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I'm a student and an employee

As one of the many graduate students working to organize a Tufts union with the United Automotive and Academic Workers (UAAW), I'd like to take this space to clarify a simple-but-important point. In recent weeks, I have noticed that some people, including our very own Tufts administration, seem to be perplexed about our student employee union movement. "What do you mean, you need a union? Graduate students aren't 'employees.' You're students," these folks may say. In fact over these past few weeks, the Tufts administration has been making just this basic argument - disputing the employee-status of Tufts graduate student workers in state hearings of the National Labor Relations Board in Boston (NLRB). Since the Association of Student Employees at Tufts (ASET) filed a petition with the NLRB to hold a union election this spring, the administration, rather than acknowledge the legal right of graduate students to unionize, has committed its resources to a confused and somewhat insulting line of persuasion. Instead of figuring out concrete ways to address graduate student concerns, the administration has been shelling out large amounts of money to lawyers who have been trying to convince the NLRB that graduate student workers on this campus are not employees at all. But how can this be? I myself am a graduate student and a teacher here at Tufts. I lecture for the English department, providing a service for which I am paid, and upon which the University depends. I am both a student and an employee of Tufts University. Three days a week, I spend my mornings preparing for and teaching 10:30 class of about a dozen students. (On the off days I attend graduate seminars, with professors and fellow grads.) Once or twice per week I hold required office hours for my students. Moreover, I frequently schedule additional conferences with students outside of office hours. My afternoons are devoted to studies towards my PhD. But my nights are filled with hours of reading, reacting to, and grading student papers, while my late nights are occupied with planning lessons and classroom discussions, as well as previewing written and audio-visual materials for future class units. Occasionally I use late late nights to work on an essay or an academic article of my own. Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining about the work. I love my job. In fact I often love it so much that it consumes my life. Planning. Preparing. Performing. Assigning. Conferencing. E-mailing. Grading and commenting on papers. My point is not that I have a problem with my work; instead it is simply that the work I do for Tufts is indeed work. I am an employee, as well as a student, and Tufts should acknowledge me (and other grad students like me) as such, and so respect the ongoing union movement as the proper legal course for graduate student workers who want to have a say in their conditions of work. I know from experience that as a graduate worker it is possible to forget the employment aspect of our relationship to Tufts. The courses I teach - English 1 and 2, are critical thinking and writing courses, in which I pick the essays, books, and films that my class will study. It follows from this that a good deal of the preparation I do for my course intersects with topics, issues, or writers that interest me. In this, I seem to be like many graduate student employees, as well as many full and part-time faculty here at Tufts. As academic workers, we often have the privilege of teaching topics and materials that we are familiar with and which we either enjoy or find useful. Such personal pleasures of academic work go with the territory. There is a danger of confusion here. I've heard some say that our work is not real work, just because we enjoy it or learnfrom it. Because a graduate student in English or philosophy, or biology happens to enjoy thinking about Faulkner or epistemology or genetics - according to this logic - his or her teaching within that respective area is not work, but a form of "training" or a non-economic "labor of love." But should labor - upon which the University depends, which Tufts directs, and for which I'm paid - not count as work, just because I enjoy it? Certainly not. Frankly, I doubt that one could be truly fit to teach an academic subject unless one has an independent, extra-economic interest in that subject. One's ability to communicate (and inspire with) knowledge is intimately related to one's engagement and interest in that material in question. (If you've ever had a teacher who had no independent, genuine interest in what he or she was teaching than you know what I mean.) At a world class university like Tufts, love of one's work should be a requirement for academic workers, not an excuse for degrading the work we do into an exploited form of leisure. Even if I loved or learned from every second of my labor as a teacher, that does not change the fact that I am in fact working as a student lecturer for this University. The fact is of course, that though as a teacher I am often reading and re-reading texts that I enjoy, the work I do for English 1 and 2 at Tufts is seldom identical with the work I do for the sake of my own graduate studies. While practice may make perfection, the fact remains that reading through ten six-page essays to fix grammar and sentence structure is hardly in any clear sense, preparation for my PhD (at least no more than, say, practicing my typing skills as I write this Viewpoint is preparation for writing my dissertation). In fact, the irony of my position as a PhD-seeking lecturer is that it's often difficult to find the time to devote to my PhD work. This is not only because teaching is addictive, exhausting, and time-consuming (as it should be), but also because like many other graduate TAs and RAs, I've had to find outside jobs, either at Tufts or off-campus, to simply make economic ends meet. The cost of living in the Medford/Somerville area is very high, and costs for simple necessaries like books and health insurance are often too much for me to afford. Like most Tufts graduate students, the salary I get for the work I give Tufts does not meet my basic human needs. Sadly, contrary to that Don Henley Eagles' tune, when you're hungry love alone will not keep you alive. Like many graduate students workers, at the end of the day, I do indeed love my work. I take pride in my work, and I work hard for Tufts students. Teaching is my job, and it's an important job that is essential to the functioning of this University. I take this job seriously, and so the terms and conditions of employment matter to me dearly, both for the sake of my students' learning, and for my own sanity and survival. I'm convinced that forming a graduate student union is the best, most proven way to improve graduate student working conditions, and the UAW has more experience working with graduate students than does any other union. As a student employee, I take my employee status seriously, and that is why I'm working for a union with ASET/UAW. Would my students want me to view my teaching as anything less than a real job? Shouldn't teaching Tufts students be valued not only in the abstract, as academic endeavor, but in the concrete, as the productive work that it is?Joe Ramsey is a student at Tufts' Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.


The Setonian
News

Mouridian's account is incorrect

It was with the deepest sadness and disappointment that I read about Dr. Mouridian's biased and incorrect version of the tragic events during World War I, involving both Armenians and Turks, in Friday's Daily. We all know that history is full of tragic events. However, it is maybe even more tragic to see that even today some individuals and groups will not rest until they breed new hatreds, based on distortions of history and lies, and then fuel them as much as they can. I have spoken to people, among them to my late great-grandmother, who had lived through those days, and what they all said was the same: 'During the World War I, the Turkish population in Eastern Turkey was stabbed in the back; every Turkish family in that region lost dear members in atrocities committed against them; then, deportation came and both sides suffered; it was a very hard, very sad time.' Not only is all this supported by the Ottoman archive records, but has also been confirmed by many unbiased Western, among them also American, historic and contemporary sources. What better proof could be there that there was no genocide than the fact that no Armenians in other parts of the country were hurt in any way? Like many innocent Turkish lives, were also innocent Armenian lives lost under war conditions? Most probably; but, however terrible that may be, when were innocent lives not lost during wars?I wonder if people who disseminate or support a one-sided, aggressive propaganda, full of lies, are aware of the fact that, as a result of similar campaigns, tens of Turkish diplomats, some of our finest, most humanitarian, and idealistic people, were killed in terrorist attacks in the 1970s? Do they know how much over 100 diplomat families have grieved only in the last 30 years because of that?One of my mother's closest friends is Armenian. My brother and I call her 'Aunt' and her husband 'Uncle', and her sons write to my mother in Turkish, signing 'your nephew.'I hope that, at least in international universities, people will manage to give a chance to feelings of respect, and friendship, and, if at all possible, to love, rather than to prejudice and hatred. After all, what is education all about? What I would like to add is that nothing and nobody can break the ties that bond Armenian and Turkish friends whose numbers are not few.Kerem Koz '02


The Setonian
News

American Studies and UCCPS build bridge to Chinatown

Learning and volunteering are two interests that capture the hearts of many students. Now, through a collaborative effort by the University College of Citizenship and Public Service (UCCPS) and the American Studies Program, students can combine these activities in a new program called Building Bridges. Building Bridges allows students to combine classroom learning with real-world experience in Boston's Chinatown through a course titled "Active Citizenship in Urban Communities: Race, Culture, Power and Politics." The 15 students currently enrolled in the class are required to do citizenship work in Boston in addition to attending class. They work in places as the public school system, urban development programs, and affordable housing and welfare solution projects. Professor Jean Wu, who teaches the course, says the combination of learning and service is important because it allows students to discuss the real-world experience they gain through site visits in an academic setting. "In order to make sense of their experiences, students need information and knowledge," Wu said. "The classroom is a great place to do it." Students chose to participate in the Building Bridges Program for a variety of reasons. Senior Kathleen Leanza was introduced to the program through the Americorp program Jumpstart. She was also interested in learning about the Chinatown neighborhood. "With the Tufts Medical School and Tufts New England Medical Center there in Chinatown, I was curious as to the different aspects that affect Chinatown," Leanza said. Sophomore Leslie Wang took the class because of her interest in the Chinatown community. She wanted to both learn more about the community and its history and to be more actively involved in volunteering. For Wang, working at her site has been frustrating at times, but ultimately, the experience has been rewarding. "This class has been a great combination of 'real life' experiences," Wang said. "Professor [Jean] Wu has pushed us to think outside of the box and take the most from what we are experiencing." The choice of Chinatown as the site for the citizenship aspect of the program stems from the University's strong ties to the area. Both the Tufts Medical School and Tufts New England Medical Center are located in Chinatown. According to Wu, many students don't know about or understand the community because it is very different from the places where they grew up. The six sites where students work are the Josiah Quincy Upper School, the Asian American Resource Workshop, Jumpstart, the Campaign to Protect Chinatown, the Asian Community Development Center and the Welfare Solidarity Project. The UCCPS and American Studies personnel behind the creation of the program hope to promote knowledge of Chinatown's history and encourage students to learn about other communities. "Active Citizenship in Urban Communities: Race, Culture, Power and Politics" is one of the few courses at Tufts that combines learning with citizenship, but its creators hope it will be a model for similar programs, both at Tufts and other schools. "The students are looking deeper and learning more about urban communities as a whole," said Wu, who believes that the program is important in helping students to become active citizens. "People don't always see the resources and talent college students have to give," she said. Wu hopes the course will inspire the students to consider careers that will give back to communities that need their skills. As unique as the service portion of the course may be, even the classroom aspect of the program is not completely traditional. Wu attempts to bring in as many community speakers as possible, who are often the heads of the various organizations where the students work. The class also takes field trips to various sites in Boston to further connect with the community. The program has generated positive feedback thus far. "Students now have the opportunity to learn interactively about the history and contemporary issues of Boston's Chinatown through an Active Citizenship course and a 'real-time' practicum," said David Hendrickson, the coordinator of the Tufts Chinatown Partnership.


The Setonian
News

What's Your Problem?

Q: Dear Dr. K, This guy I've been seeing has been trying to get me to pose naked for some x-rated naughty pictures that he wants to take of me in various positions. At first the idea seemed really weird and freaked me out, but now I'm starting to think it might be fun. Is it weird that I am ok with this? I'm just afraid of the pictures winding up in someone else's hands or, God forbid, on the Internet. Is this something I should do? -potential playmateA: Before you let this guy pop his extra large lens out, there are a few things to consider. First of all, how long have you been seeing this guy? It's one thing if you've been dating for several months and feel comfortable enough to get this intimate with him. It's an entirely different matter if this is someone you've casually gone out with a few times, because you probably don't know him well enough to decide if he is genuinely sexually daring or just some perverted peeping tom who is using you to get some free porno to show off to his best male friends. I would be hesitant to get into some rather compromising positions in front of the camera if you don't know this guy very well. Have you spent a lot of time together? More importantly, do you trust him? Taking pictures of a lover in the buff can be an incredibly erotic and sexy way to gain even more intimacy, and can bring two people closer together. They can be great to look at when you are apart, and when you need a reminder as to just how attracted you are to your boyfriend/girlfriend. However, keep in mind that once the pictures are taken, your naked self is permanently stored on film and now belongs to the guy. If he is a total sleaze, you may really regret ever agreeing to posing when your mom calls you crying and screaming because next-door neighbor Mrs. Smith's son Johnny was caught showing the entire seventh grade class pictures of you, nude, doing some very X-rated things on camera one afternoon after school on some random Internet porno site. Also, you are definitely not weird for getting excited about the idea of posing for these pictures. Everybody has different ideas of what is sexy, and different things turn different people on. It is totally normal to get hot over the idea of stripping down and letting your inhibitions float away. Again, I fully encourage you to go for it if and only if this is something you will not regret. Don't commit to posing unless you are aware of all possible consequences. Which, of course, includes the possibility of your nudie pics being on display for seventh graders across the world. Lovely thought, isn't it?Q: Hey Dr K.,It's been two years since I failed the second midterm in Bio 14, dropped the class and never looked back. I've been much happier as a child development major. The only problem is: my parents don't know! My mom still starts e-mails to me with "Dr. Daughter." They'd be so disappointed if they find out that I'm not on the path that they want. They've even said before that they won't pay for school unless I'm pre-med! What should I do? How am I going to tell them that I hate medicine?! -bound for disgraceA: How's this: "Dear Mom and Dad, I hate medicine. Completely, utterly, with every living cell inside of my body, I hate medicine. I have tried my hardest to learn the course material. I have attempted to have fun with it, find it interesting, given it my all, but I still hate medicine. I will be completely miserable for the rest of my life if I have to continue on this path that was so obviously not meant for me. I cannot imagine a life so incompatible with my own hopes and dreams. As your daughter, it is important for you to wish me happiness in my life, which I have found through child development. I feel that my strong passion, which finally brings me happiness and love for a subject, is something that will fuel my career goals and will send me on to do great things in the field. But I really, truly, hate medicine. And as disappointing as that might be for you, you are not living my life, and cannot force me to make decisions you have or have wanted to for yourselves. Sincerely, Dr. Daughter, PhD." Listen, often times parents try to push careers onto their kids that they think will benefit their children the most. After all, they want you to move on to join one of the most prestigious career paths - that of the medical doctor. However, it is hard for parents to sometimes understand why we don't make the same decisions that they do. You have to understand one of the most important things in life: you have to live for you, and you alone. Living out anybody else's dreams will undoubtedly lead you to a life of sadness and dissatisfaction. You need to find something that you feel passionate for, which you have, and go with it! It doesn't matter how crazy it might seem, or how hard it may be to get a job in that field, because if you are really that passionate about what you are doing, success will come to you naturally. Go with your instinct, follow your heart and dreams, and your life will be infinitely better than one created for you by your parents. This is the only way you will ever understand what it means to live a truly happy life. Good luck.


The Setonian
News

Not another war on terror

The official media line that we've been fed in the past several months about the Israeli/Palestinian conflict is that Israel has been defending itself against terrorism that has threatened the security and the existence of the state of Israel. But from where I'm sitting, the situation is much different. I intern at Grassroots International, a small development organization based in Boston, and over the past few months I've gained a unique perspective on the current crisis in the Middle East. Grassroots International provides funds for community organizations in several regions throughout the world in an effort to promote people-centered development and global justice. The program was originally born out of a commitment to justice for Palestinians in 1984. Grassroots currently supports a number of partner organizations in the Palestinian territories, including the Union of Palestinian Medical Relief Committees, which provides much needed medical care to Palestinians throughout the West Bank and Gaza. We also support the Palestine Center for Human Rights, the Gaza Community Mental Health Program, and the Ibdaa cultural Center in Dheishe refugee camp, which works to keep refugee kids off the street and was the site of the recent Academy Award-nominated documentary film Promises. Obviously, in the months that I've been working at Grassroots International since January, the situation in the Middle East has gone from bad to worse. Our partners have been directly afflicted by the recent violence and it's become downright frightening to come into the office and wonder what news we might receive next. Last month, Israeli troops broke into the Ibdaa cultural center, took it over, and positioned a sniper from the roof of the building, thereby gaining a perfectly threatening vantage point over the entire Dheishe refugee camp. The center is used by the community as a children's after-school program, a home for the community dance troupe, and as a library. The Headquarters of the Union of Palestinian Medical Relief Committees, another one of our partners, was attacked two weeks ago in Ramallah. Tank fire destroyed one ambulance, and medical workers, particularly since the siege of Ramallah, have been under constant harassment and threat by Israeli soldiers. For instance, Dr. Jihaad Mashal, a UPMRC Director, was forcefully detained for four days in his house. Such actions, particularly when the Palestinian communities need medical supplies and physicians most, constitute gross human rights violations and have been condemned by the United Nations and other humanitarian organizations. This morning at Grassroots I came across something that truly disturbed me. While looking through some archives from the early 1980s, I found a newsletter put out by Grassroots, dated the Spring of 1983, on the crisis of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon. The newsletter reads "thousands have been killed or wounded... countless innocent civilians desperately need food, medicine, and shelter- above all they need basic security and proof that the future holds more in store than further bloodshed and misery." The words are so chilling precisely because they could be applied to the violence that is going on today, even as I write. Why have we seemingly come full circle? Are Palestinians today any closer to that promise of basic security and a future that holds more than bloodshed and misery than they were nearly 20 years ago when this now yellowed and frayed newsletter was printed? I apologize in advance for offending anyone, but I simply cannot reconcile the two disparate images that have been pounding through my head this week: 1) the rally in DC in support of Israel's defense against terrorism, and 2) the crushed homes, white rubble and twisted steel which hides bodies underneath in Jenin. Just yesterday morning as well reading the old newsletter, I also read a variety of news sources' accounts of the recent violence. The New York Times reports that the UN envoy to the Middle East, Terje Roed-Larsen toured the Jenin camp on Thursday and was "horrified beyond belief" by what he saw, stating "not any objective can justify such action, with colossal suffering to civilians. We saw children looking for their parents. We saw fathers, brothers, sisters digging in the rubble in order to find the corpses of their dear ones." Every time the rebuilding process occurs, hearts are broken and scars, literal and figurative, are created that make this peace so much more distant than it was twenty years ago. Destruction plants the seeds for new animosity to grow, new generations of children that grow with new, more deeply entrenched perceptions of an enemy. It is clear to me that there is no "military solution" to this problem. The Israeli government cannot ensure the safety of its people through destruction. The Israeli government cannot perpetuate the claim that it overruns civilians and their homes in the name of stopping "terrorism." Furthermore, the United States government and the United States people, cannot further the criminal analogy that has recently been made between the US War on Terror and the Israeli War against Palestinians. The events of Sept. 11 and our tax dollars cannot be used as a justification for the atrocities in Jenin, for the humiliating curfews endured by Palestinians, nor for the death of a 14-year-old Palestinian boy who was shot by Israeli troops enforcing a curfew just yesterday morning.Christina Turner is a senior majoring in International Relations.


The Setonian
News

All stressed out, and no place to go

You have a big exam tomorrow. Your notes, your textbooks, and your review sheets are laid out in front of you. Your pencils are sharpened and you're ready to go, but your roommate has some friends over, or wants to go to bed early, or has suddenly decided to listen to loud music - very loud music. Where can you study into the wee hours of the morning? According to some students, including Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senator Pritesh Gandhi, the answer is simple: nowhere. Gandhi is pioneering a proposal to open late-night study spots around campus, and calls it a disgrace that such facilities are not provided at a university of Tufts' caliber. The sophomore's proposal includes: a 24-hour reading room, open seven days a week during midterms and finals; keeping Eaton Lab open 24 hours, seven days a week all year; extending Tisch library's hours until midnight on Friday and Saturday nights; and keeping Brown and Brew open 24 hours Sunday through Thursday. "You should never have a time during the day where you can't relax in a safe space, or study in a quiet, safe space," Gandhi said, adding that the University's lack of late-night study facilities is in opposition to its commitment to academics. "To close the library at 9 p.m. [on Friday and Saturday] is preposterous," he said. "What kind of message is that sending to students?" Senate President Eric Greenberg agreed that the issue concerns many students. "It directly affects the education that students receive here," Greenberg said. "We complain about the social life, or the dorms... and we're not focusing on the most important thing. People are trying to study." Dean of Students Bruce Reitman also said the proposal warranted consideration, though he cautioned that such initiatives are often very costly to Tufts, which is already financially strapped. "I'm glad to see that people are interested in spending more time on their studies," he said. Reitman worked with the senate and dining services last year to open late-night study at Carmichael, and said he was pleased the results. Last year, the Dean of Students Office also worked to keep Eaton Computer Lab open for two extra hours each night. "I feel like the expansion that we did last year of both the computer center's hours and Carmichael study hall were very well justified," Reitman said. "[Late night study] is at least worth exploring as an experiment. I am pursuing it because I consider it important for a campus like Tufts." But Tisch Library Director Jo-Ann Michalak isn't so sure that Friday and Saturday nights are the best time to extend library hours. Michalak says that very few students use the library on these nights, and feels that extended hours would be better justified on busier nights of the week. According to library research, she said, most students are satisfied with the library's current hours. "We did a student survey that was online in the fall and the general feeling was that the majority of students... tend to be satisfied with the hours," Michalak said. "But that doesn't mean that everyone is satisfied with them." According to Gandhi, who says he has received a "slew" of e-mails on the subject, the student body is less satisfied than Michalak thinks. "For students to e-mail student reps about these issues is unheard of," Gandhi said. Sophomore James Clark said that since college students tend to keep such late hours, a late-night study facility is a good plan, though not an essential one."I think it would be nice, but I don't think it'd be necessary," Clark said. "There should be a place where you can go until 3 a.m. every night. I don't think they need to spend the money to keep something open [for 24 hours a day]." Funding is the biggest challenge to establishing a late-night or all-night study facility on campus. Gandhi believes that Tufts' small endowment and tight budget are the biggest hurdles that he and his committee will need to cross to realize their vision. "Everyone is always behind this, but there's no money," Gandhi said. "Tisch library recently got its budget increased, so they have a little bit more movement, and we plan on exploiting that movement" Reitman also addressed the funding issue, saying that while he is committed to finding a late-night study facility, he also needs to explore the cost of the senate's request to come up with the best solution. "We're a community that has a finite amount of resources," Reitman said. "We have to prioritize our expenditures. I think we'll be able to address the concern and provide something." Michalak agrees that funding is the biggest obstacle in the way of keeping the library open for more hours. She specified that to keep the library open late at night, a guard would need to be hired. And to keep the library open longer on weekends, Michalak would have to hire professional staff that would assist students in accessing the collection and using the library facilities. Typically, two professionals and one student are on duty at the library at all times. Gandhi feels that until the issue is resolved, and a late night study space is designated, Tufts is sending the wrong message to both its current and prospective students. "The message Tufts should be sending is that we're an academic institution," Gandhi said. "We focus our money and our legwork on creating a situation in which scholarly students are produced by the University."Some students agree that the current situation is an inaccurate representation of the University's academic goals. "I'd say partially it reflects poorly on the University," sophomore Graham Griffin said. Sophomore Courtnay Thomas also supports the proposal. "I definitely think the library should be open, if not 24 hours, at least later on Friday or Saturday," Thomas said, mentioning that many other universities provide such facilities. "You can't really do work in your dorm room because people are loud." But other students are less sure that longer study hours would be an effective use of funds. "Tufts doesn't encourage enough social activity," senior Bill Lane said. "Everyone already studies at all hours of the day and night. What we really need is better parties and more parties. This proposal will only promote the spread of dorkiness at Tufts." It remains unclear whether Brown and Brew or another Dining Services facility would be a possible late-night study space in the future. Dining Services Director Patti Klos declined to comment on the issue until she could meet formally with the senators involved. But Klos added that she is open to exploring their requests and working together to meet students' needs. She anticipates that staffing would become an issue in opening up Brown and Brew for 24 hours a day. According to Reitman, keeping Brown and Brew open all night would require approval from Medford as well. "I don't think it's realistic to keep the dining halls open," said sophomore Taylor Shann, who works for Dinging Services. Shann specified that if dining facilities are open, staff is needed not only to serve and prepare the food, but also to bus tables and ensure that the facility will be clean and ready for operation the following morning. But despite potential obstacles, Gandhi remains optimistic. "We're going to make it happen," he said. "Unless the administration tells us no, and then we're still going to make it happen."



The Setonian
News

Burning issues

Your music collection used to stand as both an accomplishment and an investment. Each album recalled a specific time in your life - maybe the summer at the beach when you bought that Bon Jovi CD and listened to it every weekend, maybe riding in your friend's car when you first decided that you really liked Rage Against the Machine. What's more, each part of your collection represented a specific choice; you weren't about to blow $15 on a Harvey Danger album just because you heard one good song on the radio in '97 (or maybe you did do so and regretted it forever). These days have given way to an era in which people's music collections are sprawling, gargantuan, and worth virtually nothing. The ubiquity of CD burners (and the availability of blank CDs at 40 cents apiece) has made it easy and cheap to amass binders full of hundreds of illegally burned CDs. Once, great thought would go into your every purchase; burning an album costs so little, however, that you might as well copy anything on the off-chance that you might like it. It's possible to become overwhelmed by your own collection, to own pages and pages of stolen CDs that you haven't even listened to. Yes, stolen. Burning a CD is the same as stealing it. You're getting recorded music - something that you're undeniably supposed to pay for - without a single penny going to the manufacturer, the distributor, or even the band. Paint your own CD-burning habit as anything you like, from something harmless to an act of civil protest, but the facts remain. Duplicating a copyrighted recording violates both the law and the spirit of capitalism. Intellectual property rights are as important as physical ones. It's still a theft even if you can't be caught. So justify your habit however you might, and be content with it if you have to, but don't insult everyone's intelligence by saying it isn't stealing. CD burning falls into the same category as cheating over the MBTA by putting a handful of pennies into the exact change turnstile on the T. You may feel that the full price is a cheat, you may not see the face of the people you're ripping off, and there may be no chance of being apprehended for your crime, but it's still a petty and immoral theft. It's also an unsustainable method: if everyone got on the T for 17 cents, it would fall into a worse financial hole than ever. Likewise, if everyone burned their CDs, there wouldn't be any to burn in the first place. People justify CD-burning in all kinds of ways. In particular, many point out that the record labels pay the artists so little that the companies have been effectively cheating both the bands and the consumer for years - implying that it's then fair somehow to cheat them out of their money. Citizens of the happily-capitalist USA should remind themselves that no one is forced to purchase CDs. If you think that music is too expensive, you don't need to buy it (and no, stealing the CD is not a valid alternative, even if you think that your favorite musician is getting a raw deal). If you choose to buy a CD for $15, you can't pretend you were cheated. You knew full well how much you were paying and what you were getting. Some artists have undermined the public's sense of intellectual property by admitting that they hardly care if people burn their albums, especially if it gets more listeners to come to concerts. Don't take this as a legitimate blessing upon CD burning, however; the artists have no legal authority in the matter. The artists don't have control over the record companies' copyrights, and while they make little from record sales, they rake it in at live shows. The interests of artists and record labels aren't at cross-purposes, but they aren't always the same, either. Even if you're actually angry at the labels' treatment of musicians, screwing over the record company by not buying your favorite band's album isn't going to get your message across. In fact, it's only likely to get the band dropped for poor sales. Bear in mind that however much you imagine the record company as a bloated, faceless demon, it's still the reason that you have recorded music to listen to at all. When is it legitimate and fair to burn a CD? You're justified if you're making a mix for yourself of music that you already own: you paid for it, and you're keeping it. And, though technically illegal, it's fair to burn CDs that are unavailable commercially - things like out-of-print albums, unreleased material, or even concert bootlegs. If you can't pay for it in the first place, there seems little point in feeling guilty about getting it for free or for paying the wrong people. How much of this is out there? The "latest" from Dave Matthews Band and the Smashing Pumpkins will never be available in stores. Burned copies of Neil Young's 1974 album On the Beach can sell for $50, and people pay for it. It's out of print in vinyl and has never been released on CD; there's no other way to get it. With so much burning going on, the lack of zealous activists against CD burning is surprising. Those moral-high-road diehards that keep buying their music at full price end up paying for their "frugal" counterparts with burners, and they should be outraged. If you still buy your music, you should be outraged. Your friends may be cheap, but that's no reason to help them out. For those people who ask that their burners be pried from their cold, dead hands: Don't lie to yourself. You don't burn CDs for politics. You burn them because you don't want to pay for them, and that's not exactly a defensible position. And for the people out there who keep buying music and can stand up to the jeers of their freeloading friends: keep buying what you want, and don't loan out your collection. There's no reason to be someone's chump.


The Setonian
News

Summer internship search leaves students frustrated

Now that spring break is officially a thing of the past, students have started getting serious about summer plans. But despite extensive planning and researching, many have found the internship and job search process particularly frustrating this year. "Part of the problem this year has to do with the fact that the economy has been in a funk and a lot of companies are looking to cut costs and thus cutting any paid internships that are out there," sophomore Jonathan Parker said. Parker has applied to approximately 30 companies in his search for a summer position in the field of economics and finance. He has only heard back from four of these businesses, and only with replies that the internship programs have been cut or already filled. This came as a surprise to Parker, who thought he had started his search with plenty of time, having sent out his resumes and cover letters in February. Sophomore Debbie Anilionis has also already applied to several advertising internships in the New York City area, but hasn't heard back yet. "I'm really getting anxious because I haven't found out about any of them yet," Anilionis said. She began sending out resumes and cover letters over winter break. Frustrated, Anilionis sought advice from some people she knew in the field, who advised her to e-mail advertising agencies directly concerning internship availability. Anilionis subsequently emailed resumes and cover letters to approximately 20 agencies. According to Parker, this level of accessibility has made the job and internship search significantly more difficult than in years past. "Since e-mail and the web has developed, all the companies are taking resumes and cover letters online, which means that anyone can basically copy and paste a resume to 50 companies at once," he said. "To hear a voice and to see a face is rare because they have so many hundreds of applicants online." Both Anilionis and Parker sought help from Career Services but feel that they were not provided with all the help that they needed. "[Career Services] gave a good guideline but they don't give real, detailed help," Anilionis said. "They give us a web site for internships, Interncenter, but a lot of the internships listed weren't updated." Parker added that though he scheduled a meeting with a member of the Career Services staff, the session consisted primarily of searching Interncenter, which he could have searched on his own from his dorm room. Other students have yet to look into summer employment, but are not as worried about their prospects as those who have already sent out materials. Freshman Debbie Roaquin hasn't started looking for work yet, but hopes to find a job soon. She is mainly interested working to make money, but would like to find a job related to a career field in business or advertising. "An internship would be good, a paid internship would be even better," Roaquin said. A Queens, NY, resident, she added that finding a summer job in New York City is even more competitive - many students are interested in finding internships in the city. Roaquin says that she does receive some pressure from her parents to quickly find summer employment. "They say the experience would be good," Roaquin said. "But a lot of it has to do with not wasting my summer and making money. My parents complain to me about not knowing the 'value of a dollar.'" Roaquin's parents suggested that she get in touch with cousins working on Wall Street to "make some connections."Parker agrees with that strategy, explaining that this year it seems impossible to find a position without having a connection to the organization. "You need to know someone these days to get an internship," Parker said. "You have to have something that sets you apart and just knowing somebody helps." In the end, despite not having been granted interviews from any of the organizations that received his resume, Parker has been accepted into a year-long program with the London School of Economics. He will have to spend his summer taking classes in order to graduate on time. Sophomore Neha Surana has always seen taking classes as the best course of action for this summer. She plans to study chemistry at Harvard while living at Tufts. Class registration deadlines are more flexible than those for internship applications. "It's basically something I need to do, to make my life easier next year," Surana said. "Summer classes have a later deadline and the application is more of a formality."


The Setonian
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An elephant never forgets

Anderson Hall was erected in 1961 for $1.5 million. The building was named after Arthur J. Anderson (1889-1964), who received a Bachelor of Science degree from the Tufts School of Engineering in 1912 and an honorary Master of Arts degree in 1943. Anderson was a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity during his undergraduate years and served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees for Tufts in 1949. Anderson went on to hold many professional positions, including partner in a Boston insurance firm and the consul for Sweden in Boston. Containing classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, lounges and a library for the civil, mechanical and engineering graphics departments, Anderson Hall also included an area designated for a future computer center. The project was financed through the Engineering Building Fund, which received contributions from 60 percent of the school's engineering graduates. Inside the building, a number of areas were named for notable Tuftonians and benefactors of the project, including several classrooms given by alumni classes. As of 2000, Anderson Hall continues to be used by the School of Engineering as one of its four core facilities on the Medford campus.


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Rose's to join MOPS next week as new Chinese vendor

Students looking forward to the sweet smell of Rose's will only have to wait a few more days, as the Boston Ave. Chinese food vendor begins service in the Merchants on Points (MOPS) program next week. Dining Services confirmed Wednesday that Rose's will be added as soon as software allowing the restaurant to accept Tufts' dining points arrives. In October, the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate Services committee and Dining Services polled 857 students on their favorite of six local restaurants. Rose's, which received 289 votes, and Golden Light in Davis Square, with 106 votes, were the top two choices. The restaurants' hours were not displayed on the survey, and in the following month, students expressed concern over Medford zoning restrictions that require Rose's to close by 11:00 p.m. "I think there are other, more popular Chinese restaurants because Rose's doesn't deliver as late as the others," junior Rebecca McCormick said. Dining Services explored other options, and before winter break the Daily reported that Dining Services negotiations with Golden Light were coming to a close. But communication difficulties with Golden Light over the break prompted Dining Services to approach Rose's again. "They haven't been very responsive," Dining Services director Patti Lee Klos said. Members of the Senate have said that after numerous visits and attempts to contact the restaurant, Golden Light representatives were unable to communicate with Tufts. Citing language barrier problems, Senator Ed Schwehm said, "We had to assume that they didn't really want to be on MOPS or be bothered by us anymore." Schwehm said he is frustrated by how long the process of adding a fourth vendor has taken, criticizing the efforts of both sides. "We're trying to provide the service to students, and it's upsetting to me personally that it's taking so long," Schwehm said. "It's been the whole semester and now starting a second semester without a fourth MOPS vendor. Personally, I think that's almost unacceptable." He said that because the appropriate steps were taken in the fall, including the student poll, the fourth vendor should have been established within the MOPS system much sooner. Partially accountable for the delay were problems with the program's hardware supplier. When Klos placed an order over break with Blackboard, the equipment provider, the company was working to upgrade the system. Orders for this type of system are not placed very frequently, so Tufts had to wait for new software compatible with its system and the upgraded hardware needed to connect Rose's. Klos said the system should be ready next week. "They've escalated this service call a little higher up in their system," Klos said of Blackboard. Last semester, students ordering from MOPS vendors experienced long waits for food - sometimes up to three hours. The addition of a fourth restaurant comes as a relief to many students. "Now you can have pizza, sandwiches, and Chinese all on points. It's perfect," sophomore Alexis Margolin said. The MOPS program continues to grow because student demand placed on participating restaurants is high. Klos said there may be some lag time in Rose's adjustment to its increased number of orders, especially since the delivery restaurant will need to train new drivers. Last fall, MOPS participants as a whole saw their transactions double and their dollar intake triple. Klos is confident that Rose's will make the necessary adjustments and hopes that students will react positively to the addition. "We hope that they will be favorably received. It will remain to be seen," Klos said. Senators, however, are less confident and anticipate that students will be frustrated with Rose's 11 p.m. closing time. At the end of the semester, "student opinion may be for getting rid of Rose's and contacting other vendors," Schwehm said. Klos hopes that Rose's will continue in the MOPS program. "There is an expectation that students will be satisfied with the quality and service," Klos said. The program will be reevaluated at the end of the semester.


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Blind Assassin' challenges reader to be detective

The Blind Assassin does not purport to be a mystery novel. Though the title evokes thoughts of crime, it is a memoir interspersed with pages from a science fiction/love story with the same name by one of the characters. But toward the end, the plot turns into a mystery, and the reader is challenged to put together the pieces of a three seemingly different stories to uncover the narrator's hidden secret. This book's strength is the plot's creative genius. Author Margaret Atwood alternates between the stories of an affair involving an outlaw and a young girl who lie in bed and invent science fiction tales, the present life of 83-year old Iris Chase Griffen, and her memories as seen through the lens of her sister's suicide. Though these plot lines are separate at first, Atwood slowly weaves them together so that every detail works to the final conclusion, and no threads are left loose. The story begins with Iris' recollection of her sister's death in 1945 at the age of 25. Though Laura's car crash was ruled an accident, Iris does not believe that conclusion and sets up the book as an inquest and explanation of her sister's death. Next, the reader encounters the early chapters of Laura's book, The Blind Assassin, which was published after her death. The chapters have little relation to the early parts of Iris' story and include a lover-fugitive making up tales for his girlfriend. The blind assassin is originally a character in that story. Later, the novel switches to the present life of Iris. A ceremony where she awards a creative writing prize named in honor of her sister, gets Iris thinking about Laura's death. Iris is old, lives alone in the small Canadian town where she grew up, and speaks from a mildly cantankerous perspective. She begins her journal-slash-memoir, which is mixed in with this science fiction story. This story begins in Iris' childhood home with a description of her grandparents and her mother. That Iris' mother died while giving birth to a sibling who died as well, was never fully explained to her - the first incarnation of the blind assassin concept. As Iris recounts her childhood, newspaper clippings and her commentary foreshadow what is to come. To save her father's button factory, she marries rich industrialist Richard Griffen, and when he dies mysteriously, his sister gets legal custody of Iris' daughter. She is left alone and miserable for the rest of her life. The revelation of plot details before they are explained makes reading The Blind Assassin an adventure. The reader knows at the beginning that they are meant to come together, and as elements of one story slowly show up in the other, the reader delights in putting all the pieces together. The blind assassin concept is subtly symbolic, and much of the book's beauty lies in the slow pace of the author's writing and the fact that she leaves it to the reader to draw connections. The book's 521 pages are cumbersome and the plot is difficult to get through at some points - the writing is thick with details and the relationship between the plots is still unclear. But Atwood's beautiful writing keeps the reader intrigued, as she maintains a fresh, unique, and succinct descriptive style. The strength of the narrator's authority and the humor of her voice augment an already ingenious plot. Iris takes the reader inside her mind. She doesn't just tell the story of her life, she comments on it, and examines how time has changed her perspective. Her narrative is full of witty gems, insights on life - commentary on the seasons and the passage of time- and observations of other's idiosyncracies. The subtlety with which she presents her thoughts make it so that the narrator is not preaching, just explaining. Added to strong, likeable characters and creative plot with a sense of mystery is a constant commentary on the art of writing a book. Atwood is obviously writing something that is meant to be published and read, but Iris is doing the exact opposite. In fact, after Iris makes it clear that the goal of her book is to reveal her hidden secret, she says that "the only way you can write the truth is to assume that what you set down will never be read." She later teases the reader with the idea that she is writing this memoir so that she will be remembered after her impending death. This constant commentary about writing as an art causes the reader to question the motivation behind what they are reading. The Blind Assassin is a combination of ingenious plot, creative characters and description, and subtle symbolism that makes reading an adventure. The book combines elements of a love story, science fiction, and nostalgia into a slow-paced mystery where the reader is the detective.


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Yes, Pierre Omidyar

I would like to echo the sentiments of my fellow senior, George Farish, and commend President Bacow for naming Pam and Pierre Omidyar commencement speakers for my upcoming graduation. It's tough for me to imagine what May 19 is going to feel like, as a senior, about to head into the wilderness of filing my own taxes, 60-hour work weeks, power suits, and power lunches. In other words, graduation will be my formal entrance in to the world of adults, and initiation into total independence. I can predict a range of emotions, from nostalgia of leaving the friends, and fear for what the future may or may not hold for me. Who knows what I'll be doing at the time of my five-year reunion, or whether I will live up to the opportunities that my Tufts education has afforded me? I can't imagine more appropriate speakers for this type of occasion than two former jumbos, Pierre and Pam Omidyar. They have walked the same hallways, had many of the same professors, and sat in the same commencement seats as I will sit, during the course of their Tufts education. Pierre and Pam Omidyar have taken their Tufts degrees, put them to work, and represented Tufts well. They are two jumbos that will understand the intense range of emotions and thoughts that will echoing through my head. Am I ready for this? Can I make it? I'm sure that Pierre and Pam Omidyar had the same doubts during their graduation, and they made it. Perhaps Pierre's crowning achievement is the creation of eBay, an online auction site that has revolutionized the Internet. Mr. Omidyar has taken an original, entrepreneurial idea, implemented it in the market, and profited handsomely. Pam and Pierre Omidyar have not been the only ones to profit; they have made the commitment of donating all but one percent of their fortune to programs benefiting community development. The Omidyar foundation is a revolutionary way of exploiting the efficiencies of a capitalist system to benefit the greater good. The foundation uses the venture capital market to provide organization with base capital for community organizations, such as Global Education Partnership, and Social Ecology Incorporated. These firms share the Omidyar's mission statement of "helping all of us rediscover the importance and benefits of community in our lives." The development of the UCCPS program at Tufts is only one example of the Omidyars' work to promote active citizenship. I'm proud to share the same degree with the Omidyars. They embody important ideals to Tufts students like me, working hard to realize their dreams, and sharing profits with those who haven't been afforded the same opportunities. I am a student at Tufts, and I am proud of my education, not just the institution that my degree comes from. If I had wanted to go to a big name school, I could have chosen University of Michigan or UC Berkeley. However, I chose Tufts because my individuality is important to me. I have an identity, I'm not just a number to my professors, and I'm glad that the graduation speakers embody these ideals. The Omidyars do not speak at several graduations every year, as do many other big-name speakers, and I'm confident that their speech will be original, heartfelt, and relate to the senior class in a genuine manner. If I were looking for a generic speech from someone who had spent one day on campus, I might look to Bill Cosby or Bono. They would probably be entertaining, but what could they tell me that would be any different from what they would say at any other college graduation? I have seen many big-name speakers at Tufts, and I have found their speeches to be generic. Namely, I, along with many other students, was disappointed with Colin Powell's speech last year. While his life experiences were interesting, the speech was the same motivational advice that would have given any other school. He did not take the time to discuss issues that were important to Tufts students interested in Middle Eastern affairs, and instead spouted the same self-glorifying lines he would have told a group of senior citizens, or middle school students. Tufts students are unique, and I'm confident that the Omidyars will be able to relate to the student body better than Bono. I would rather tell my kids that a pioneer in the Internet that has harnessed his entrepreneurial ambition for the good of society spoke at my graduation than a rock star from a band whose music will probably be played on Adult Contemporary radio stations. If the Omidyars are a Big Mac; and Bill Cosby, Al Gore, and Bill Clinton are "escargot, shrimp cocktail, and Caesar salad," I'll have fries with that.


The Setonian
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Lord Jeffs hand men third NESCAC loss of season

As the mercury topped 90 degrees on Kraft Field yesterday afternoon, the men's lacrosse team lost to the Amherst Lord Jeffs, 13-7. With the loss, the Jumbos fell to 6-3 overall and 3-3 in the NESCAC. The Lord Jeffs improved their record to 5-5 (2-3 NESCAC). A win would have vaulted Tufts into a three-way tie with Bowdoin and Colby for second place in the NESCAC, but instead the Jumbos fell back into fourth place, tied Williams and Wesleyan. "All this did was put us in the middle of the pack instead of in second place," senior Jon Zissi said. "Now we have to play with our backs against the wall for the rest of the season." For the second time this season, Tufts came off a big win against a nationally-ranked team and dropped its next game to a lower-ranked and arguably weaker team. After defeating Bowdoin on April 3, the Jumbos lost in heartbreaking fashion to Williams, 11-10. And again yesterday, after an impressive victory over Colby last weekend, the team played uninspired lacrosse in losing to Amherst. "We didn't play well enough to win, and we didn't deserve to win," coach Mike Daly said. "And it's pretty disappointing coming off of a pretty good win against Colby." The Jumbos did see their fair share of chances to get back into the game. Tufts was within one goal through the first half until an Amherst score with 49 seconds left sent the Lord Jeffs into the half up 5-3. The Jeffs got on the board quickly in the second half, jumping out to a 6-3 lead after only 23 seconds of play. The Jumbos cut the lead back to two, however, when junior midfielder Alex Kerwin found freshman Bryan Griffin open in front of the cage, where Griffin made it 6-4. Tufts came within one goal of Amherst with 3:52 left in the third when Zissi came around the left side of the goal and fired a shot in to the top left corner, just out of reach of Amherst's freshman goalie Cushing Donelan. The Lord Jeffs responded a mere 27 second later, however, when a shot from way out got past senior goalkeeper Kirk Lutwyler, who was screened by three players. In the fourth quarter it was Tufts that struck first, pulling within one goal yet again when senior Jack Palmer nestled a shot into the low left side, making it 7-6 with 14:27 left to play. But Amherst once again had the answer, as Jeffs senior Harlow Voorhees fired an underhand shot into the back of the net to restore the two goal lead. Just over one minute later, Voorhees struck again, giving Amherst a 9-6 lead. Though Tufts had the ball in its end numerous times throughout the remainder of the fourth - and saw several opportunities to put another score on the board - the Jumbos seemed to stand around the crease, refusing to cut and get open for shots. Amherst upped its lead to four when the Jeffs' leading scorer, freshman Alex Casertano, rolled an underhand shot along the ground past Lutwyler. After another Amherst score, the Jumbos finally scored with 1:20 left, but it was too little, too late. The Jeffs would add two more goals in the final minute of the game to make the final score 13-7. "We came out flat and we played flat for the whole game," Zissi said. "They out-ground-balled us and they out-hustled us. They just wanted it more than we did." Though the loss was disappointing - especially on the heels of the win at Colby - the team is focused on the remainder of its NESCAC schedule. "It's disappointing, but this game isn't any different than any others," Daly said. "They're all league games and they're all important." Tufts has three games remaining in the regular season, and will next face Bates on Saturday in what should prove a hotly contested battle. In its most recent game, Bates defeated second-ranked Bowdoin, 10-7. Though the Bobcates are near the bottom of the conference, Daly said his team isn't taking anything for granted. "Every team in this league should be nationally ranked, and in my mind every team in this league is nationally ranked," Daly said. "There's not any one that's any bigger or any more important than any others."


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Aha! Tufts professor measures new learning phenomenon

Experts have long believed that memorization, essential for success in life, takes "effort." But now, Tufts psychology professor Sal Soraci thinks there are more specific ingredients. Soraci is working to "uncover the memory mechanisms" behind effort. In earlier publications, Soraci and his colleagues discovered that subjects recalled sentences better if they experienced a sudden "insight" as to their meaning - a phenomenon they termed the "aha" effect. Now, Soraci's group has identified the electrical impulses behind the "aha" effect, demonstrating that it can be studied in the laboratory. "Effort won't help you in 'aha' contexts," Soraci said. "Sometimes, generating multiple alternatives to provide multiple perspectives is critical to enhance learning and memory." The effect has also caught the attention of the press. The Boston Globe featured an in-depth article about Soraci's work, and Soraci was recently interviewed by NECN. Soraci may also appear on ABC's Good Morning America in the near future. Soraci and other scientists realized that the "aha" effect is somewhat counterintuitive because it suggests that initial confusion, followed by realization, may be helpful to learning. In order to test the "aha" effect, they devised a controlled experiment. Imagine being asked to make sense of this sentence: "The clothes were ruined because the sign vanished." Your mind races to find the connection. How were the clothes ruined? What is this sign? How does it stop the clothes from becoming ruined? When you are given the missing clue, "wet paint," a wave of understanding washes over you. But, if the clue is presented before the nonsensical sentence, no memory advantage was found. Soraci's work shows that these moments of clarity facilitate memorization of sentences and their subsequent recall. The term "effort" was beginning to snap into focus, but the team didn't stop here. Recently, attention has been focused on understanding why the "aha" effect makes memory longer lasting. Soraci and others proposed that as the subjects read the solutions to the nonsensical sentences, their brains recreated the scenario using the new information. This regeneration, they hypothesized, led to increased retention. If this were the case, it would help to resolve longstanding debates about the nature of learning. Plato, along with the 20th-century American philosopher and educator John Dewey, believed that learning was an active process that requires challenge and stimulation. Conversely, the 18th-century Italian philosopher Giovanni Vico posited that because mathematics and language were human inventions, they were easier for humans to understand and remember than natural world phenomena. As another test of the hypothesis that active learning aids memorization, Soraci and collaborators presented subjects with fill-in-the-blank exercises, such as "S-EAKER." They were then given hints to direct them toward a particular solution. Some subjects, for instance, received "S-EAKER: A tennis shoe" while others were given "S-EAKER: Not part of a stereo set." Individuals given the latter cue tended to remember the word better, presumably because mental activity was stirred in the rejection of the incorrect response. Additionally, they found that the more varied and interesting the hints, the better subjects were able to remember the words. For instance, subjects presented with "B-X-R: A stocky dog; a canine" were unable to recall "boxer" as consistently as were subjects presented with "B-X-R: A stocky dog. A prizefighter." Reminding subjects of the multiple meanings of "boxer" induced a stronger memory. Amanda DiFiore, a graduate student who collaborates with Soraci, has discovered that about 400 milliseconds after the key word ("wet paint") is presented, subjects experience a sharp brain spike called an N400. Although the N400 is well known to other scientists, DiFiore discovered that it was coming from a more frontal section of the brain. This new insight may improve scientists' understanding of learning, and aid the study of learning in the laboratory. According to Soraci, the impact of this work reaches far beyond the lab, and teachers should incorporate "aha" moments into their lesson plans. For instance, to teach the theory of evolution, Soraci suggests that students be given the same tools that Darwin had to work with. The Globe quotes Dorothy Leonard, a Harvard professor of business administration, as saying, "The pressure is to provide answers, to provide lists, but if [Soraci's] research is correct, [students] will not remember them as long if you don't design in time to be confused and struggling." A number of other Tufts professors have collaborated with Soraci in his research, including Richard Chechile, Kent Portley, Steve Cohne, and Shirver Center professor Michael Carlin.


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Thanking the Tufts community

The families of Frank and Marie Cerasuolo and Paul and Fran Cioffi wish to thank the Tufts students who assisted us during the fire at 7 Capen Street on March 29. Some residents on both sides of the house came immediately offering cell phones. Others gave tissues and drinks of water to our children. Some invited us into their residences for warmth. We are very grateful you all got out safely and hope things are back to normal for you. We appreciate your kindness - you are our heroes!Fran Cioffi


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Boston Postal Inspector investigating Tufts mail thefts

A postal inspector is investigating theft allegations after multiple Tufts students received opened letters with missing monies, a Boston Post Office spokesman said yesterday. A string of complaints and evidence collected since Valentine's Day indicate that the alleged thefts took place off campus, according to Tufts University Police Department (TUPD) Lieutenant Charles Lonero. "The investigation found that the letters were opened prior to arriving at the University," Lonero said. That conclusion was reached after the TUPD sent decoy letters through the system, and no money was stolen. Subsequent security upgrades included more locks, a more secure sorting procedure, and a reduction in the number of people who have access to each mailbag, according to Support Services Manager Sheila Chisholm. Sophomore Daniel Gold was sent a taped envelope containing a Valentine's Day card and a $10 bill via US mail. The envelope arrived with broken tape and only the stain of the missing bill remained in the card. He brought the matter to the attention of Boston Postal Inspector Moira Sanning, who has been assigned to the case. Gold said that he is working with Sanning to determine where the money may have been stolen. "She's been really helpful so far," he said. "She said that she might try sending me money from different places, and seeing if the money is stolen." Other students have reported thefts from their mail, most around Valentine's Day. Lonero said that the TUPD has received additional complaints since Valentine's Day, although only in isolated incidents. The Boston Post Office declined to reveal how it plans to uncover the source of the alleged thefts, saying that publicizing such information would be detrimental to its investigation. Gold said that if more students submit complaints to the Post Office, there will be a better chance that something is done to prevent further theft and to reclaim the stolen money. "If more people file a complaint when this happens... the Post Office will become more serious and more likely to change," he said. The Medford Post Office directs students who have mail theft complaints to fill out a complaint form, which allows them to receive reimbursement - a recourse which Gold took advantage of. Tufts Mail Services told Gold that theft within the Tufts system is unlikely because the staff does not have much contact with the mail, nor does it have much time to go through it.


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All that jazz: An interview with Tufts' Joel LaRue Smith

Brassy melodies will fill Cohen Auditorium tonight as the Tufts Jazz Big Band presents its spring concert. The group's "Tribute to Jazz Trumpet Giants" will feature Tufts' own Tiger Okoshi performing several dynamic trumpet solos. Joel LaRue Smith, a music lecturer at Tufts and director of the Tufts Jazz Big Band, spoke to the Daily earlier this week about the band, his background, and what to expect from the concert.The Tufts Daily: How did the show evolve from a Miles Davis tribute to "Jazz Trumpet Giants"?Joel LaRue-Smith: We did start it out as Miles Davis, but then Tiger [Okoshi] kind of gave us the repertoire that he wanted to use. I noticed the repertoire that he gave me, and the repertoire that I was doing independent of him. Without him as a soloist, we were including the music of Dizzy Gillespie, and Sandoval, and he had the music of Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, and Louis Armstrong. So, I said wait a second - this isn't just about Miles, this is about the trumpet giants. There's also a lineage, there's a history with Louis and then Dizzy and then Miles and then Sandoval. Also, Dizzy Gillespie has to be included because he's really the one who bridged the gap between Cuban music and North American music in this country. He's the one who started introducing the great Cuban musicians to the American public.TD: What do those two styles have in common?JLS: Both of the musics are derived as a result of the African Diaspora, the displaced African in the Carribean and North America. The commonalities are that they both are improvised music, and they both tend to use call-and-response type components in the structure. They also have the use of the trumpet and percussion as a main focal point. Cuban music tends to use a lot of trumpets, and typically the most famous players in the history of jazz, like Louis Armstrong and Miles Davis, have been trumpeters. It goes back to the whole religious concept of the walls of Jericho being tumbled down by Gabriel blowing his horn, or the mighty elephants of Africa - their screeching is like that of a trumpet. It has force; people who are typically oppressed need a voice, and what larger voice than the trumpet? It cries out, but it's also very moaning and sensual. It's not just a sound of anger or rebellion.TD: Who can we expect to see performing?JLS: Tiger Okoshi. He's a world renowned trumpet player. He teaches at Berklee, and he also teaches here at Tufts now. He's an author, and he travels all around the world - he plays with some of the best people, the top names in jazz. Tito Ayala is the congero that's playing with us, and he plays in a lot of Salsa bands, and does a lot of Latin jazz. They're both going to give a big boost from the two ends of the spectrum, the horn and the drum.TD: Are there any Tufts students that are standing out?JLS: Well, the whole band has done an amazing job as a cohesive group. I think we're focusing on one trumpeter in particular, a student here, Chris Kottke. Chris is this amazing honor student, I think he's a sophomore, and he's going to be a featured soloist in a lot of the compositions. And he's definitely someone to watch out for. I think he's taking a year off to study at Berklee and then returning. TD: How did you wind up at Tufts yourself?JLS: I came to Tufts from New York City. I was freelancing, playing Jazz and Latin music in New York, and I was also going to graduate school at Manhattan School of Music, and Tufts needed a full-time person to direct the jazz program. I wanted to do it because I think it's important, and this is the controversial part. As some might see it, and some might see it as very logical, I think it's important for their to be the presence of an African-American, teaching African-American music. I was fortunate - I had Ryan Carter, who was in the Miles Davis Quintet, as one of my teachers, and this guy's so famous, I wondered why he's in a university teaching. He's a major player, just like I consider myself to be, and a major first-call session guy. He said, well, we need to have a clear presence in the university because this music is going in there now, and there needs to be serious representation. I thought well I could do that, it's steady income, and it's also a good way to give back. It's important not to just take, and want to be a superstar, but to give back to the students, and I love it. I love doing what I'm doing. I played with Tito Puente, Mario Bauza, Tony Bennett... I played with all of those people, and I still love playing, and I'm still playing a whole lot, but there is something rewarding about teaching and it also clears things up in my headTD: And this clarifies your sense of the music?JLS: Yeah, and I feel like it clarifies my commitment to society, as being a responsible, reliable musician as opposed to like this egotistical, narcissistic, mercenary kind of a person. That's really important, for me anyway. Plus the kids at Tufts are just so cool, because... they're so smart! Everyone at Tufts is really smart. They're hard studiers, and I mean, their interests are very varied, very few undergraduates really focus on anything, but maybe that's the beauty of it too, they're open, it's like Sonny Rollins says, music is an open sky. So in that regard I dig Tufts; that's why I came, and I'm still here... this is going on my fifth year, and I'm still here.TD: Who should come to the show on Thursday?JLS: Everyone should come to the show. In the wake of Sept. 11 everyone has been hooraying over Americanism and patriotism, and still jazz is treated like a stepchild in the American popular culture and definitely in the academy. We need to reexamine matching the rhetoric with the action. The rhetoric is "yes, yes, let's revisit, let's reignite our old ties with what is true." This music is distinctively American. It's a combination of Europe and Africa happening as a result of the slave trade. It couldn't happen in Europe, it couldn't happen in Africa. It happened here. And it's a phenomenon, people need to really embrace it.


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NBA playoff picture coming into focus

Although most basketball fans have their eyes on this week's collegiate conference championships and next week's NCAA tournament, a few NBA teams are turning heads with impressive performances. After a lackluster start to the season at 16-18, the Detroit Pistons currently boast a 34-23 record that has placed them second in the Eastern Conference. Led by Jerry Stackhouse's 22 points per game, the Pistons are an eclectic group of seasoned veterans that include deadly three-point shooter Jon Barry, aged but still dangerous Clifford Robinson, hefty former Arkansas star Corliss Williamson, and improving defensive force Ben Wallace. While the Pistons are capable of posting convincing offensive numbers, they are winning by playing solid defense. The team has only allowed 87.5 points in its last 23 games improving from the 91.5 points per game it has yielded for the entire season. Although this squad in no way represents the Bad Boys of the late '80s, rookie coach Rick Carlisle has his club headed for the most wins since the 1996-1997 campaign. The Pistons are currently a half a game ahead of the Milwaukee Bucks in the Central Division and four and a half games behind the New Jersey Nets for the overall lead of the Eastern Conference. If this winning streak continues, they can secure home-court advantage throughout the playoffs. With home court advantage, the Pistons could very likely represent the East in the Finals because of their 20-8 record at home. Another Eastern team currently eyeing the playoffs is the Miami Heat, whose postseason chances seemed dismal after the first two months of the season. After a 108-74 thrashing by the Phoenix Suns on Jan. 12, the Heat's record stood at 8-26. It seemed that coach Pat Riley would miss the playoffs for the first time in his coaching career. Since that loss, the Heat has been scorching with a 17-6 record, and now is just three games behind the Indiana Pacers for the final Eastern playoff spot. Like the Pistons, the Heat are succeeding by means of defensive excellence, surrendering a league-leading 88.3 points per game. On the other hand, offensive input has been extremely lacking. With Eddie Jones and an aging Alonzo Mourning leading the way with 19 and 15 points per game, respectively, the team has a plethora of capable veteran scorers in Jim Jackson, Rod Strickland, Kendall Gill, and Brian Grant that must step up down the stretch. If Miami continues its solid play for the remaining 25 contests, it will give Indiana a definite challenge for the eighth seed in the playoffs. The Heat's only obstacles are the Washington Wizards, who without MJ have sunk to a sub .500 team, and the Toronto Raptors, whose current 11-game losing skid has them headed for an early summer vacation. In the Western Conference, the Portland Trail Blazers are suddenly reemerging among the league leaders. The Blazers, who have perennially been a Western powerhouse and a fixture in the playoffs, struggled to a 13-18 record through 31 games. However, the Blazers have not been the same since Jan. 2, completing a drastic turn-around, posting a 24-6 record including winning their last ten contests. As in the past, Portland is winning through a balanced scoring attack including seven players averaging double-figure points. Veterans Rasheed Wallace, Scottie Pippen, Dale Davis, and Damon Stoudamire are leading the way and showing young developing players such as Ruben Patterson and Bonzi Wells how to win against the league's premier teams. Since the All-Star break, Portland is at perfect 6-0 against a very strong Western Conference. This streak includes victories against the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Lakers, and Sacramento Kings. Looking forward to the playoffs, Portland's multi-faceted scoring approach may be troublesome for teams such as the Lakers and Timberwolves, whose bench production can be inconsistent. In other news, last Friday NBA fans received a preview of the upcoming Amy Fisher vs. Tonya Harding bout following the LA Lakers 96-84 victory over the Indiana Pacers. Just seconds after the final buzzer sounded, Lakers guard Kobe Bryant approached Pacers guard Reggie Miller near halfcourt and threw a punch at the 14-year veteran. The two eventually ended up in a skirmish on top of the scorer's table before being separated by teammates. The league handed Bryant a two game suspension without pay and fining him an additional 12,500 dollars. A surprised Miller, who claims that he was neither the instigator nor the aggressor in the incident, also received a two game suspension and a 10,000 dollar fine. Although both players are extremely physical, and Miller is a notorious trash-talker, there was no indication during the game that a fight would ensue. If any squabble was expected, it was one between Lakers center Shaquille O'Neal and Pacers center Brad Miller. The two centers were involved in a mini-brawl in January after Miller, then with the Chicago Bulls, committed a flagrant foul against Shaq. O'Neal served a three game suspension for his roundhouse swing at Miller. With all the hype surrounding the two, their tempers did not flare on Friday. Shaq actually assumed the role of peacekeeper in trying to separate the two combatants. While Bryant later issued an apology to his Laker teammates for missing two games, he refused to apologize to Miller.


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Non-scoring meet launches some Jumbos into postseason

The women's track and field team put in another strong showing this past weekend at the Springfield Invitational. Although the meet was non-scoring, many Jumbos capitalized on the opportunity to qualify for the fast-approaching postseason. "It was an invitational, so we were able to put some people in different events," coach Kristen Morwick said. "It was a bit windy on the last straightaway so that affected some of the sprint times, but overall it went well." The heptathlon, which spanned both days of competition, was one of the more anticipated events of the weekend. Presented with the only official opportunity during the regular season to compete in the event, the squad took full advantage - four out of six competitors represented Tufts. The quartet of freshman Melissa Graveley (3417 points), sophomores Amy Spiker (3130 points) and Jessica Trombly (4017 points), and senior Sarah Leistikow (3669 points) proved a contentious crew as they placed fourth, fifth, second, and third, respectively. Leistikow had not participated in the heptathlon since freshman year, and this weekend was the first time for Graveley, Spiker, and Trombly. With her second place finish, Trombly came close to breaking the school record in the heptathlon, ending up 106 points shy of tying the 4123 point mark. Trombly's effort was also good enough to earn her a provisional qualification for Nationals, giving her an impressive first outing in the event. Graveley and Spiker both qualified for ECACs, while Leistikow made the Division I cut-off. "It was nice to have so many people competing in the heptathlon, they were able to support each other," Morwick said. "They can all improve in different areas, it was a good learning experience." The sprinting tandem of junior co-captain Myriam Claudio (2:23.49) and sophomore Emily Bersin (2:23.52) went for a distance workout in the 800m run. The duo placed second and third, qualifying for Division IIIs in the process. "I haven't raced the 800 in over a year, but it felt fine," Bersin said. "I would like to do it once again this season. It was nice to be able to run it with Myriam since we do our workouts together and know each other's racing style so well." Sophomore Shushanna Mignott also had a successful outing in the sprints, placing fifth in both the 100m dash (13.37) and in the 200m dash (28.12). Fellow freshman Ayako Sawanobori (28.40) and Sika Henry (28.93) placed sixth and seventh in the 200. "We've trained Shushanna as a jumper, so to see her do so well in the sprints is great," Morwick said. "The wind of the straightaway was pretty strong, I think she could have gone below 28 in the 200 without it." The long distance crew also had its share of worthy finishes. Freshman Katie Sheedy qualified for the ECAC meet with her outing in the 1500m run. Sheedy placed second with a greatly improved time of 4:55.97. Also making the stride in the postseason was junior Megan DiBiase (20:47.71), as she met the NESCAC mark in the 5000m race en route to a third place finish. In the steeplechase, junior Mary Nodine (12:06.33), senior Heather Ballantyne, and sophomore Bethany Arrand captured second, third, and fourth places respectively. Ballantyne (12:13.11) and Arrand (12:19.57) also picked up season personal records (PRs). "We were really happy with the race, but I still think we can go faster," Ballantyne said. "There's a huge learning curve for the steeplechase, so I'm excited for the postseason and better competition." The throwers logged another weekend highlighted by PRs achieved across all events. Freshman Katie Antle threw a PR in the discus (116') that clinched first in the event. Antle also had a PR in the hammer throw (105' 8'') in her sixth place finish. Sophomore Kate Gluckman posted PRs in the discus (112' 3'') and the shot put (38' 6''), garnering third and fourth places in the two events. Newcomer and sophomore Maritsa Christoudias placed ninth in the javelin throw, just missing the finals grouping of the top eight with her hurl of 91' 1''. However Christoudias fouled out on an attempt of 120', which would have placed her comfortably in second place. "We've been working with Maritsa for about two weeks now, she's a great athlete and only going to get better. She has a great shot at NESCACs in the javelin," Morwick said. Sophomore Jessica Gauthier threw for a PR of 108' 05'' in the hammer throw, good enough for a fourth place finish. Freshman Jess Colby also had a PR in the hammer of 99' 10'' in her seventh place finish. This weekend's upcoming Connecticut College Invitational will provide the squad with its last regular season meet. The postseason starts up the following weekend with the NESCAC Championships, which makes this next competition a prime and necessary opportunity to get as many Jumbos as possible into postseason venues. In addition to Connecticut College, Coast Guard, WPI, and Eastern Connecticut College will provide the team with worthy adversaries. "This is a last chance qualifier for the postseason," Morwick said. "We'll be missing some key people due to the FE exam that some engineers on the team are required to take, but we should be fine. We'll try to put people in their best events."@s:Women to compete at Conn College next week


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Second place NESCAC finish caps successful season for women's track team

Battling the elements in another unseasonably inclement competition, the women's track and field team capitalized where they could at the NESCAC Championship meet on April 27 and 28 at Bates College. Snow, sleet, rain and hail tried to temper the women's resolve, but Mother Nature proved no match for the will of the Jumbos. The squad entered the meet with a goal of bettering last season's fifth place finish and achieved that goal by placing second overall. "We wanted second in our conference and the result was a total team effort to achieve our goal," coach Kristen Morwick said. "Everyone showed a lot of guts and heart and pulled it together without a lot of complaint and with a lot of Tufts pride." In a meet where every point counted, the squad came through when in the clutch. The top three final team standings saw Williams College in first with 208.5 points, and Tufts (101) and Colby College (98) separated by only three points. The weekend's events were marked by stellar individual performances, some expected and some pleasant surprises. As a familiar face in the leader spots this season, sophomore Jessica Trombly didn't disappoint when the pressure was on and the conditions less than optimal. During the first day of competition Trombly aggravated a hamstring injury that could have rendered her unfit to compete for the remainder of the weekend. She competed, however, in all the events she was slated for and accounted for an astounding 32 team points. Trombly's points came from first place finishes in the long jump (16' 3.75''), 100 meter hurdles (15.82), as well as third place finishes in the 400 dash (59.08) and the 4x100 relay (49.74). "Her performances given her injury were unbelievable. She is a true competitor and a true team player and it was amazing to watch," Morwick said. Trombly's teammates in the sprint events also put forth impressive performances. Junior co-captain Myriam Claudio garnered second place in the 100 dash (13.07) and third in the 200 dash (26.59). Claudio was joined by sophomore Shushanna Mignott in the 100 dash, as Mignott placed one spot back with a time of 13.16. Mignott also leapt to eighth in the triple jump, in a jump measured at 36' 1.25." Sophomore Emily Bersin had one of the surprise performances in the 400 hurdles towards the end of the meet. Entering the race Bersin was seeded eighth, but when the race was over she had captured third place. The time of 1:06.09 was a PR for Bersin and provided the Jumbos with much needed points. During the last lap and a half of the steeplechase race, junior Mary Nodine had a huge surge that made for another exciting finish. Nodine's last minute kick propelled her past a few runners and pushed her into seventh place. The time of 11:42.79 posted by Nodine was also a new school record in the 3000 steeplechase. "We pushed through some crazy weather, especially since we were jumping into pits of water while it was essentially snowing out," Nodine said. "We were one of the toughest teams out there and we came in second, I was very impressed with how people did." Senior Sarah Leistikow finished two slots behind Trombly in the long jump (15' 11.75''), and also notched a second place finish in the heptathlon (3725 points). Freshman Melissa Graveley racked up 3578 points for a seventh place finish, and sophomore Amy Spiker took eighth with 3466 points. The trio of heptathletes accrued 11 essential team points over two days of competition. The throwing contingent marked the meet with a set of solid performances across all events. The duo of sophomore Kate Gluckman and freshman Katie Antle performed well in the shot put and discus events. Gluckman finished fifth in the shot put (38' 9'') with Antle finishing a place behind and throwing two inches shorter. In the discus, Gluckman had a substantial PR with her lob of 125' as she captured sixth. Sophomore Maritsa Christoudias (106' 6'') and junior Danielle Perrin (100' 3'') represented the team well in the javelin, placing fifth and eighth respectively. "The entire season is filled with memorable moments, but I think the best one was to know that at the end of NESCACs, we had accomplished what coach Morwick had known all along that we could do - get second place as a team," Claudio said.Looking ahead, the Jumbos have the Div. I Championships May 10-11 at Northeastern, ECACs on the following weekend at Springfield College, and Nationals. There are a few Jumbos who have qualified provisionally for the Nationals meet. These athletes include: Trombly in the heptathlon and the 400, Nodine in the steeplechase, and as member of the 4x400 relay team, comprised of Claudio, Trombly, freshman Sika Henry, and Bersin. The coming weeks could see more people qualify for Nationals or see those who have qualified provisionally make the automatic cut. Morwick says she has no doubt that the Jumbos' future is bright. "We will continue to grow and improve. The team will be more mature, polished, and composed in the coming year. We're a pretty young team with lots of potential and we look even better for next year," Morwick said.