Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Page 1

Activists and admins: Stories of publicity and co-option see FEATURES / PAGE 3

WOMEN’S CREW

Jumbos take down 1V8 race in Worcester

‘Card Thief’ steals players’ hearts with great art, music, gameplay see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 7

SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE

THE

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

VOLUME LXXIII, NUMBER 55

tuftsdaily.com

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

Rubén Stern to leave role as director of Latino Center by Jesse Najarro

Assistant News Editor

Latino Center Director Rubén Salinas Stern will retire this August after working at Tufts for 24 years, according to an email sent to the Latinx community on April 6. Stern explained that he made the decision to retire for several personal reasons and after realizing that it was hard to remain energized in such a bustling environment and atypical job. “This is a very youthful environment, Student Affairs as a whole,” Stern said. “I was starting to feel old and Student Affairs people work a lot of hours. They work weekends, they work nights. It’s not your typical job in that sense.” Stern will be succeeded by Melissa Colón, a research analyst in the EliotPearson Department of Child Study and Human Development, as interim director for the 2017–2018 academic year, according to Stern. Stern said he arrived at Tufts in 1993 to a Latinx community that felt nonexistent to many, and to no space whatsoever for students who identified as Latinx. Since then, through both his own and student efforts, the Latinx community at Tufts has thrived and has taken on a greater leadership role at Tufts, according to Stern. “When I got here, what I heard about the Latino community was that it was

invisible,” Stern said. “That’s the term I used to hear. I don’t think that’s the case anymore. I see a supportive community.” In particular, Stern noted that the number of students who identify as Latino at Tufts has increased from about 175 in the 1990s to more than 300 now. He also said that more students have taken on leadership positions at Tufts. Marisel Perez, an associate dean of student affairs, attributes such progress partially to Stern’s efforts to harness the voices of Latinx-identifying students and welcome other students with marginalized identities on campus. “I think that Rubén has opened those doors very effectively to make sure that the center is a place where everybody who wants to be part of it or visit it feels welcome,” Perez said. “It’s not just the Latino Center. It’s a center [for] a lot of students who may not necessarily identify as Latino, but they feel a certain alliance and sense of community by going there.” Perez worked with Stern in 2003 on an education and outreach project after several “incidents of bias” — particularly acts of discrimination such as derogatory graffiti — made many Latinx students on campus feel unwelcome, according to Perez. “We used the opportunity to, through the peer group, do a lot of outreach education,” Perez said. “Rubén was part of the conceptualization of that initiative,

RACHAEL MEYER / THE TUFTS DAILY

Rubén Stern poses for a photo in the Latino Center on April 24. but it wasn’t just one incident. It was just a need to have that kind of [education] like peer leaders. We would go to the residence halls, mostly the students, and put together programs that raised awareness about diversity.”

Stern worked to educate the Tufts community about diversity through these peer groups and as a member of the diversity council, which Perez also served on. She see RUBEN STERN, page 2

Brown and Brew set to close after 20 years of operation by David Nickerson Staff Writer

ALEX KNAPP / THE TUFTS DAILY

Brown and Brew Coffee House in Curtis Hall will close in August.

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Rain 58 /51

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Brown and Brew Coffee House will close at the end of the business day on Aug. 11 after more than 20 years of operation, according to Director of Dining and Business Services Patti Klos. The decision to close Brown and Brew was made when it became apparent that a new cafe will be included in the Science and Engineering Complex (SEC), Klos explained. “It made sense to locate a cafeteria inside the new building,” Klos said. “So once that decision was made, does it make sense to keep the Brown and Brew operating across the street? Not really.” Klos said that the new location in the SEC will be called the Kindlevan Café and will serve a variety of items, including hot food for lunch, salads and coffee. “We will still feature espresso-based drinks, tea … we will have the grab and

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go, the sushi, and the salads and the sandwiches, but we will also have the ability to have some hot food, breakfast sandwiches, possibly other breakfast items,” Klos said. Klos said that the cafe will also have a limited selection of freshly made juices and smoothies. According to Klos, meal swipes will not be accepted initially at the new cafe because it will be unable to support the high volume of customers that a meal swipe location usually attracts. “We just don’t think we will have the capacity,” she said. “That’s really the issue.” The new cafe will be connected to the SEC’s large atrium, and customers of the cafe will be able to eat anywhere in the atrium or at a bar that will be connected to the cafe, Klos said. According to Klos, no positions will be eliminated when Brown and Brew closes.

NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................3 ARTS & LIVING....................... 7

see DINING, page 2

COMICS.......................................8 OPINION.....................................9 SPORTS............................ BACK


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Wednesday, April 26, 2017 by The Tufts Daily - Issuu