It’s Britney, B... Comeback queen is at it again with new album ‘Glory’ see ARTS AND LIVING / PAGE 9
TUFTS VOLLEYBALL
Jumbos serve up competition at MIT invitational
Ambassador to Mexico Roberta Jacobson sits down with the Daily see FEATURES / PAGE 6
SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE
THE
INDEPENDENT
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXII, NUMBER 4
tuftsdaily.com
Monday, September 12, 2016
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Waging war for worker wages
Somerville ordinance bans plastic bags in retail businesses by Hannah Uebele News Editor
MAX LALANNE / THE TUFTS DAILY
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) calls to members and allies of the 32BJ Service Employees International Union (SEUI) at a rally in Boston Common, extending her support for higher wages for union members and urging workers in attendance, which included Tufts janitorial staff, to keep fighting for their cause. see page 2
Tufts Technology Services updates campus wifi, printing services by Robert Katz News Editor
Tufts Technology Services (TTS) has begun implementing changes to campus wifi and printing, as well as to its facilities in Eaton Hall, according to TTS Director of Client Support Services Kyle Pope. Some of these updates were completed during the summer, while others will continue to be put into place throughout the fall. Pope said that changes to TTS’ printing services include allocating a new $10 subsidy to every student’s ID that can be used at pay-for-print stations across campus. “We don’t feel that it should be incumbent upon the student to bear that cost if that is required by their studies at Tufts,” Pope said. “We had to balance the fact that we’re asking students to do something and essentially giving them a mandate without telling them about the fees, versus being able to support all of the students.”
The subsidies will be funded by a mix of revenues from the operating costs of printing services, new terms negotiated from Tufts’ contract with their printing service providers and subsidies from the School of Arts and Sciences and the School of Engineering, Pope said. According to Pope, the number of computers available in the lab has been reduced from 78 to about 40 because no more than about 40 students were shown using the lab’s computers at peak times, according to a year’s worth of surveys and log-in statistics collected by TTS. However, the computers have been replaced with new Dell Precision Workstation and 27-inch iMac desktop computers, he said. Eaton’s service desk will also be staffed more often, with both computer repair and customer support services offered by a rotating schedule of student and full-time employees, Pope said.
Please recycle this newspaper
Sunny 74 /56
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Over the summer, Eaton Hall’s computer lab was re-painted and given new facilities, according to Manager of Service Marketing and Communications Christine Fitzgerald. She said that new furniture is currently being added to one side of the room, including high-top bar tables, stools, chairs, banquettes and mobile white boards designed for collaborative work. She also said that in the three available multimedia collaborative spaces there are large screens with HDMI and VGA inputs for students to plug in hardware. Some of the collaborative furniture is not yet available and will be installed in October, Fitzgerald said. According to Pope, Eaton had been overdue for a major renovation. “There was duct tape covering rips in the carpet. We made real investments in the furniture to make it more collaborative and see TTS, page 3
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A new ordinance took effect in Somerville on Sept. 1 prohibiting commercial businesses in the city from giving single-use plastic bags to customers at checkout. Businesses will now provide paper bags instead of plastic ones, and customers are greatly encouraged to use reusable bags, Jaclyn Rossetti, Somerville’s deputy director of communications, said on behalf of the members of her department. “We encourage everyone to be mindful of their own carbon footprint,” Rossetti told the Daily in an email. Larger stores with more than 10,000 square feet of floor space have had to abide by the ordinance since the beginning of the month, while all other trade establishments have until Dec. 1 to adhere to the law, she explained. According to Rossetti, Target, Stop & Shop and Star Market are a few of the large businesses initially affected. Larger businesses have an earlier deadline due to the fact that many of the larger stores are national chains which have had experience complying with similar ordinances elsewhere, she said. “We wanted to make the transition as easy as possible for business owners and thought that giving the smaller businesses more time to use their current supply of bags and plan for compliance would be the best way to do that,” Rossetti said. The ordinance applies to all of Somerville’s businesses, including those on the Tufts campus, she added. According to Tufts University Bookstore Manager Boon Teo, the bookstore supports the ordinance and is working to comply with its rules. “While our physical address is in Medford, many of our building licenses and permits come from the city of
Somerville,” Teo told the Daily in an email. “Given this, and both the campus and Barnes & Noble College’s dedication to environmentally [friendly] products, we are working on finding an alternative to plastic bags.” The Tufts Bookstore has begun the process of phasing out plastic bags, but is still working out the timeline to find a good replacement, according to Teo. “The Bookstore, having the pleasure to be part of such an environmentally conscious campus and company… wholly supports this initiative,” Teo said. “For us, it is just a matter of finding a bag that can hold the weight of textbooks. In the meantime, we do offer reusable bags for just $0.89 in the store.” The Tufts Sustainability Collective’s (TSC) co-president Mary-Paule Monks explained the importance of the Tufts Bookstore’s commitment to environmentally friendly practices and compliance with the ordinance. “The Tufts Bookstore is the face of Tufts for many people… it’s also just the way that we sell our culture here as a university, and what we value is put into the bookstore,” Monks, a sophomore, said. Monks also noted that even though the bookstore is just one business, its example has the potential to influence others. “This is the way that we present the Tufts identity to the rest of the world by selling our merchandise,” she said. “It is just one bookstore, but the Tufts Bookstore serves a large community,” she said. Monks said that the plastic bag ordinance will be a definite topic of conversation in the upcoming TSC meetings. She noted that Tufts’ practices can have an influence on the surrounding communities. “It’s definitely important to [TSC] that Tufts, the university, collaborates with both Medford
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................6 ARTS & LIVING.......................9
see PLASTIC BAGS, page 3
COMICS......................................11 OPINION...................................12 SPORTS............................ BACK