2011-09-16

Page 1

Sunny 64/45

THE TUFTS DAILY

WOMEN’S SOCCER

Team looks to boost support ‘Fan the Fire’ designed to entice fans by

Ethan Sturm

Daily Editorial Board

On paper, the Tufts women’s soccer team’s match against Wesleyan looks just like any other the team will play this year: nothing more than an early-season game against a familiar middle-of-the-pack NESCAC foe. But take a peek at Kraft Field tomorrow, and you’ll quickly realize that the spectacle in front of you is anything but typical. From the school president handing out T-shirts at the door to the huge crowd to the 8-year-old girl sitting on the sidelines, the game has quickly become much more than a simple sporting event. Half sporting event, half carnival As the inaugural event of the Fan the Fire initiative, the game has the weight of the school’s administration thrown behind it. Just for showing up, students will receive free food and T-shirts, some of which University

TUFTSDAILY.COM

Friday, September 16, 2011

VOLUME LXII, NUMBER 6

President Anthony Monaco will be handing out. One lucky fan will walk away with far more, too, as the winner of the halftime penalty kick shootout. The prize for the contest was recently announced to be a pair of 50-yard line tickets to the New England Patriots game against the Miami Dolphins on Dec. 24. The event is being funded by the University Advancement Division, which focuses on alumni relations. “It’s really a win-win for everyone involved,” Melissa Burke (LA ’11), the co-creator of the idea, said. “The fans get free food, the team gets extra support and a great cause gets extra attention.” Beside all the giveaways, fans can stop by the tent of Team IMPACT, which matches children facing adversity with collegiate athletics teams. Not to mention that in the middle all of this, there is still a soccer game going on — a prospect that the team’s members are quite excited about.

“I think it will great for our team,” senior defender Cleo Hirsch said. “At Homecoming, it’s such a big difference when people come out to the game and get really excited. The energy is always so much higher with a lot of fans.” From thesis to reality This great idea all started with a senior project. Burke and Amanda Roberts (LA ’11), both former members of the Tufts field hockey team, had no visions of grandeur when they began a project for their Communications and Media Studies minors. The two threw around ideas for a while, and they eventually settled on developing a plan to better advertise Tufts Athletics. “It was clear that a lot of Tufts doesn’t care when it comes to athletics, so we were looking for a way to better market it,” Burke said. “We see IMPACT, page 13

Where You Read It First Est. 1980

Africana studies major incoming, Dean says Martha Shanahan and Brent Yarnell

Daily Editorial Board In response to a recently reemerging student demand for a change in the university’s race and ethnic studies offerings, and specifically calls for an Africana studies department, Dean of Arts and Sciences Joanne Berger-Sweeney today announced plans to develop a new academic program offering study tracks in a wide variety of race and ethnic concentrations. The program will offer expanded options for the study of Africa and the African Diaspora, but could also include faculty and courses focusing on race and ethnicities from Asia and North and South America as well as some gender, sexuality and urban studies. While the specific academic by

content remains undetermined, Berger-Sweeney pledged her support for the program by guaranteeing a group of three new tenure-track faculty hires and the appointment of a program director as early as the 2012-2013 academic year. An eight-member faculty committee, which convened for the first time Wednesday, proposed the program’s content for consideration by the full faculty, who must approve any new academic program, Berger-Sweeney said. “This group really needs to think about what is the core mission of this programmatic entity and ...what are we trying to achieve,” Berger-Sweeney said. “What should be the purpose of a new program that we create? What’s going to be cutting edge? What’s going to serve see PROGRAM, page 4

Elections update Five Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate seats were filled last night at the Candidate’s Meeting by sophomore walk-on applicants after one seat from the class of 2012 and two in the class of 2013 went unfilled and dropped down to become available to sophomores. One senior also walked on to the body as a senator, and one junior filled the only empty seat on the TCU Judiciary, which oversees the recognition of new student organizations. A senior filled the open community representative seat for the Asian American Center, and the community representative position for the Africana Center went unfilled and will be filled through a special election later in the semester. A student on Monday submitted an applicaton to the Africana Center to run as its community representative but did not continue with the application process beyond that point and is therefore not a candidate. Two seats on the Freshman Class Council, the vice president for social programming and the secretary, were filled in an uncontested election. The remaining empty positions on the Senate and Freshman Class Council will be filled after an online school-wide election on Sept. 20. A referendum on the use of $20,000 from the Student Activity Budget Surplus to TuftsLife for the purpose of leasing and operating a text messaging short code for 12 months will also appear on the ballot. Candidates The following freshmen will run in the Sept. 20 school-wide election. There are seven open freshman senate seats, and three openings on the Freshman Class Council.

Here are the uncontested winners from Wednesday night:

Freshman Senate Seats Harish Gupta Darien Headen Dan Healy Jacob Indursky Robert Joseph Dan Katter Ben Kurland Andrew Nunez Chloe Perez Matt Roy Jessie Serrino Kelly Vieira Lesley Wellener

Sophomore Senate Seats Arielle Evans Max Means David Riche Stephen Ruggiero Ali Silverstein

Freshman Class Council President Candidates Santosh Swaminathan Fay Syed-Ali Freshman Class Council Treasurer Candidates Boyu Ai Ryan Cairns Meaghan McGoldrick Freshman Class Council Vice President for Academic Programming Candidates Marcus Budline Lindsay Rogers

Senior Senate Seat Michael Vastola

TCU Judiciary Jesse Comak, junior Committee on Student Life David Huang, sophomore Freshman Class Council Maddy Ball, secretary Grace Michaels, vice president for social programming Community Representative for the Asian American Center William Huang, senior

--by Amelie Hecht and Martha Shanahan

Inside this issue

Scott Tingley/Tufts Daily

Tisch Library plans to purchase five new iPads that will be available for students to borrow.

New director sets goals for university library system by

Kathryn Olson

Daily Editorial Board

Tisch Library this semester boasts a new library director as well as new technology, including iPads set to be available for student use later this semester. Former Harvard Divinity School Library Director Laura Wood expressed enthusiasm for her new position. “It was an opportunity I couldn’t resist,” she said. “I think that what Tufts is accomplishing as a university is really terrific. I’m excited to find ways [Tisch] can continue to advance its services.” Wood’s goals for Tisch include improving the library’s collections and space, and facilitating student access

to both, she said. “Libraries are about conversations,” she said. “Being a librarian is about providing access to and facilitating those conversations whether they happened two hours ago, or 200 years ago.” Head of Library Information Technology Support Thomas Cox feels that it is important for Tisch to provide students with new technology for use. This semester, students can, for the first time, rent laptops from Tisch for up to four hours for use outside the library, Cox said. These laptops will be accompanied by five new iPad tablets, which Tisch aims to purchase sometime this semessee LIBRARY, page 4

Today’s sections

Students parking on campus are paying more for their permits.

The Daily tells you who is likely to take home trophies at Sunday’s Emmy Awards.

see NEWS , page 3

see ARTS, page 5

News Features Arts | Living

1 3 5

Comics Sports

8 Back


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.