Broadway Bridge closure impacts community, businesses in Ball Square see FEATURES / PAGE 5
MEN’S TENNIS
Sorkin crowned winner of ITA New England Singles Championship
No. 24 volleyball stays undefeated, improves to 12–0 see SPORTS / PAGE 11
SEE SPORTS / PAGE 11
THE
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXVIII, ISSUE 18
Tuesday, October 1, 2019
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
tuftsdaily.com
Baker bans all vaping products in Massachusetts drawing praise, criticism
by Connor Dale
flavored and non-flavored vaping products in both retail and online stores. The Commonwealth’s Public Health Council imposed the ban the same day. The restrictions apply to all vaping products and devices, including tobacco and marijuana. Baker said that the temporary ban, which has brought Massachusetts beyond where any state has gone to address the growth of vaping related-illnesses, would allow public health officials enough time to get a grip on the situation. “We as a Commonwealth need to pause sales in order for our medical experts to collect more information about what is driving these life-threatening, vaping-related illnesses,” Baker said at a press conference last Tuesday.
News Editor
Responding to the recent spike in vaping-related lung diseases, Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker declared a public health emergency on Sept. 24, banning the sale of electronic cigarettes and vaping products. The ban will last through Jan. 25, 2020. The declaration comes on the heels of a spate of mysterious vaping-related illnesses popping up across the country. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has linked the use of e-cigarettes to more than 800 cases of lung disease in 46 states and the U.S. Virgin Islands over the past five months, a dozen of which have ended in death. In addition to the public health emergency, Baker also called for a temporary four-month statewide ban on the sale of
VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
see VAPING, page 2
A man vapes with a cloud of vapor from his electronic cigarette.
Intersex activist Tatenda Ngwaru Tufts implements new first-year shares her story at Civic Life Lunch Hall Council program by Madeleine Aitken Contributing Writer
MENGQI IRINA WANG / THE TUFTS DAILY
Tatenda Ngwaru, founder of the first intersex organization in Zimbabwe, ‘True Identity,’ suggests what Tufts could do to raise awareness for intersex community in the Rabb room, Lincoln Filene Center on Sept. 30. by Elie Levine News Editor
Tatenda Ngwaru, a Zimbabwean intersex activist and asylum seeker, spoke about her life and work yesterday at a Civic Life Lunch hosted by the Jonathan M. Tisch
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College of Civic Life. In 2013, Ngwaru founded True Identity, Zimbabwe’s first organization for intersex people. At the lunch, Ngwaru was accompanied see NGWARU, page 2 For breaking news, our content archive and exclusive content, visit tuftsdaily.com @tuftsdaily
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The Office of Residential Life and Learning (ORLL) announced online that it would be implementing a new system of Hall Councils in all first-year dorms, with positions to be filled by elected first-years with an overall goal of planning events and building community both within and across first-year dorms. Joshua Hartman, director of ORLL, is pioneering this new network of organizations. “The idea is to allow residents of a specific residential space to have ownership, insight, and agency in planning events and community building initiatives in their building,” Hartman said in an email to the Daily. Hartman hopes this program will be helpful to First Year Advisors (FYAs), whose jobs include building community in first-year dorms. Hartman is looking forward to seeing strong relationships between Hall Councils and FYAs, and expects “a more vibrant and engaged community” to come from this change. Although the Hall Councils will work independently, each one is structured the same way, according to the ORLL website.
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The executive board will consist of elected positions — president, vice president for membership, vice president for residential advocacy, vice president for programming and vice president for administration. Each Hall Council also has a general assembly, which will be comprised of students throughout the residential community that will participate on a volunteer basis, according to Hartman. Elections closed on Sept. 25, with over 45 candidates running for positions in their Hall Councils, according to Hartman. There were some vacant positions, but these will be filled in the next few weeks by the individual Hall Councils, according to Hartman. Hartman reported that more than 500 students voted in the elections, representing about a third of the firstyear class. “We’re happy with the turnout, especially since this is the first year of implementation,” Hartman told the Daily. Ben Silver, president of Carmichael Hall Council, was inspired to run for the position because he noticed a lack of community in his dorm. “There isn’t a sense of connection within the dorm … I want to foster some social
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................5 ARTS & LIVING....................... 7
see HALL COUNCILS, page 3
FUN & GAMES.........................9 OPINION...................................10 SPORTS............................ BACK