Rain 42/41
THE TUFTS DAILY
TUFTSDAILY.COM
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2010
VOLUME LX, NUMBER 41
Where You Read It First Est. 1980
Committee to tackle questions raised by Referendum 3
Heartbreak at Tufts: Both field hockey and volleyball upended in NESCAC title games
BY
BRENT YARNELL
Daily Editorial Board
ANDREW MORGENTHALER/TUFTS DAILY
The field hockey team fell 3-0 to Bowdoin in yesterday’s NESCAC Championship at Bello Field, ending hopes for a title repeat. Meanwhile, the volleyball team, after upsetting No. 1 seed Amherst on Saturday, lost to No. 2 seed Middlebury in yesterday’s title game. See Sports on the back page for details.
The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate has convened a special committee to draft the bylaws necessary for the implementation of the community representative overhaul specified in Referendum 3. As senators debate the guidelines for putting Referendum 3 into action and explore specific bylaw changes to conform to general principles outlined in it, however, they are finding that there may be more holes to fill than previously thought. Referendum 3, passed in a school-wide vote in September, grants community representatives the right to vote on fiscal matters, confers greater authority to the four culture centers on campus in choosing community representatives, and establishes the diversity and community affairs (DCA) officer position to manage diversity issues throughout campus. Many details of the reform, according to TCU Parliamentarian Dan Pasternack, remain up in the air. While the specific lan-
guage of the referendum cannot be negotiated, the bylaws, he said, would clarify some of the less defined points. Pasternack, a senior, chairs the special committee tasked with drafting the bylaws. The bylaws, he said, will detail the community representatives’ responsibilities, the process by which they are elected and the nature of the DCA position. The referendum and its bylaws will function similarly to the Senate’s own constitution and bylaws, according to TCU President Sam Wallis, a senior. While the Senate’s constitution defines the roles of senators, its bylaws list their specific duties and responsibilities. “The constitution is the framework that governs the structure of student government,” Wallis said. “The bylaws are the specific procedures by which we go about executing the constitution.” The committee consists of Wallis; TCU Vice President Tomas Valdes, a senior; Pasternack; Referendum 3 sponsors and senators Nadia Nibbs, Chartise Clark and Carolina Ramirez, all seniors; all four community representatives; Culture, Ethnicity a n d see REPRESENTATIVES, page 2
Senator reaches out to Greeks on LGBT concerns BY
CORINNE SEGAL
Daily Editorial Board
Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senator Logan Cotton has initiated a dialogue aimed at making Greek life more accessible to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) students. In a recent e-mail to the LGBT Center listserv, Cotton, a sophomore and Theta Delta Chi (123) brother, requested suggestions for ways to create safe environments for LGBT students within the Greek community. “Our goal is to establish a greater level of understanding between the LGBT community and the Greek community so that the two can interact and support one another without the barriers of animosity to obstruct,” Cotton said in the e-mail. Cotton further elaborated in an interview with the Daily that, based on his conversations with students, there was a perception that Greek life was somehow incompatible with the LGBT community. “People told me that there were a lot of ways that Greek life, implicitly or explicitly, can be inhospitable to students who identify as LGBTQ,” Cotton said. Cotton said establishing a positive relationship between the LGBT and Greek communities would be mutually beneficial.
“I know how big a role Greek life played for me when I first came to Tufts,” Cotton said. “I think it’s a shame if a student can’t take advantage of all the opportunities because the environments that are created are inhospitable, but I also think it’s a real loss for Greek life in general if Greek life can’t capitalize on having such fantastic leaders as the LGBT students in our community.” TCU Senator Tabias Wilson, the chair of the Senate’s Culture, Ethnicity and Community Affairs (CECA) Committee, is working with Cotton on the initiative and said that the goal is to establish the Greek chapters as “safe spaces” on campus. A safe space, according to Wilson, a sophomore, is a place where students can be comfortable with their identity. “A safe space is a place where you don’t necessarily need to be cognizant about what identity you may have,” Wilson, a Theta Chi brother, said. “If you have to go into a place and you act like you have to take certain precautions because of an identity you have … that’s probably not a safe space.” Discussion about LGBT life within Greek houses began during the Pride Flag initiative, in which students were encouraged to hang rainbow flags from their house and dorm room windows to show support for the LGBT community, according to Cotton’s e-mail. see LGBT, page 2
ZOE MOORE/TUFTS DAILY
The third edition of Shepard Fairey’s Mayer Campus Center mural is not identical to previous incarnations.
Street artist Fairey’s mural revamped on campus BY
AMELIE HECHT
Daily Editorial Board
The lower Mayer Campus Center patio wall recently received a face lift as artists created the third installment of a mural by street artist Shepard Fairey. The mural, a collage of several prints with an anti-war theme, is one part of a larger exhibition organized through The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (ICA) that displays the artist’s work throughout Boston. Fairey gained widespread public recognition and fame for “Hope,” his 2008 portrait of Barack Obama, and the “Obey Giant” campaign.
Inside this issue
Fairey erected the original mural on campus in January 2009, coinciding with the Institute for Global Leadership’s (IGL) 2009 Education for Public Inquiry and International Citizenship (EPIIC) International Symposium on Global Cities. The mural, a series of paper prints bonded to the wall by wheat paste glue, is not meant to be permanent, according to Pedro Alonzo, co-curator of Fairey’s ICA exhibition. “They are temporary, and that is his intention,” Alonzo said. “They last as long as the weather allows. In the harsh climate of Boston, they have a hard time staying up.”
Snow melted on top of the wall soon after the mural’s first installation, stripping off the adhesive, Alonzo said. Six months later, Fairey returned to restore the wall. Over the past year and a half, the weather eroded the images once again, necessitating the mural’s restoration, according to IGL Director Sherman Teichman. Fairey himself did not participate in the installation, instead sending several of his installation artists, according to Alonzo. “Shep tries to be part of the installation of as many of the see MURAL, page 2
Today’s Sections
A study has shown that modern-day college students spend far less time hitting the books.
Acclaimed director Danny Boyle discusses the making of his latest film, ‘127 Hours.’
see FEATURES, page 3
see ARTS, page 5
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