Geology classes explore ground below Tufts via drilling projects see FEATURES / PAGE 5
WOMEN’S SWIMMING
Tufts takes seventh at NESCACs for third year in a row
The Daily takes a look at what to expect from the new season of ‘Game of Thrones’ see ARTS AND LIVING / PAGE 7
SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE
THE
INDEPENDENT
STUDENT
N E W S PA P E R
OF
TUFTS
UNIVERSITY
E S T. 1 9 8 0
T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXI, NUMBER 16
tuftsdaily.com
Wednesday, February 17, 2016
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Lee Coffin to leave Tufts after 13 years as Dean of Undergraduate Admissions by Joe Walsh
Assistant News Editor
Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Lee Coffin will leave his position of 13 years to become the new Vice Provost for Enrollment and Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid at Dartmouth College on July 1. His successor will be chosen before Coffin officially leaves Tufts. Coffin’s transition was announced in a Feb. 4 statement to the Tufts community, written by Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences James Glaser and Dean of the School of Engineering Jianmin Qu. “We know that we speak for our entire community when we say that Lee has made an indelible mark on Tufts,” the statement read. “The impact of his work can be felt far beyond his office in Bendetson Hall where he has led and nurtured a professional team of admissions officers for the past 13 years.” Glaser said that during Coffin’s tenure at Tufts, there have been vast improvements to the transparency of its admissions process and student financial accessibility to Tufts, among other things. According to Glaser, he and Qu will assemble a search committee to find the next Dean of Undergraduate Admissions, who will either be a candidate from Tufts or an outside hire. In the statement, Glaser added that before he leaves, Coffin will establish the infrastructure needed to incorporate the admissions process of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts (SMFA) into the Tufts process, in light of Tufts’ pending acquisition of the SMFA.
“I didn’t go to Tufts, but over the 13 years I feel very much like I’m a Jumbo. ”
by Will Kenneally Staff Writer
Coffin said that one of his most important goals at Tufts was to make the application process more transparent to appli-
Members of the Tufts Sustainability Collective (TSC) met last night to discuss first steps on several campaigns the group is spearheading this semester. The umbrella-organization, which is comprised of sustainability-focused student groups including Tufts Climate Action, Tom Thumb’s Student Garden and Food for Thought, is focusing on improving the sustainability of dining options on campus. The group laid out its agenda Tuesday night last week with the hope of addressing the wasteful practices of take-out options on campus including Hodgdon Grab and Go, the Pax et Lox Kosher Deli and The Commons Marketplace. In an attempt to decrease the amount of waste generated by take-out containers at these dining facilities, TSC is proposing the implementation of a system involving reusable containers, TSC co-directors Mary-Paule (MP) Monks and Izzy Fontein explained. First-year Fontein said this system was inspired by the University of Vermont’s Eco-Ware program, which involves a one-time purchase of a re-usable container. She explained that through a similar program TSC hopes to implement at Tufts, customers would return their dirty containers to the food providers in exchange for a token that they would keep until they need clean containers upon their next purchases. “A lot of other schools have actually instituted a similar program,” Monks, a first-year, said. “We [also] figured this would save [Hodgdon] money.” Fontein said that members of the group have discussed this initiative with the Office of Sustainability, which has previously tried to work with Dining Services to implement a similar program but has not yet been successful in doing so. Along with envisioning a container-return culture, TSC is also looking to decrease the amount of waste that comes from the water bottles sold at Pax et Lox and The Commons Marketplace. The Commons is
see LEE COFFIN, page 2
see SUSTAINABILITY, page 3
SOFIE HECHT AND EVAN SAYLES / THE TUFTS DAILY
Commitment and Data”
to “Voice
According to the Feb. 4 statement, under Coffin’s leadership, Tufts rose to become the 15th most selective school in the nation. However, Coffin said he prefers to define the success of his office not from the metric of selectivity but from more qualitative methods of evaluation, such as whether professors feel that their classroom experience has enhanced over the years. “It’s possible to both create a community that has a high degree of intellectual engagement [and] stay true to our core values,” he said. “What’s for me been very satisfying is that those numbers have paralleled that more qualitative goal.” Glaser said that both the size and the quality of the university’s applicant pool have increased because of Coffin’s strategic thinking.
Please recycle this newspaper
Partly Sunny 46 / 25
/thetuftsdaily
Tufts Sustainability Collective proposes new initiatives to reduce waste
“We’ve always had fantastic students, but [Coffin] really has increased the size of the extraordinary students on campus, not just in terms of their intellectual prowess but in terms of many other talents and qualities,” Glaser said. Jeffrey Taliaferro, associate professor of political science and co-chair of the Undergraduate Admissions and Financial Aid Committee, said that creating a more intellectual community has been a longstanding goal for Tufts. “[When Coffin was hired, Former University President] Larry Bacow told him quite explicitly: ‘I want you to recruit and admit more intellectual students,’ and we have certainly seen that over the years,” Taliaferro said. Many administrators and students have said that part of Coffin’s success is from his
For breaking news, our content archive and exclusive content, visit tuftsdaily.com @tuftsdaily
tuftsdaily
tuftsdaily
understanding of young people in general and of the Tufts community in particular. “This is a job that requires somebody who has their fingers on the pulse of young people and how they’re thinking and what they care about and how to appeal to them, and he has that,” Glaser said. Sophomore Melissa Adler said that she also thinks that Coffin’s personality reflects that of the student body. “Hopefully [his successor will be] somebody who understands Tufts people and is able to accurately describe the campus vibe like he did,” Adler said.
Operating Bendetson Hall
Contact Us P.O. Box 53018, Medford, MA 02155 617 627 3090 FAX 617 627 3910 daily@tuftsdaily.com
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................5 ARTS & LIVING....................... 7
OPINION...................................10 COMICS.....................................12 SPORTS............................ BACK