TUFTS SOCCER
‘Arrival’ a smart alien film that gets first contact right see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 5
Jumbos shut out first two NCAA challengers
Editorial: Respect and inclusion are invaluable, but are they ‘unwavering’ at Tufts? see OPINION / PAGE 8
SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXII, NUMBER 46
tuftsdaily.com
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Changes in federal requirements, student needs TCU Senate holds weekly meeting drive administrative reorganization by Mark Usatinsky Contributing Writer
According to an Oct. 21 email from Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences James Glaser and Dean of the School of Engineering Jianmin Qu to Tufts undergraduates, recent changes in administrative responsibility within Dowling Hall and other departments concerning student life will expand or change the roles of several deans, most notably Dean of Undergraduate and Graduate Students John Barker and Dean of Student Affairs Mary Pat McMahon. “In an increasingly complex higher education landscape, the new structure is designed to improve coordination and support for individual Tufts students and better meet the complex demands of an ever-changing student body,” the email read. According to Glaser, while the previous system had been functioning well, the time had come for changes.
“We hadn’t substantially reorganized in about 11 or 12 years, and over the past year I think we’ve come to recognize that it would be a good time to do this,” he said. The reorganization was prompted by many changes both within the university and society in general, Glaser said. “Societal trends happen, and now there are new challenges we have to face and you should reorganize periodically to address those new challenges,” he said. “For instance, there are a lot of new federal requirements that we do things in certain ways … or there are new developments in the world that effect us — social media, better treatments for mental illness that allow students to be more successful than in the past — and it brings us a different set of challenges that many of our students are facing.” Glaser added that reorganization may be beneficial for the deans themselves as well.
“Reorganization gives you opportunity to provide growth and development of people who live within the organization,” he said. “You want to maximize their strengths and minimize their weaknesses, and reorganization gives you the opportunity to do that.” Barker said that he will assume a new role as dean of international studies and extended programming. According to Barker, in his role prior to the reorganization, he had broad responsibility for much of the student experience, including student affairs, study abroad and health and wellness. During his time as Dean of Undergraduate and Graduate Students, Barker established the Bridge to Liberal Arts Success at Tufts (BLAST) program, according to Glaser. BLAST is a sixweek summer program for incoming students who may be first generation college students or who attended an see ADMINISTRATION, page 3
Tufts, U.S. Army launch cognitive and brain sciences research center by David Nickerson Contributing Writer
Tufts and the U.S. Army Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center (NSRDEC) officially opened a co-funded Center for Applied Brain and Cognitive Sciences (CABCS) in mid-October on the Medford/Somerville campus after more than a year of planning and research on the project. Caroline Mahoney, NSRDEC Cognitive
Science team leader and co-director of CABCS, said that the center’s launch was the culmination of years of collaboration between Tufts and NSRDEC. “This center really came about from relationships [between Tufts and NSRDEC] that were built over the last decade and a half working together in the cognitive science area,” she said. According to the center’s website, the CABCS exists to bring together scientists and engineers from different fields of study to advance research and tech-
nology in cognitive and brain sciences. According to Mahoney, that mission statement is put into practice in a variety of different topic areas ranging from nutrition to robotics. “The work that we do on our team spans from anything looking at how the context in which a human operates influences performance — so by that I mean nutrition, physical fatigue, anxiety, uncertainty, any of those things — see RESEARCH CENTER, page 2
by Vibhav Prakasam Staff Writer
The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate met Sunday night in the Sophia Gordon Hall Multipurpose Room to discuss a resolution and supplementary funding requests. TCU President Gauri Seth, a senior, started the meeting by briefly discussing the Turkey Shuttle, which will run from the Mayer Campus Center to Logan Airport and South Station to provide transportation for students traveling for Thanksgiving break. TCU Senate Vice President Shai Slotky, a senior, then asked for committee updates. The Student Outreach Committee talked about the Senate Student Leadership dinner, which will be held this Thursday at the Breed Memorial Hall, and the Services Committee talked about the Cause Dinner on Tuesday night. According to the Services Committee, the Cause Dinner is an event in which students can choose to donate a portion of the cost of their meal swipe or JumboCash when they swipe into Dewick-MacPhie or Carmichael Dining Centers. Proceeds will go to the North American Indian Center of Boston. This money will then go toward aiding indigenous communities in Massachusetts as well as fighting the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) in North Dakota. Representatives from the TCU Judiciary then announced that they have updated their bylaws for clarification. Rather than sending a representative to weekly Senate meetings, they would show up as a group once a month. The Committee on Student Life (CSL) has to approve the change before it is made. TCU Senate Parliamentarian Adam Rapfogel, a sophomore, then took the floor to introduce a resolution for Tufts to support protestors fighting the DAPL and to divest from financial institutions funding the construction of the DAPL. The resolution was written by Diversity and Community Affairs Officer Benya Kraus, a junior, along with LGBTQ+ Community Senator Parker Breza, a sophomore, and junior Gabriela Bonfiglio. There was a motion to pass the resolution, but one senator objected so the body moved into a debate over it. One of the main issues was divestment from financial institutions and how
COURTESY CABCS
Pictured is the entrance to the suite which houses the Center for Applied Brain & Cognitive Sciences.
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see SENATE, page 2
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