The Tufts Daily - Tuesday, November 17, 2021

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VOLUME LXXXI, ISSUE 33

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

Tufts Dining reintroduces reusable takeout container program, pauses Dining2GO

MINA TERZIOGLU / THE TUFTS DAILY

Reusable takeout packages in Dewick Dining Hall are pictured on Nov. 8. by Ava Autry

Assistant News Editor

Tufts Dining reimplemented its reusable takeout container program on Nov. 1 that had first been launched in 2019 in the Carmichael and DewickMacPhie dining centers , and stopped Dining2GO due to low participation. Both programs serve as ways for students to

eat outside of the dining halls while also reducing food waste, Patti Klos, director of Dining and Business Services, said. “The Reusable Take-Out container program enables a student to self-select items that are placed in the green boxes,” Klos wrote in an email to the Daily. “Most things available in the servery (except for soup and very liquid items) can eas-

ily be placed in these to-go containers.” Tufts Dining, along with the Office of Sustainability and EcoReps, promoted the reusable containers as a dining option prior to COVID-19. Dining2GO was put in place during the pandemic to accommodate COVID-19 regulations, see TAKEOUT, page 2

TCU Senate hears supplementary funding requests, discusses upcoming resolution

by Zoe Kava News Editor

The Tufts Community Union Senate heard supplementary funding requests and discussed an upcoming resolution in a meeting on Sunday, Nov. 14. After a brief roll call and committee updates, TCU Treasurer and Class of 2022 Senator Elizabeth Hom introduced six supplementary funding requests. The Tufts Mock Trial team requested $750 for return travel from a competition in Washington, D.C. The Allocations Board recommended $675 and the request then passed by acclamation with seven Allocation Board members voting in favor, none opposing and two abstaining. Mock Trial also requested $1,400 for round trip travel to Chicago, and the Allocations Board recommended $1,260. The request passed with 22 senators voting in favor, none opposing and none abstaining. Future Histories Literary Magazine requested $46 for website management. The request passed by acclamation with nine Allocations Board members voting

tuftsdaily.com

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

ALEXANDER THOMPSON / THE TUFTS DAILY

Tufts Commnity Union Senate is pictured holding its regular meeting in the Sophia Gordon multipurpose room on Feb. 9, 2020. in favor, none opposing and none abstaining. Tufts Culinary Society requested $500 to pay for food and supplies for its annual “Culture Crawl” event. The request passed with 24 senators voting in favor, none opposing and none abstaining. Public Harmony, an on-campus community service performing group originally requested $1,670 for the purchase of equipment, including amplifiers, an electric drum set, a PA system and cables. The costs were recalculated to be $1,440, and the request then passed with 25 senators voting in favor, none opposing and none abstaining. Pen, Paint, and Pretzels — a theatre group— requested $350 to hire a trainer to give a violence and intimacy workshop in prepa-

ration for its next play. The request passed with 25 senators voting in favor, none opposing and none abstaining. Men’s Club Soccer requested $5,000 to help cover the cost to send 24 student-athletes to a national tournament. The Allocations Board recommended $4,500, and the request passed with 24 senators voting in favor, none opposing and one abstaining. Vice President Tim Leong then introduced a resolution submitted by Sophia Costa, BR Rose and Roger Burtonpatel that called on Tufts to cancel its cuts to the Portuguese program and invest in its long-term viability. The resolution will be heard and voted on by the TCU Senate on Dec. 6. The TCU Senate Town hall was also moved from Nov. 15 to Nov. 18.

DSDI announces plans for new Indigenous student identity center

CHRISTINE LEE / THE TUFTS DAILY ARCHIVES

112 Packard Ave, which will house the new center for Indigenous and Native students at Tufts, is pictured. by Madeline Mueller Staff Writer

The Tufts Division of Student Diversity and Inclusion recently announced its plans to form a new on-campus identity center for students who identify as Indigenous and Native American. The creation of the center was among the recommendations of the Compositional Diversity Workstream that took place this past February. The creation process will be led by Ellise LaMotte, who started her tenure as associate dean in the division of student diversity, inclusion, and success on Nov. 1. Members of the Indigenous Students’ Organization at Tufts have been an integral part of the work to establish the center behind the scenes. Although ISOT is not yet recognized as an official student organization through the TCU senate, it has existed on campus since fall 2019. Even before the announcement of the center, members of the ISOT worked with admissions to recruit new students by participating in the Voices of Tufts Diversity Experience. ISOT member Tylee Tosia, a sophomore, was initially drawn to Tufts by the support she found during Voices. “I knew that there probably wasn’t going to be a center for me,” Tosia said. “But the fact that ISOT did exist at Tufts, that was a … big reason why I actually chose to come here.” Junior Hannah Norton was one of the students who helped form ISOT in 2019. “When we do the program Voices — hosting Zoom meetings with incoming Indigenous students — one of our main points is [that] we’re working towards

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the center,” Norton said. “And having that hopefulness of working towards the center … has been used to bring in freshmen and bring in Native students,” Norton and Tosia noted that despite being mentioned only once in the announcement of the center, ISOT was a major driving force behind calls for an Indigenous identity center. “It was infuriating that ISOT only was named once in the whole announcement,” Tosia said. “Tufts has used a lot of Indigenous stories and Indigenous voices to promote us basically, and the fact that they hardly mentioned us in that article was very hurtful … Every single member of ISOT has put in so much effort and so much time … It didn’t give us justice for what we all have done and everything we have sacrificed just to be here and to have our voices heard.” During their work over the past year, Norton and other ISOT members had support from former Senior Assistant Director of Admissions Sean Ashburn (AG’20) and former graduate student Sidney Kabotie. As part of their graduate capstone projects, Ashburn and Kabotie interviewed ISOT students and organized their stories. Kabotie helped present student conclusions and concerns to the Tufts administration. LaMotte is charged with managing the opening of the center, including hiring a director for the center. The director of the Indigenous People Center will have a joint role in admissions. Norton said that they would like to see an effort to increase see INDIGENOUS, page 2 NEWS

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