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ZBT gets the ball rolling at charity drive kickoff

The Zeta Beta Tau fraternity inaugurated its Get on the Ball charity drive at a ceremony at the Granoff Family Hillel Center yesterday afternoon. University President and ZBT alum Lawrence Bacow attended. ZBT brothers will roll a six-foot-tall ball around campus for the next week, and for each person who signs it, a number of organizations including the Office for Campus Life and the Hillsides Wine and Liquors store will donate a specified amount to the Children's Hospital Boston.


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Michael Goetzman | Spotlight

Sitting in the admissions office during pre-frosh weekend, Shabazz Stuart, like all fellow pre-frosh, was waiting to meet his host upperclassman. Instead, he was greeted by a spirited admissions officer eager to ingratiate herself with the boy wonder.


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School of Medicine renovates campus center, library in first phase of construction

    The Tufts School of Medicine completed the first phase of renovations on its campus center and library this week.     A $15 million donation from the Jaharis Family Foundation last fall provided the main funding for the construction of the building, the Arthur M. Sackler Center for Health Communications, and of the Clinical Skills and Simulation Center, which opened in June.     The gift, pledged by Steven Jaharis (M '87) and his father, Michael Jaharis, was the largest in the history of the medical school, which is located in downtown Boston.     "We wanted to create more of a sense of community, to create spaces where students could meet," said Marsha Semuels, executive administrative dean of the School of Medicine and a member of the Sackler Renovation Project Steering Committee.     In order to provide closer interaction with the administration, the officials' offices are situated in the middle of the building, according to Semeuls.     The renovated Sackler Center features new learning communities on the third and fourth floors. These include smaller classrooms, a kitchen and lounges to encourage work in small groups.     The renovation also added a fourth-floor café and study space, incorporated into the existing Hirsh Health Sciences Library.     "[There] was a small café that had coffee and prepared food, but nothing hot. So we knocked out all of the walls and made it into a big open space," Semuels said. "We worked with faculty and students to create healthy options, and the existing library is merged into it."     The second and third phases of construction will produce other amenities, including more offices, a gym and locker rooms.     The School of Medicine designed a Web site called "The Big Move" to hear and ameliorate any worries or concerns that students and faculty might have about the center renovations.     "Other than [concerns about] some unusual [construction] noises, we haven't had any complaints," said Stephanie Fitzgerald, administrative coordinator for the Hirsh Health Sciences Library.     But some students voiced other worries in a questionnaire the medical school put out. Some referred to food choices in the new café and questions about the wireless Internet access that will now extend to the entire building.     One student expressed concerns about handicap access during renovation. The administration assured all students that construction would not compromise accessibility and that the work would only be a minor inconvenience.     The Clinical Skills and Simulation Center includes 12 exam rooms, three simulation rooms and a 50-person classroom, according to a School of Medicine press release.     Students previously had to travel to Brown University in Rhode Island to access the equipment and training that the Clinical Skills and Simulation Center now provides.     "I do think we are going to have truly wonderful facilities," Semuels said. "You can already see how excited prospective students are about the space, and it will certainly make the students who are here happier."


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Freston speaks on the birth of MTV

MTV co-founder Tom Freston recounted the evolution of the groundbreaking television station yesterday. He focused on the 1980s media environment into which music videos were thrust and analyzed the network's move away from airing music videos.


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Limited student interest slows influx of local food

This article is the second in a two-part series chronicling the expansion of the local food movement both on a community-wide scale and among Tufts students. Yesterday's installation focused on the Davis Square farmers' market and the efforts of students who promote locally grown food. This piece will address local food in Tufts' dining halls and eateries, as well as the barriers to expanding its presence on campus.


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Interview | Austan Goolsbee

    Gearing up for this week's Tufts Daily Radio show, we sat down with Austan Goolsbee, the senior economic advisor to Sen. Barack Obama's (D-Ill.) presidential campaign, before he met with Tufts Trustee Alan Solomont's political science class. He blamed many of the country's current economic ills on President George W. Bush's relaxed approach to economic oversight and said adopting Obama's more interventionist strategy would be critical to fostering an environment in which graduating Tufts students and other Americans looking for work can succeed.     The following is a partial transcript. To hear more of the interview, listen to this week's radio show on WMFO, 91.5 FM, at 11 a.m. on Sunday or log onto www.TuftsDaily.com next week to download a podcast. Sarah Butrymowicz: Do you think our economy is fundamentally changed forever as a result of this crisis? And if it is, how is it going to be different? If it's not, how long does it take to get back to where we used to be? Austin Goolsbee: Yes, but not in the negative sense of, "Hey, we're in a crisis and will we never get out of it" ... I would anticipate that once we get through this crisis we will fundamentally change the oversight of financial institutions in a pretty substantial way and that will last for a long time ...     At the very least, we're on path for a pretty serious recession. If the government takes aggressive steps, my view is it could be fairly short-lived and hopefully nobody will ever really remember it ... If the government sat around and waited too long — which, disturbingly, the Bush administration has kind of taken that as their approach — … or, in the worst-case scenario, if the government started doing things that were counterproductive, it could last for a very long time. SB: The prospect for finding a job after graduation seems more daunting than ever as a result of this. I'm curious as to what an Obama administration would do to create more jobs. AG: There is a direct link between what's happening in this financial crisis and the availability of loans and money to businesses ... Obama's view is on policy grounds — direct tax credits to companies for creating new jobs, direct spending from the government on critical things for the economy — be they investing in the economic infrastructure of the country [or] money for college to help make college more affordable ...     In the short run, these key additional stimulus measures — money for infrastructure, money to the states, immediate tax relief for middle-class people — try to prevent an admittedly serious downturn from turning into something a lot worse. SB: I know that at the end of last week [Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr.] proposed a plan of investing directly into U.S. banks. What do you think about that plan? AG: Senator Obama has been calling for him to consider such an option from the beginning … The fundamental problem of the current financial crisis is that our banks and financial institutions are under-capitalized. Putting money directly into the banks on a strictly temporary basis is the most direct way to recapitalize banks. You have to be very mindful, [one], that the government is getting its money worth. Two, you've got to make sure that if the government is putting in money, they're not just taking the money and lining their own pockets ... And three, you have to have an orderly plan for the government to get out of that business, because the track record of long-term investing for the government into the banking system is not good. The government ends up steering the loans to places that are more politically palatable rather than profit-making.



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Charlotte Steinway | SOS

Dear SOS, After a couple of years of believing that the walk up the hill was enough exercise to keep me in shape, I finally realized that those late-night Boloco binges may actually require a little extra physical output on my part. I've never been a big gym-goer, so I feel pretty out of the loop. There's so much etiquette involved — what to wear, how to act, what to bring — that I've started to curse the day I wasn't born a varsity athlete. Help!     Sincerely, CardiOMG Dear CardiOMG,     Your story is a familiar tale, my friend. I avoided the gym for months after a scarring experience in which my BFF brought her entire varsity team over to judge the fact that I was ellipting — with my hair down. But after a few tips and tricks from friends, I have tried to become the semi-regular gym-goer that I've always dreamed to be.     But all in all, the gym can be quite a scary place. Especially when you're leaving late at night and accidentally set off the building's fire alarm. (What?)     The way to combat the fear of fitting in with the other gym-goers can oftentimes be boiled down to the rudimentary phrase utilized by toddlers and primates alike: "Monkey See, Monkey Do."     Before overt mimicking can occur, however, it's good to note what basic tools you should bring with you. A water bottle is necessary (I've met certain athletes who are convinced there's a natural spring underneath Cousens), and some form of distraction is also a good idea. But this is where some of the protocol can get a little iffy.     iPods and other music devices are pretty much a universal must — I'd say go for ear buds over those hipster Bose headphones, which become Petri dish earmuffs when they get sweaty. But the type of reading/study material you choose to bring is up for debate.     I've seen flashcard memorization, I've seen text book highlighting, I've even seen journal-writing whilst on the Stairmaster, and it only serves to confirm my suspicions that we truly are part of the multi-tasking, quasi-ADD generation. Just think about it: There are iPods, there is the gym's own background music (which is often Chris Brown … nice), there are three televisions each complete with subtitles (side note: "The Hills" is officially the worst show to watch only in subtitles — Heidi: "Spencer, you're such an asshole!" Spencer: "What, oh sorry" Heidi: "It's ok! I love you!!!"). There are people you know working out around you, there are textbooks/magazines/novels and, last but not least, there is the actual work-out machine keeping you physically active amidst the intellectual hullabaloo. Yes, I found a way to use that word in yet another column.     Anyway, try to keep your reading and listening material to short, digestible chunks that don't require too much intellectual investment on your part and the time will fly. Do a couple flash cards, or read a little Us Weekly and before you know it, you will probably be a ripped body builder and/or in perfect shape to run the Boston Marathon.      Last but not least, try to keep the socializing to a minimum — most people are either too focused on their work out or physically incapable of muttering a few words in between gasps of air.     But when it comes down to it, most people go to the gym to work out — except for that middle-aged man who wears khakis and flip flops and just sits on the ab machine "doing crunches." Can't say I'm too sure about him.


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After blackout, university reexamines emergency response infrastructure

As administrators continue to gather information about last weekend's campus-wide blackout, students have raised concerns about Tufts' effectiveness in responding to the 14-hour power outage, focusing particularly on the emergency alert service's timeliness and the inactivity of dormitories' electronic key fob systems.




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TUPD investigation led to drug accusations

A directed investigation by the Tufts University Police Department (TUPD) targeting alleged student drug dealers appears to have laid the foundation for the expulsion cases brought over the last few weeks against three Sigma Nu brothers and a fourth unnamed student.


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Some now facing key '09-'10 ResLife decisions

Sophomores who were forced into triples last year and are considering using their housing lottery advantage must decide by tomorrow whether to request a boosted number for next year or to wait to use it for their senior year.


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DiBiase calls for Mayer renovation

As former Tufts Community Union (TCU) President Neil DiBiase sees it, the elusive third phase of campus center construction could soon become a reality – with the help of some recovered funds.


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Senate holds meeting to discuss use of recovered funds

The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate's forum yesterday was just one facet of a broader campaign to garner input from students on how it should make use of the more than $700,000 it has recovered from the embezzlement scandal.


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Local food movement expands, attracts modest Jumbo following

This article is the first in a two-part series chronicling the expansion of the local food movement both on a community-wide scale and among Tufts students. This installation focuses on the Davis Square farmers' market and the efforts of students who promote locally grown food. The second part, which will run tomorrow, will address local food in Tufts' dining halls and eateries, as well as the barriers to expanding its presence on campus.


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Students lend a hand at Homeless Coalition's 5K run

Somerville residents and a range of Tufts community members turned out in record numbers for the 13th Annual Somerville Homeless Coalition (SHC) 5K Road Race on Oct. 4, helping the SHC meet fundraising goals despite the negative economic climate.


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Senate to hold forum on recovered funds

Invest in JPMorgan Chase; buy the country of Iceland. Those are just two suggestions students have given the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate on how to use the $714,291.72 it recovered last month from the embezzlement scandal.



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Online books allow authors to more readily keep their publications up to date

When Rice University engineering professor Rich Baraniuk decided to publish his work on digital signal processing in 1999, he was concerned that the two-year publication process would make it impossible to keep the information up to date. Instead, he found collaborators in his field and published his work online alongside theirs by creating an online network called "Connexions."


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Ally Gimbel | When Kiwis Fly

People love famous places. They'll travel far and wide to see the country's only roller skating museum (Lincoln, Neb.) or the world's largest ball of twine (Cawker City, Kan.). Any road trip will undoubtedly yield multiple tourist attractions and distractions, with localities boasting things like "the best apple pie on this side of the Mississippi."