet Boston CEO Martha Sheridan. "The fact that it's driving distance — but still over 50 miles — is appealing because people won't have to book flights, but they will want to spend the night in the city, presumably," Sheridan told WBUR's Paul Connearney, adding hotel availability shouldn't be a problem in March for anyone booking last-minute trips. - Zoom out: What's the Boston tourism scene look like in general these days? Sheridan told Radio Boston the number of vacationers visiting Boston is back to pre-pandemic levels, though remote work has still left a dent in business travel. [Listen to the full segment here](. - On the picket line: Graduate student workers at Boston University are going on strike this morning in an effort to get higher wages and better benefits. The group includes about 3,000 unionized student workers, like teaching assistants and fellows. They plan to picket on Marsh Plaza every weekday until the strike ends. - The two sides [seem pretty far apart in negotiations](. Grad student workers currently get stipends from $27,000 to $40,000 for 20 hours of work a week. The union is demanding an increase up to $62,440. BU officials say they have offered to increase PhD student workers' wages to $42,159 and raise the minimum wage for students paid hourly from $15 to $18. - Pryde parade: Massachusetts Democrats say they have restored funding for a Boston housing project tailored toward LGBTQ+ seniors, after the money was [cut last July by congressional Republicans](. Rep. Ayanna Pressley announced this morning that she and Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey secured $850,000 in the latest government funding bill for The Pryde project in Hyde Park - Why it matters: The Pryde's developers had pledged to push forward with or without the money. "What this funding now does is allow us to have the rich, resourced programming and services that will make The Pryde a home for the folks who are living in isolation, facing harassment where they may be, and now are able to have a community that supports them," LGBTQ+ Senior Housing executive director Gretchen Van Ness told WBUR. - Out of office: Gov. Maura Healey now says she'll disclose the location of her personal out-of-state trips — [but only after the fact]( — as she tries to balance [past pledges]( about greater transparency with personal privacy and security. The shift comes after Healey's office refused to give reporters details about a four-day trip last month, which led to [a bit of a media headache for the governor](. - So, where'd she go last month? Puerto Rico. According to her office, Healey's partner, Joanna Lydgate, took her to the island for a long weekend to celebrate the governor's birthday. P.S.— If you need a laugh, the 24th annual [Boston Comedy Festival]( to City Winery this week, featuring well-known standup comics ranging from Lenny Clarke to Kevin Nealon to DL Hughley. Nik DeCosta-Klipa Editor, Newsletters [Follow](  Support the news  The Rundown [Judge rules in favor of White Stadium renovation, pro soccer team plan]( A Suffolk Superior court judge ruled Friday against plaintiffs who sought to block a plan to renovate White Stadium in Boston's Franklin Park. The ruling is a victory for the City of Boston and Boston Unity Soccer Partners, which plans to bring a women’s professional soccer team to the city to play at the stadium by 2026. [Read more.]( [Judge rules in favor of White Stadium renovation, pro soccer team plan]( A Suffolk Superior court judge ruled Friday against plaintiffs who sought to block a plan to renovate White Stadium in Boston's Franklin Park. The ruling is a victory for the City of Boston and Boston Unity Soccer Partners, which plans to bring a women’s professional soccer team to the city to play at the stadium by 2026. [Read more.]( [New England and New York dig out as a new storm will bring snow to the Midwest]( Police across the Northeast reported hundreds of traffic accidents over the weekend. Meanwhile, a separate storm will continue Monday across much of the Rockies, Plains and upper Midwest. [Read more.]( [New England and New York dig out as a new storm will bring snow to the Midwest]( Police across the Northeast reported hundreds of traffic accidents over the weekend. Meanwhile, a separate storm will continue Monday across much of the Rockies, Plains and upper Midwest. [Read more.]( [4 men charged in Moscow attack as Russia marks a national day of mourning]( Four men accused of staging the Russia concert hall attack that killed more than 130 people appeared before a Moscow court Sunday showing signs of beatings as they faced formal terrorism charges. [Read more.]( [4 men charged in Moscow attack as Russia marks a national day of mourning]( Four men accused of staging the Russia concert hall attack that killed more than 130 people appeared before a Moscow court Sunday showing signs of beatings as they faced formal terrorism charges. [Read more.]( [Bird flu is decimating seal colonies. Scientists don't know how to stop it]( Avian influenza is killing tens of thousands of seals and sea lions in different corners of the world. Even the New England Aquarium, where outdoor harbor seal exhibits delight visitors, has taken strict sanitation precautions to prevent transmission of the virus to its animals. [Read more.]( [Bird flu is decimating seal colonies. Scientists don't know how to stop it]( Avian influenza is killing tens of thousands of seals and sea lions in different corners of the world. Even the New England Aquarium, where outdoor harbor seal exhibits delight visitors, has taken strict sanitation precautions to prevent transmission of the virus to its animals. [Read more.]( [Princess Kate's cancer triggers public shock, sympathy — and shame on the tabloids]( "It has been an incredibly tough couple of months for our entire family," the Princess of Wales said in a video filmed in secret and released Friday. [Read more.]( [Princess Kate's cancer triggers public shock, sympathy — and shame on the tabloids]( "It has been an incredibly tough couple of months for our entire family," the Princess of Wales said in a video filmed in secret and released Friday. [Read more.]( Anything Else? - Cognoscenti contributor Holly Robinson [writes in this essay]( the experience of being diagnosed with cancer as a mother in her early 40s — and why Princess Kate's announcement moved her to tears. - The Red Sox play their first game of the 2024 season this Thursday in Seattle. While recent seasons have been bleak, a Boston University creative writing professor argues it can build character. Novelist and lifelong Sox fan Leslie Epstein — who also happens to be the father of the one and only Theo Epstein (!) — talked to WBUR's Sharon Brody about [what great writing can teach us about rooting for a losing team](. - MGM Resorts is reportedly exploring a sale of its Springfield casino, which has failed to meet expectations — both in terms of jobs and profits. Local elected officials [have some concerns](. - Cars, circuitry and communications technologies are among South Korea's biggest exports. But it's the country's cultural exports that are the focus of an exhibition at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts. [Click here for a look inside the exhibit](.  What We're Reading 📚 - An Exquisite Biography of a Gilded Age Legend ([The New York Times]( - Two major newspaper chains dropped the AP. What will it mean for readers? ([Washington Post]( - Miranda’s Last Gift ([The Atlantic](  Tell Me Something Good [Springfield Museums transform Taylor Swift’s '1989' into planetarium light show]( A 30-minute visual light show set to Swift’s most popular album right now, “1989 (Taylor’s Version),” will run until May at the Seymour Planetarium. Since the museum started putting on music shows last year, the most requested artist has been Taylor Swift. [Read more.]( [Springfield Museums transform Taylor Swift’s '1989' into planetarium light show]( A 30-minute visual light show set to Swift’s most popular album right now, “1989 (Taylor’s Version),” will run until May at the Seymour Planetarium. Since the museum started putting on music shows last year, the most requested artist has been Taylor Swift. [Read more.]( Listen: The Common is joined by Morning Edition producer Laney Ruckstuhl to discuss her [recent reporting]( on the [community-building iftar dinners being held by Muslim students at MIT.]( Play: [WBUR's daily mini crossword.]( Can you keep your streak going? Before you go: [Birdwatchers delight.]( 😎 Forward to a friend. They can sign up [here](. 🔎 Explore [WBUR's Field Guide]( stories, events and more. 📣 Give us your feedback: newsletters@wbur.org 📧 Get more WBUR stories sent to your inbox. [Check out all of our newsletter offerings.](   Want to change how you receive these emails? Stop getting this newsletter by [updating your preferences.](  I don't want to hear from WBUR anymore. Unsubscribe from all WBUR editorial newsletters [here](.  Interested in learning more about corporate sponsorship? [Click here.]( Copyright © 2023 WBUR-FM, All rights reserved.

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