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THE TUFTS DAILY
TUFTSDAILY.COM
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
VOLUME LXII, NUMBER 18
Where You Read It First Est. 1980
Tufts formalizes music engineering minor by Stephanie Straus
Contributing Writer
Tufts Department of Music last semester began offering a music engineering minor — an interdisciplinary program for students interested in both music and engineering — prompted by increased student demand. The minor in music engineering, co-directed by Paul Lehrman, a lecturer in the music department, and Professor of Mechanical Engineering Chris Rogers, was initiated in February of this year and graduated five students this past May, according to Lehrman. Eight students are pursuing the minor this year. Although all of the courses that make up the minor had already been established, Lehrman and Rogers compiled these music and engineering classes into one program in response to student and personal interest. The program grew out of an existing
minor in musical instrument engineering, which focused on acoustic instrument design. To this, two new areas of focus were added to create the new program. Students minoring in music engineering can now choose to pursue one of three tracks: acoustic instrument design, which is overseen by Rogers, electronic instrument design or sound recording and production, both overseen by Lehrman. The minor consists of five courses, three of them spanning the overlap between music and engineering, and the other two concentrating on the student’s track of choice. To complete the minor, students must also do a final project or honors thesis. Open to all students in the School of Engineering and the School of Arts and Sciences, the minor hopes to attract a variety of majors from see MUSIC, page 3
Daily File Photo
Cardibo.com, which currently allows visitors to track the usage of treadmills in Cousens Gym, will eventually monitor bike and elliptical machines.
Uphill central heating plant Cardibo allows gym-goers to switches to natural gas track exercise equipment use by
Michelle Stevens
by Sharon
Contributing Writer
The Department of Facilities Services is currently working on converting the main fuel source for the Medford/Somerville campus to natural gas in an effort to reduce the university’s carbon emissions. The university will switch its energy source from number six fuel oil, otherwise known as bunker C or residual fuel oil, to natural gas, considered a cleanerburning fuel. Construction to accommodate the switch is on track to be completed by the end of October, according to Director of Facilities Technical Services and Tufts Energy Manager Betsy Isenstein. Changes involve infrastructural improvements and the installation of additional equipment to support the volume of natural gas being used and allow for the burning of gas at the uphill central heating plant located between Dowling and East Halls. The uphill central heating plant serves much of the main campus, Vice President for Operations Dick Reynolds said. All buildings serviced by the plant will now be heated by natural gas. After modifications, the plant will have two sources of fuel: natural gas and oil number 2, otherwise known as heating oil, which will be used as backup in case Facilities runs into any difficulties with the natural gas source, according to Reynolds. National Grid, the company that provides Tufts’ electricity, completed construction on Sept. 28 to replace a portion of the gas main on Boston Avenue, enabling it to contain natural gas. A gas service from the main on Boston Avenue up to the plant will be implemented in the next week or so, Isenstein said. Recent drops in prices for natural gas make this project affordable and the choice of fuel makes the decision environmentally sound, Isenstein noted.
Lam
Contributing Writer
Gym-goers trying to pick a good time to make the trek over to the athletic complex can now check the availability of Cousens Gym equipment on a new website, Cardibo. com. Cardibo, which uses vibration censors embedded in the exercise machines to identify when equipment is in use, went live in the middle of last month, according to co-founders Rameen Aryanpur and Jackson Dolan, both of whom are in their fifth year of a joint master’s and Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering program. The website features a layout of the gym floor plan, indicating which machines are open and how long unavailable machines have been occupied. The “trends” feature
Oliver Porter/Tufts Daily
Tufts is converting its main fuel source for the Medford/Somerville campus to natural gas. “It’s not only the cleaner burning fuels as much as far as emissions is concerned, but it’s also a cleaner fuel in the [aforementioned] plant, and plant workers are not having to deal with oil,” Isenstein said. “[Natural gas] makes plant maintenance and operation easier, smoother, cleaner.” Environmental Studies Program Director Colin Orians raised concerns about the extraction of natural gas. “While natural gas definitely reduces our carbon footprint, the extraction of natural gas can cause other pollution problems,” Orians told the Daily in an email. “I think it is important to know where our gas comes from. If it is leading to environmental destruction in, say, Pennsylvania, I would not be too pleased.” see OIL, page 3
Inside this issue
uses historical data to predict how crowded the gym will be at a given time of day. Sensors embedded in the machine respond to vibrations and transmit the data online, Dolan said. The website currently only displays information about the use of the treadmill machines, but developers are in the process of hooking up the bikes and ellipticals to the monitoring technology. The idea for the project grew out of a mechanical engineering senior design class that Aryanpur and Dolan took last fall. They realized the project they were working on could satisfy a real student demand. “A lot of times I’d go [to the gym] and it would be really crowded,” Aryanpur said. “I’d have to wait 15 to 20 minutes, which isn’t that big of a deal, but when you have see CARDIBO, page 3
Pathway by cannon closed for renovation The Department of Facilities Services this past weekend closed off the path around the cannon and the back of Goddard Chapel for curb replacement and new planting, according to Vice President for Operations Dick Reynolds. The changes were originally scheduled to take place over the summer as a part of the campus improvement program, but they were pushed back when the necessary construction materials were not available in time, according to Reynolds. He anticipates the path will be reopened by the end of the week. The updated section of the walkway will feature a granite curb that will create a more uniform appearance with the rest of the path in front of Ballou Hall, Reynolds said. New hedging will replace the plants between the path and the President’s Lawn, he added.
The changes were prompted by comments from visiting parents and alumni about the appearance of the path. “We discovered that a lot of parents and alumni and parents of people visiting the university have commented that they thought it didn’t look in keeping with the quality of [the university],” he said. “We decided that since that’s a major area as people go from the upper campus [to lower campus], it should be keeping with the quality of the rest of the area.” While the redone curb will be granite, the path itself will remain asphalt, according to Reynolds. “The curbs were asphalt, and it just wasn’t attractive,” he said, adding that the vegetation between the walk and the lawn was “pretty scruffy.” —by Elizabeth McKay
Today’s sections
A look at the Protestant community on the Tufts campus.
“Up All Night” takes to the small screen.
see FEATURES, page 5
see ARTS, page 7
News Features Arts & Living Editorial | Letters
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Op-Ed Comics Classifieds Sports
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