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The Setonian
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Tufts graduate participates in Coro, a public policy fellowship program

With a weak economy and employment levels at all-time lows, many students from this year's graduating class scrambled to pin down post-college plans. These students weighed the possibilities: Should they try to get a job? Should they apply directly to graduate school? Should they take a year off and just travel? More so than in past years, students had to dig deep and ponder their options for the future.


The Setonian
News

In Boston mayoral race, challengers face uphill battle

Bostonians will head to the polls tomorrow to narrow down the city's race for mayor from the four current contenders to two. Calling for a change to Boston's political scene, the three challengers face a steep challenge against incumbent Thomas Menino.



The Setonian
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Green team prepares Curio House for competition

In the once-empty field across from South Hall, an entire building was erected over the summer. It's not hard to miss. On the weekends, people surround the building, moving things around, finishing up the flooring inside or measuring and taking notes on its dimensions.


The Setonian
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Corrections

Wednesday's article "Bacow tells community he is ‘cautiously optimistic' on economic outlook" erroneously stated when Trustee Emeritus Bernard Gordon's $40 million gift to Tufts was announced. The university announced the gift on Sept. 9. Wednesday's article "Renowned physicist Dyson to deliver Snyder lecture" incorrectly stated that Freeman Dyson is employed at Princeton University. He is professor emeritus in the School of Natural Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study, where he first began teaching in 1953. Although it is located in Princeton, N.J., the institute has no affiliation with Princeton University. Wednesday's article "At forum, freshman TCU hopefuls make pitches" incorrectly stated that freshman Spencer Rubin was disqualified from the election. Rubin did not attend the forum due to a prior commitment and notified the Elections Commission prior to the event. He was not disqualified and was in fact on the ballot in yesterday's election.


The Setonian
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Addition to Loj nears completion

    Students visiting New Hampshire will soon have extra room to stretch out. After a slight delay, construction of the Trips Cabin, an extra facility alongside the Tufts Mountain Club's (TMC) Loj, is expected to be completed next week.     The contractor, Katahdin Cedar Log Homes, is now furnishing the cabin with bunk beds. The building will be ready for use once the mattresses arrive and the state fire marshal approves the facility.     TMC President Katie Bond, a senior, is pleased with the progress.     "Everyone who's seen it, all the people working on the Tufts side of things who have been up there are ecstatic," she said. "It's looking beautiful, and it's exactly what we wanted."     Workers began building the cabin in June, with completion slated for August, but an unusually wet summer got in the way.     "There was an incredible amount of rain in June and July," said Robert Biswanger, a Tufts Facilities employee managing the construction project. "The 31 days of rain put us behind schedule." But earlier this week, he said that the cabin is "95 percent complete."     Biswanger said that aside from the rain delay, the construction went smoothly and the contractors "did a wonderful job."     The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate decided in April to allocate $230,000 to the project after a heady, semester-long debate. Although TMC raised $11,854 on its own for the project, most of the funding came from the TCU funds.     The Trips Cabin is divided into two sections, designated for accommodation and equipment storage respectively. It has a heating system, sprinkler system and smoke detectors and is designed to be energy efficient.     The cabin will be able to sleep 21 people, nearly equal to the Loj's original accommodations.     "The capacity has roughly doubled, which is phenomenal as far as hosting more student groups, making more people comfortable there and not intimidating new people who want to go up," Bond said. "We can increase the scale of our events up at the Loj and do a lot more outreach."     TCU Senator Dan Pasternack, a junior who initially proposed funding the Trips Cabin project with Senate dollars, was impressed by the swift progress. "I'm glad to see such large change happening so quickly and I think it's just a testament to what we can accomplish," he said.     Bond said the new space will better allow TMC to meet student demand and reach out to more individuals.     In line with this aim, TMC is launching a campaign this semester to attract students to the Loj. This will include a newcomers' weekend on Sept. 26 and a grand opening party on Oct. 24, according to Bond. TMC is also drafting guides about the Loj and helping students plan trips.     TMC continues to grapple with the challenge of transporting students to the Loj, particularly on weekends. "It's something that we as the TMC board really struggle with," Bond said. The group is exploring the possibility of getting a van but has no firm plans in place.     The cabin's ultimate cost has not been finalized, as billing is ongoing. Both Bond and Biswanger, however, are certain that the cost will not exceed its $240,000 budget.     "Our project manager has been doing a great job of keeping finances in check and finding ways to save money that don't compromise the quality of the building," Bond said. Biswanger said it is possible that the final costs will be well below the budget, in which case the surplus funds will go back to the Senate.     Pasternack stands by his original decision to support the project. "It's something that I think students may not see the impact [of] immediately, but as time goes on it will have a big impact on the campus if used properly," he said.     Looking back on what was a contentious debate in the Senate, Bond is hopeful that some who disagreed with the allocation will eventually be won over. "When we applied for the funds we really believed in its benefit for the entire Tufts community," she said. "We hope that over time some of the people who were uncomfortable with the allocation will start to see our perspective."




The Setonian
News

Under new policy, AP credits get less recognition

    There is some bad news for incoming English majors hoping that Advanced Placement (AP) scores might add up to an exemption from college math courses, or pre-med students who hoped never to take another social science class: Under a policy introduced this semester, no more than one AP credit can be counted toward a particular distribution area.     Despite some student opposition, the Educational Policy Committee (EPC) voted in April to overhaul the school's handling of AP credits. The EPC capped the number of pre-matriculation credits that Arts and Sciences students can put toward their degrees at five; for School of Engineering students, the number was  limited to eight. Before the EPC vote, there had been no limit on the number of AP credits on which students could draw.     Pre-matriculation credits are earned from scores on AP and SAT II exams, as well as international baccalaureate credits and those earned from some college courses taken before entering Tufts.     In making the change, the EPC argued that AP courses do not always meet the standards of rigidity set by supposedly comparable Tufts courses. As a result, students who received credit for introductory-level courses and skipped to higher-level classes were often ill-prepared for the jump, according to EPC Chair Jack Ridge.     The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate in February passed a resolution expressing concern about changing the AP policy. The resolution discouraging change passed 15-5 with two abstentions. But the two TCU senators serving on the EPC last year voted in favor of the policy change when the proposal came before the EPC.     Senator Edward Chao, who co-sponsored the Senate resolution and was not on the EPC, expressed his disappointment with the committee's decision. "The new policy penalizes students who had achieved," said Chao, a junior and the chair of the Senate's Student Outreach Committee. "Students shouldn't have to retake courses."     Ridge, a professor of geology, said classes taught in high schools often cannot match the rigor of Tufts courses, even if they are APs.     "The AP credit is a little bit misleading in terms of … what the standard was going to be like in a college course versus what they had in high school," said Ridge.     The EPC also noted in its resolution that, on average, students with higher financial aid packages matriculate with half a credit fewer than other students, putting them at a disadvantage.     Tufts has granted 32 percent more AP credit in the past five years due to a rising number of students taking the test and the variety of tests now offered by the College Board, the non-profit organization that administers the AP exams, according to the EPC resolution.     While some exams such as AP Calculus are generally seen as matching the rigor of college-level material, other tests such as those in U.S. history and biology are often harder to equate to a Tufts class, Ridge said.     Last year, students in the School of Arts and Sciences could fulfill the entire math requirement if they received a score of five on the AP Calculus BC exam. Others were able to evade two semesters of introductory English courses with a five on either the AP Literature or Language exam.     The EPC's decision did not reflect the feelings of the student body, according to Chao. "We agreed this wasn't right," he said.     But Ridge said the problem lies in the quality of AP testing itself.     "Fundamentally, most faculty have a problem with it," he said. "Regardless of what kind of course a student had in high school, the AP exam is not an indicator of how well they performed in that subject area."     The Class of 2013 is the first to be held to these new standards, and a majority of the 10 freshmen interviewed for this article expressed frustration with the credit limits.     While some were irritated with the new limitations, other students were unconcerned about the matter. Some said they had only taken three or four AP classes and would not be greatly affected by the changes.


The Setonian
News

For college graduates, employment may be a click away

With job-hunting season just around the corner, many seniors dread what comes next: spending countless hours surfing Monstertrak and Careerbuilder.com, filling out time-consuming job applications and giving up the cushy student lifestyle.



The Setonian
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Internet recovery program aims to 'reSTART' addicts' lives

Many Tufts students have difficulty tearing themselves away from the Internet to do homework, but for those truly addicted to online media, a new clinic in Redmond, Wash. claims to have the answer. The clinic's existence highlights the complex issues associated with the growing problem of Internet addiction.



The Setonian
News

Changes felt at Fall Ball

Reactions to the restrictions on Friday's Fall Ball have been mixed, but one thing is for sure: This dance was different from those of past years.



The Setonian
News

Tufts student gets chance to spin the big wheel

    The famous artist Andy Warhol once said that "in the future, everyone will be famous for fifteen minutes." Many students may roll their eyes at the popular saying, resigned to spending the next few years in the obscurity of Tisch Library, but for one Tufts senior, fame is just a spin of a wheel away.     Senior Peter O'Regan unknowingly signed up for his time in the limelight while playing a game of online "Wheel of Fortune" one evening last winter. A link by the computer screen's edge caught his eye, and, without any real hope of success, O'Regan signed up to be thrown in with thousands of prospective contestants, all eager to win a spot on the show.     "I had actually forgotten about it until I got the e-mail for the group audition," O'Regan said.     Five months after signing up, O'Regan was called to audition with a relatively small pool of entrants. He was then chosen to represent Tufts University in the second round of the "Wheel of Fortune" College Week special, taped in the Boston Convention Center and set to air on Nov. 10.     The format of the College Week edition is largely indistinguishable from the show's standard daily episodes, but several key alterations were made to accommodate the week's theme. The taping location was moved from the show's usual home — Los Angeles — to Boston, arguably America's greatest college town. With it came a full-sized traveling Wheel of Fortune wheel and a stage set that consisted of a mostly accurate, slightly undersized cardboard New England street. On the set, a projector screen played a looping video montage of scenes from various competing schools, including live footage of Tufts' very own West and Eaton Halls.     Boston University's cheerleaders egged on the audience and helped announce co-hosts Pat Sajak and Vanna White, and Boston foodie group The Phantom Gourmet helped Charlie O'Donnell entertain the audience during the show's opening.     Over the nearly three decades of its existence, Wheel of Fortune has integrated several similarly planned themes to honor specific events and boost viewership. One of its most successful themes in recent years has been the NFL Players Week, in which the game show competitors are exclusively NFL athletes, according to Sajak in a behind-the-scenes interview with the Daily.     In addition to attracting spectators, themed weeks create a unique atmosphere behind the wheel and in the audience. College Week in particular stands out because of the sense of partnership it consistently builds between competing players.     "There's a level of camaraderie any time, but it's always interesting with the college students; there's such a camaraderie since they're all in the same point in life," Cassandra Thompson,  the Wheel of Fortune contestant coordinator, said. "Everyone roots for everybody, and they're excited for each other because you can have three big winners every show. I've seen people come away in third place with $25,000, so there's no need to have that competition. You can all come away with so much."     The contestants' politeness seems antithetical to the theme and its accompanying setting: university students, often representing rival colleges, competing with one another to win the largest sum of money. But when plucked out of their cutthroat classrooms, the students seem to bond over their shared nervousness and pride.     Despite the obvious sweating and breath-holding every time O'Regan or one of his competitors from Georgetown University or the University of Maryland spun the wheel, by the end of the day, contestants had already planned to make a Facebook group and keep in touch, O'Regan said.     It is obvious to viewers that Wheel of Fortune is not simply about the money, but also about puzzles, ambiance and humor. According to co-host White, this has allowed it to outlast many other game shows with easier puzzles and larger cash prizes.     "It goes back to that old game of solving the puzzle. You walk by the TV, and if there's a half puzzle showing, you want to solve it," White said.     "People like the game no matter how much money we're giving away," Sajak added. "The idea is not necessarily to solve the puzzle quickest. It's to solve the puzzle and amass money, and the puzzle is up there a long time. The way it's designed, more often than not, you have it at home before anyone solves it in the studio, so you also feel pretty superior to those people. That's probably part of it."     There is also the comfort of Sajak and White, who have co-hosted the show since its syndication on primetime television in 1983 and who now have their schtick down to a T. White has never repeated gowns (and has even changed between half-hour episodes taped on the same day), her record for claps  averages 720 per episode, and Sajak's interactions with the contestants have become familiar to three generations of American television viewers. The show's light humor also keeps audiences coming back for more; it is cheerful, homey and sometimes even scandalous.     "Do you want to speak into my chest?" Sajak offered to White after her microphone malfunctioned several times.     "Do you want to speak into mine?" White replied.     "I can just imagine the echo," Sajak hit back, resulting in gasps and laughter from the audience.     From a participant's perspective, Wheel of Fortune rolls by quickly. "It was exciting. It was just fast," according to O'Regan, who was still blushing with excitement as he walked through the curtains separating the glitzy stage set from the vastness of the convention center's open space. But while fifteen minutes of fame is not much time in the limelight, sometimes one can take something from the time into the future.     The cash prize O'Regan proudly took home to Tufts was one such souvenir. The amount will be revealed on Nov. 10 at 7 p.m., when he is allowed to discuss the puzzles and prizes with others. More significant, though, is the fleeting experience of stepping out of normal life — in O'Regan's case, one of chemical engineering, being a Wren Ram and heading up the Tufts Energy Forum — and stealing a moment in the spotlight. The beauty tips from the show's makeup crew weren't bad, either.     "I look good," O'Regan said, smoothing a hand over his recently airbrushed cheek. "I like this. You girls have the right idea."


The Setonian
News

Packard Hall construction completed

    The Department of Political Science now has a new home, as completed renovations to Packard Hall early this summer have allowed faculty and staff, previously located in Eaton Hall, to move into the building on time.     Construction began just over a year ago in June 2008, and the total renovation cost was $7.1 million.     Administrators within the School of Arts and Sciences originally planned to occupy Packard when Tufts' Board of Trustees approved $6.9 million in 2008 for the overhaul of the building. After construction began, however, a reevaluation of the Eaton Hall space prompted them to redirect the building to the political science department, and the trustees authorized an additional $200,000 to better suit the department's needs.     The office space allotted in Eaton was "substandard" for political science members, Vice President of Operations John Roberto said. "It was a department whose needs were well known."     Political Science Professor Jeffrey Berry agreed that it was time for the department to move. "The old office was not very welcoming," he said. "It was cramped, at best. Students were sitting on the floor."     Department Chair Robert Devigne said that the staff needed more space based on the number of students the department advises. "We were overrun by political science students, and we advise more international [relations major] students than any other department," he said.     The religion and anthropology departments will now occupy Eaton's offices, according to Devigne.     Packard Hall was previously home to the university advancement office and has in its long history served the university as a residence hall, dining hall and library.     The Linbeck Company conducted the renovations to the building. Linbeck was also responsible for the construction of Sophia Gordon Hall and the Granoff Music Center, according to Director of Construction Management Mitch Bodnarchuk.     "They have a good track record on campus," Bodnarchuk said of the company.     Bodnarchuk said that the project was on time and made budget even after the plans changed to prepare Packard for political science faculty rather than administrators.     The change in intended use for the building required repartitioning the Packard offices. Larger rooms designed for deans were broken down to fit the faculty members, according to Bodnarchuk.     The renovation in general, Bodnarchuk said, involved "a lot of demolition and restructuring" due to the building's old age.     Linbeck added a second set of stairs, an elevator, a sprinkler system and an entrance ramp for handicap accessibility to the building.     A number of other renovations occurred over the summer in addition to Packard's revamping. Eaton itself was re-carpeted and re-painted, while ceiling tiles and air conditioning units in the building were also replaced.     Carmichael Hall's corridors, laundry room and common room were re-painted, and the building is also sporting new carpeting. Bathrooms on the first floor were made handicap-accessible, as were 12 first-floor rooms. The plaza in front of Carmichael was also redone, removing vegetation to make it feel "light and airy," Bodnarchuk said.     Finally, the basketball and volleyball court inside Cousens Gym was rotated and extended to comply with NCAA regulations. A new hardwood floor, collapsible bleachers and a new sound system were also installed for the court.     Though all of these renovations were performed this summer, none interfered with summer programs on campus. "Everything we do, we coordinate with summer school folks," Bodnarchuk said.


The Setonian
News

Summer Rez renovations completed in campus center

    After undergoing renovations over the summer, The Rez, along with its surrounding lounge area, sported a brand new look at its official opening on Saturday.     The campus center coffee shop run by Tufts Student Resources (TSR) received both an aesthetic facelift and internal modifications from renovations that began in June and reached completion about two weeks ago.     "The goal was to increase visibility … but primarily the goal was to provide better services to the students," said TSR President Ali Osman, a senior.     The renovations include a replacement of all existing equipment in The Rez. Two ATMs that were originally located near The Rez have moved to the opposite side of the lobby near the Office for Campus Life, allowing space for a large storage area and a condiment bar for Rez customers.     The renovations allowed The Rez itself to essentially double in size, as well as making it wheelchair accessible and bringing it up-to-date with the most recent health codes, according to senior and TSR Vice President of Operations Adam Kornetsky.     The project was part of a larger initiative last year, spearheaded by TCU Vice President Antonella Scarano, to make minor facelifts to the entire campus center. She said the renovations have given new life to an old space.     "We wanted it to feel more like a social slash study room," said Scarano, a senior. She hopes that the revamped space will meet the same reception as Hotung Café, which was renovated in the summer of 2007.     "I think when Hotung [café] first opened up it was sort of a breath of fresh air," Scarano said. "It was not only pleasant to the eyes but more conducive to socializing and studying, and I think that's what's happening again to The Rez. It's another breath of fresh air."     The Rez's new look also includes hanging lamps and red lighting, red cushions covering the lounge's wooden benches and new furniture, flooring and paint. The lounge area across from The Rez features large, translucent hanging panels that enclose the space.     "They wanted the lounge area to feel more enclosed and intimate, and that's why the panels were put up around the parameter," Senior Construction Project Manager Ray Santangelo said. "We didn't build anything new here, we just added [to the lounge area]."        The students who run The Rez like the coffee shop's new appearance but are quick to point out that the unique personality of The Rez has not changed.     "It looks different, but people can still expect all of the same Rez quirks and traditions," said Rez employee Adam Frank, a senior.     "We love the renovations, but we really wanted to keep the old personality," said junior Laura Bernescu, who also works at The Rez. "We don't want people to feel the same way they do when they go into [Tisch Library's Tower Café] or Hotung [Café]."     The Rez has kept all of its old products and vendors, but it has supplemented its menu with several new selections, including bagels, frozen mochas, iced tea and chocolate milk. The renovations' inclusion of a new ice machine for the Rez will also help to make iced drinks more readily available, according to Kornetsky.     "The Rez has always offered limited food," Kornetsky said of the menu expansion, "but we know the average student is often looking for something more nourishing and nutritious."     TSR had aspired to renovate The Rez for several years but had lacked the necessary funding until last year. In April, the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate gave a $100,000 loan to TSR to pay for its renovations to The Rez. After funding for the project was established, the renovations progressed fairly rapidly.     "It was surprisingly easy to complete the actual renovation," Kornetsky said. "Of course we hit a couple of snags, as every construction project does, but we ultimately finished exactly on schedule."     Changes to the rest of the campus center are still planned but are contingent on further funding. Last year, senators toured the campus centers of other colleges and universities, formed a committee and engaged Tufts' Board of Trustees for partial support. They are hoping to renovate the campus center's upper level lobby next.     Students who work at The Rez are happy with the renovations' end result.     "People love new things, and this is a lot more comfortable and cozy," Bernescu said. "I think it's been updated to what students these days need."     "We look like a legitimate coffee shop now," Frank said. "We have the spaces and the resources to create more business and a bigger niche on campus."


The Setonian
News

Fall Ball solution presents a problem

    In response to the disorderly behavior and capacity issues at previous dances, the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate at the behest of the Tufts University Police Department (TUPD) has taken steps to prevent similar problems from arising at Friday's Fall Ball. As reported on today's front page, attendance will be capped at the 2,500 students who can get tickets at the campus center. The Senate has not compiled statistics on turnout at previous events, but under the new setup less than half of the student body can attend.     On a campus without large followings for sports teams, Fall Ball is one of three major campus-wide activities that can bring together a cross-section of the student body. The Daily approves of the Senate's decision to finally confront inappropriate conduct at these dances — conduct that has included public urination and physical abuse of security personnel — with substantive action. Still, it is difficult to justify punishing many students for the extreme intoxication of a small minority. We as a student community need to prove that we can hold large gatherings where we will act responsibly. But it is unfortunate that even if only the full freshman and senior classes wanted to attend together, they could not.     Ticketing limits the numbers in attendance but still does not handle the public urination and other disorderly conduct that may be more a function of excessive drunkenness than of lines for the restrooms. The university is already planning on increasing its security presence at this Fall Ball. The best way to respond to past issues and the current dilemma would be to further step up security at the event. The police should refuse entrance to the extremely intoxicated students. In the past, TUPD's restriction of openly drunk students has been mainly nonexistent, as students are typically seen stumbling through the ID lines.     The Senate is considering moving future dances off campus. While this approach might allow the entire community to attend, cost and transportation issues create more problems and would dissuade some from making the effort to go. It is misguided to restrict some of those who do not cause trouble when many of those who have incited problems in the past will still attend.     The Senate has taken a step toward addressing these issues, but its solution is a Band-Aid one, and better responses are available for consideration. Furthermore, removing this campus tradition from campus would be a self-defeating mistake.


The Setonian
News

Swine flu rates are expected to rise this fall across nation

    The flu that made headlines last spring is expected to return with a vengeance this fall. The H1N1 virus, more commonly known as the swine flu, is of particular concern on college and university campuses due to frequent student interaction and "because the virus appears to spread quickly among younger Americans," according to an August press release from the U.S. Department of Education and the Center for Disease Control.     Late last May the Tufts Daily published a news story confirming two cases of the H1N1 virus among recent graduates. Since the article was published, the number of cases at Tufts has risen steadily, and is projected to increase exponentially once students return to the Medford/Somerville campus.     "I expect [the number of cases of the H1N1 virus] to explode," Medical Director of Tufts Student Health Service Margaret Higham said.     Higham believes that in September, well upwards of 40 Tufts students have been exposed to the H1N1 virus.     She explained, however, that pinpointing an exact number of cases is difficult, since the test to verify H1N1's presence is only available in limited quantity.     "There is a test that will definitely show the swine flu, but there's only one office in every state that does this test, and thus it has a very limited availability," Higham said. "Testing is only allowed for people who are severely ill in the hospital, or for what we call epidemiological reasons, [i.e.] if you're trying to see if the flu-like illness you're seeing on campus or in a work place is the H1N1. So all in all, very few people are tested for it."     Distinguishing the H1N1 virus from the regular seasonal, or "winter," flu virus, is even more difficult because the symptoms between the two are virtually the same, according to Higham.     Nevertheless, the U.S. Depart of Health and Human Services was able to identify the H1N1 virus last spring, once the number of cases of the winter flu began to diminish.     "By the end of May, it was becoming apparent that the regular winter flu was basically done with, and all the cases of flu-like symptoms that [the public health department] were testing, which was, admittedly, a limited number, were the H1N1 virus," Higham said.     Whether or not the cases present in Tufts students have been the H1N1 virus, a large number of students have visited Health Service complaining of flu-like symptoms since last May.     One recent Tufts graduate, Ashti Mistry (A '09), cited cold and flu-like symptoms during the summer, but was shocked when doctors told her what she was experiencing was actually the H1N1 virus.     "I first started to feel the symptoms a few days before I went to the doctor. Basically all I had was a cough and I was just feeling really stuffy and continuously tired, [but] once I had a fever I knew that something was wrong. I rarely get [fevers] and never higher than 100, but this time my fevers were up to 101, sometimes 102," Mistry said. "I went to the doctor and was made to wear a mask the whole time there. I thought it was all a bit ridiculous and I didn't believe the doctor when he diagnosed me."     Because Mistry was living off campus at the time, she was not diagnosed through Tufts' Health Service. However, she was taking summer courses at Tufts during her illness.     "I had to keep up with the work from all the classes I was missing, especially because it was the last week of classes and my final was due soon after, with an extension," Mistry said. "Reading and paying attention to what I was reading was incredibly hard. All I wanted to do was lie in bed and sleep."     Luckily for Mistry, her professors were very accommodating and gave her extensions during her illness.     "When I had to e-mail my teacher and tell him that I wouldn't be able to continue coming to the rest of the class … he was very helpful and was very willing to give me extensions," she said. "He also informed Tufts that I was ill and I got a few calls from the staff at Health [Service] just checking in to see if I was OK."     Staying home from school is precisely what Higham has been recommending for sick students. Furthermore, Higham hopes that sick students will be able leave campus entirely, which she stressed in a letter sent out to parents this past summer.     "We want to give students the incentive to, if at all possible, try and leave campus when they're sick, and try and go home with parents, friends, or relatives," Higham said. "If not, we will try and see what we can do to keep people in single rooms as much as possible, but we don't have a whole dorm to turn into an isolation ward or anything. We're making plans to try and encourage everyone to stay away from others as much as possible."     Although staying home from school is effective once students have been diagnosed with an illness, taking preventive measures before getting sick is of equal or greater importance.     "The advice recommended by experts includes: wash your hands often, cough into your sleeve rather than your bare hand and avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth," according to a newsletter Tufts Provost Jamshed Bharucha sent to the Tufts community on Sept. 2nd.     Although these recommendations have been echoed by medical professionals for years, Higham stressed that they can make a huge difference.     "People kind of get bored when we talk about washing your hands," she said. "But the third thing, which people tend to forget about, is try not to touch your eyes and nose so much. We all do it subconsciously, but [the virus] doesn't get into your body through your mouth. You could lick your fingers [which may have been exposed to the virus], and chances are you won't get sick, but if you touch near your eye, you're going to get sick."     In terms of preventive vaccinations, the situation is less straightforward. Higham explained that an H1N1 vaccination is projected to emerge in late fall or early winter of the upcoming academic year, but neither the exact date nor the precise quantity of vaccines the university will receive can be pinpointed.     "The federal government is in charge of all the vaccines that are being manufactured. I can't order our own supply of it. The federal government will be giving the vaccine to the states, and then the states will be distributing that vaccine within the states, based on who is at the highest priority for getting it," Higham said. "College students are on the priority list, but they're kind of at the bottom. They're what I call ‘second tier.' So I do expect that we will get vaccines, but I don't expect it to be right away."     While the H1N1 vaccine may take a while to reach the Tufts campus, Higham stressed that the regular flu vaccine will be available at Tufts Student Health Service in full supply, and even at an earlier date this year than it has been offered in the past.     All information related to the regular flu vaccine, as well as news related to the H1N1 virus, will be disseminated to students and parents via e-mail and mail, as well as through the Health Service Web site.


The Setonian
News

Flash a smile, score an A: Study links GPA to attractiveness

    Conventional wisdom tells us that girls are made from sugar, spice and everything nice, and we all know that everybody's crazy about a sharp-dressed man. But a recent study has shown that these traits, along with physical attractiveness, actually affect a high school student's GPA.     In a recent study published in the journal Labour Economics, University of Miami professors Michael French, Philip Robins, Jenny Homer and Lauren Tapsell showed that high school students' grades may not be completely merit-based.     "What was found in the labor market [is that] those who are more attractive than average made wage premium and those below average made wage penalty, and we wanted to see if that relationship held up in grades for high school students," French said in an interview.     The researchers found what they expected, as French and his colleagues discovered that female students who have good personalities tend to have higher GPAs, as do male students who are well groomed.     Tufts students did not seem surprised by the study's results, and guessed that the findings applied to college students as well as their younger counterparts. Some pointed to the participation grade commonly factored into their final grade as the embodiment of many abstract, non-merit-based judgments.     "How you present yourself in class and how others see you is really important," Tufts freshman Isabel Leon said. "A big part of classes require participation … doing presentations [and] class discussions. Those activities [are based on] appearance and delivery, [so] you might excel more in certain classes if you have a better appearance in that class."     French and his fellow researchers used data gathered by the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health), a study conducted by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The university conducted interviews with students across the country. After each interview was through, the interviewer was required to answer a small list of questions, some of which specifically asked the interviewer to grade the student on a scale of one to five for personality, grooming and physical attractiveness.     Twenty thousand different seventh to 12th graders were surveyed in the course of the study.     By this method, no one person set the standard for subjective judgments on appearance. Rather, the ratings were normalized by the sheer number of responses.     Some students believe that the grade bias is just a sample of the bias they will encounter after high school.     "I think that in the real world, your appearance matters for jobs; I think it's important," Maggie Pace, a recent high school graduate headed for Brown University, said.     Others just chalk it up to human nature.     "Humans are programmed to read body language and personality," Leon said. "As long as we have teachers that are people [interacting] with students, I think that [bias] is going to play in no matter what."     Despite his confidence in the findings, French acknowledged a desire for a more perfect study.     "It would have been nice to have measurements at each year in high school where we could look at how GPA changes over four years … and how that relates to the observation of physical characteristics," French said. "What we had to work with was overall GPA at the end of high school, and physical appearance based on one observation …. As happens quite often with adolescents, physical appearance changes, especially during those years. It's not clear if changes in physical appearance change grades or if grades change physical appearance. Maybe good grades make you feel better and more confident, and [thus you] improve in all those areas."     Looks can also be more than a purely superficial way of evaluating someone, according to Tufts senior Griffin Pepper.     "You judge someone on their appearance because you base your opinion of their character on their appearance," Pepper said. "If you put effort into the way you look, people assume you put effort into everything you do."     Though French acknowledges that argument, he is also quick to suggest a different explanation.     "Although we suggest in the paper that perhaps teacher bias could be at work here, there's no reason to completely disregard the fact that the students that were more physically attractive or had more personality are more intelligent or more motivated," French said. "It could be that those characteristics are picking up effects of something else we couldn't measure."     Still, the study's results pertain solely to high school. Perhaps judgment of looks and personality is specific to high school culture, and the atmosphere in college is not quite the same.     "In college, [the grade bias] is a lot less prevalent than it is in high school," Pepper said. "I have many professors that I've tried to charm, and it has not worked. I [work] harder [for my grades] if I don't impress them with my stunning personality and well-kept hair."     Leon hopes that her Tufts experience will be different from her time in high school.     "High school has a strong and distinct culture which definitely … shapes the students' personalities in that they want to … act a certain way where they will not be shunned and [will] fit in," Leon said. "However, if you continue to go on to higher education, there's more on the line. You have an incentive to be there. The typical culture of high school cliques and drama … will just fade away because now the students have incentive."     Unfortunately, studying GPAs in college is not the next item on French's agenda. He plans on looking at the effect these characteristics have on the probability of having a romantic partner.     "[We want to see if the] more physically attractive are more likely to have a mate," French said, "and if the well-groomed are more likely to live with someone than marry."