The Tufts Daily - Monday, October 12, 2020

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VOLUME LXXX, ISSUE 19

INDEPENDENT

STUDENT

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Monday, October 12, 2020

Spring semester to begin Feb. 1, spring break to be shortened by Alejandra Carrillo Executive News Editor

Editor’s note: This article wasoriginally published online on Friday, Oct. 9. The spring semester is set to begin on Feb. 1. The decision was approved during a faculty senate meeting today. Faculty also voted to extend the transfer of credit policies they enacted for 2020, according to Dean of Undergraduate Studies Carmen Lowe. Classes are expected to end on May 5, reading day will begin on May 6 and finals will start on May 7. Final exams, as well as Review Boards for the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, will be held on the same dates as originally scheduled. The dates for Senior see SPRING , page 2

ANNA STEINBOCK / THE TUFTS DAILY

Ballou Hall is pictured with fall leaves on Oct. 10.

Headlines from off the Hill Dr. Sean Conley announces that President Trump is no longer at risk of transmitting the coronavirus, Trump holds large rally, pulls out of second presidential debate On Saturday, Dr. Sean Conley announced that Trump is no longer at risk for transmitting COVID-19, according to results from a test taken Saturday morning. Previously, Trump had spent three nights in the hospital and adhered to an experimental treatment after announcing that he tested positive for coronavirus on Oct. 2. This announcement came hours after Trump held a large campaign rally, marking the resumption of his public campaign activities. During the event, which was advertised as a “peaceful protest for law and order,” Trump spoke from the White House balcony without a mask to a group of participants, who were required to wear masks and encouraged to social distance. Additionally, Trump pulled out of the second presidential debate after a virtual format was announced, due to concerns over COVID-19. Patriots game postponed due to COVID-19 outbreak The Monday night football game between the New England Patriots and the Denver Broncos was moved to next Sunday after three Patriots players tested positive for COVID-19. Defensive tackle Byron Cowart, quarterback

Cam Newton and cornerback Stephon Gilmore account for the team’s confirmed cases. Defensive tackle Bill Murray is additionally on the COVID-19 reserve list and it is unclear if he also tested positive or was exposed to someone who tested positive. New England has closed Gillette Stadium and sent home players, coaches and staff. The stadium will likely not reopen until there are two consecutive days of clean COVID-19 test results. This is the third time in two weeks that a Patriots game has been postponed due to the coronavirus. According to NFL rules, players who have tested positive for the virus can return to play if they meet one of two conditions; either 10 days need to have passed since their initial positive result or they need to produce two consecutive negative tests at least 24 hours apart. In addition to meeting one of these criteria, the player must also be cleared by a team doctor in consultation with officials at the Infection Control Education for Major Sports and receive approval from the NFL’s chief medical officer. Suspects charged with plotting to kidnap Michigan governor On Thursday, 13 people were charged in an alleged domestic terrorism plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. According to a federal complaint, the suspects sought

FEATURES / page 3

to overthrow state governments that, in their view, were violating the U.S. Constitution. The conspiracy included the government of Michigan and Whitmer. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced that six suspects were charged federally with conspiracy to kidnap, while the other seven suspects, associated with the militia group “Wolverine Watchmen,” faced state charges. The incident has underlined growing political tension in the weeks leading up to the 2020 U.S. presidential election. Nadal wins French Open, tying Federer’s record for most Grand Slams won Rafael Nadal defeated Novak Djokovic on Sunday in three sets in the finals of the French Open to win his 13th French Open title. This win marks Nadal’s 20th Grand Slam victory. He has now tied Roger Federer’s record for most Grand Slam titles ever won. Nadal’s performance on Sunday was one of his finest, making just 14 mistakes in the entire match, and it was the first completed match Djokovic lost in 2020. The French Open’s clay court is Nadal’s specialty, as only two players, including Djokovic, have beaten Nadal in this arena. On Saturday, 19-year-old Iga Siatek won her first Grand Slam title in the women’s finals, defeating her challenger Sofia Kenin in straight sets. She became the first Polish player in tennis history to win a Grand Slam title.

EDITORIAL / page 6

New organization TREE aims to educate Tufts com- Prioritize receiving flu shots this winter munity the prison-industrial complex

ECOM discourages special election, calls for suspension of bylaws by Alexander Janoff News Editor

Tufts Election Commission (ECOM) appealed to members of the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate and Judiciary on Oct. 6 to suspend a portion of their bylaws that would require them to fill seat vacancies via election, and instead allow them to appoint students to these positions. Currently, six seats are vacated across TCU Senate and Judiciary, according to the ECOM website. The following positions are vacant: two Class of 2022 Senate seats, two Community Senate seats — a women’s community senator seat and an international community senator seat — and two Judiciary seats. According to ECOM bylaws, any vacant seat must be filled by special election no more than 15 days after an election has occurred. With the most recent election being held on Oct. 1 for the Class of 2024 Senate positions, according to their current bylaws, ECOM would be required to hold a special election by Oct. 16. Mark Lannigan, ECOM historian, explained that potential candidates for the currently vacant seats were permitted to run in the Oct. 1 election, and applications to run for all open positions were distributed.

SPORTS / back

Sheldon, winningest head coach in Jumbo history, departs basketball team

“It was going to be a special election [running concurrently with] the freshman Senate elections, and we had no applicants for any of those positions,” Lannigan, a sophomore, said. ECOM is concerned that students’ lack of interest to run for an open position in the Oct. 1 election will correlate with a low interest level in the bylaw-required election on Oct. 16. “We’re thinking that if there was no interest before, when we were actually holding an election, there’s not going to be interest within the period that the ECOM bylaws lay out, which is that we have to have another election within 15 days,” Lannigan said. “We just don’t think we could get the turnout that would make it a successful election.” ECOM plans to work with TCU Senate and Judiciary and the community centers to fill the vacant seats, with the ultimate goal of replacing the appointees in a special election tentatively scheduled for December. “We’re committed to going through the Women’s Center and the International Center to choose the community senator seats, and we’re going to be working with the Senate and the see ECOM, page 2 NEWS

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