THE
VOLUME LXXX, ISSUE 39
INDEPENDENT
STUDENT
N E W S PA P E R
OF
TUFTS
UNIVERSITY
E S T. 1 9 8 0
T HE T UFTS DAILY
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
tuftsdaily.com
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Higher number of students expected to return to campus for spring semester
EMMA BOERSMA / THE TUFTS DAILY
Carmichael Hall is pictured on Oct. 18. by Yanqing Huang
Executive Layout Editor
Tufts students, faculty and staff are beginning to plan for the spring semester, which should bring some changes to life on campus, but will be largely similar to the fall. Students were required to fill out spring intent forms by Oct. 30 to declare whether they plan to be on campus or
remote for the spring semester. Although some responses are still outstanding, Executive Administrative Dean for the School of Arts and Sciences Christopher Helmuth said responses received thus far indicate a higher percentage of students may be on campus this spring compared to this fall. “While we expect to have a lower number of undergraduate students enrolled in the spring
overall as a result of February graduations (as we do every year), we do anticipate that we will see a modest increase in the number of students on campus,” Helmuth wrote in an email to the Daily. Academically, Tufts’ plans remain largely unchanged. Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences James Glaser reported a ratio of roughly half in-person to half remote courses for the
spring semester in the School of Arts and Sciences. As of Nov. 3, about 63% of the spring courses in the School of Engineering have virtual lectures, with many courses supplemented by in-person or hybrid components such as laboratories or recitations, according to Jianmin Qu, dean of the School of Engineering. Engineering faculty have generated creative solutions
to accommodate remote students who do not have access to on-campus spaces and resources, according to Qu. “Some professors are shipping kits to students that provide equipment like volt meters, sensors, oscilloscopes or microcontroller boards, so students can set up their own labs and build and experiment see SPRING, page 2
Tufts ROTC hosts virtual Veterans Day ceremony by Peri Barest
Contributing Writer
A virtual Veterans Day ceremony was streamed on YouTube on Wednesday and garnered over 500 views. It was hosted by Tufts ROTC Joint Operations and Advocates for Tufts ROTC. The event began with a flag-passing ceremony on the memorial steps and included a keynote address by retired four-star U.S. Naval Officer Adm. James Stavridis,
former dean of The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. Dean of the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life Alan Solomont and University President Anthony Monaco also shared remarks. The ceremony opened with Kyra Link (A’20) and Chloe Malouf’s (A’20) rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner” during a photo montage of Tufts ROTC students over the years. Midshipman 1st Class Colin Seeley, a senior, introduced the ceremony and initiated the passing of the flag.
“We are gathered here today to honor those who have safeguarded our freedom with their duty, honor and selfless service to our great nation,” Seeley said. “From those who served in the Revolutionary War to those deployed all around the world today, we honor their courage, dedication and sacrifice.” Howard Schnauber’s poem “My Name is Old Glory” was read as current ROTC students passed the flag up the memorial steps to Solomont, this year’s flag recipient.
Solomont spoke about his service as U.S. ambassador to Spain and Andorra. “I recall the immense pride I felt during my tour in Spain. Walking into the embassy in Madrid with the Stars and Stripes flying overhead. Feeling a profound sense of responsibility to promote and defend American values around the world,” he said. Solomont added that citizens must work together to create a more unified community.
WEEKENDER / page 4
OPINION / page 6
FEATURES / 3
Local, independent bookstores find creative soutions to COVID-19 problems
Op-ed: Volunteer for COVID-19 human challenge trials
On-campus business Roy’s Pastelitos gives delicious, suite-made food
“We do recognize both in the long history of the United States and in the recent past, that we have not always been at our best. We have much work to do to create the more perfect union that our founders envisioned, and to build what the late John Lewis called a ‘beloved community,’” he said. He concluded by stating that civic engagement is a means of honoring service members. see CEREMONY, page 2 NEWS
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