TUFTS MEN’S SOCCER
‘Blade of the Immortal’ attempts to display ideology and tradition, falls into superficiality see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 5
Jumbos break into NESCAC semifinals after win against Bobcats
New Tisch College initiative explores social-emotional learning across Tufts schools see FEATURES / PAGE 4
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXIV, ISSUE 38
tuftsdaily.com
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Janitor Anita Posadas forced to Matt Callahan named new assistant leave work after injury on the job director of recreation and club sports by Elie Levine News Editor
Anita Posadas, a janitor who has worked at Tufts for 20 years, said she suffered a fall on the job in March and tore a muscle in her left shoulders. Posadas, whose statements were translated from Spanish to English by her granddaughter Ana Castaneda, said that she has not received the adequate workers’ compensation for her injury and the loss of work it has caused. Posadas said she fell at 7:35 a.m. on March 2. She said she had a vacuum backpack on and was cleaning the stairs of the Granoff Music Center, about six feet up. She said that her supervisor, Victoria Guerra, startled her and yelled at her, causing her to fall. Guerra then tugged on Posadas’
arm and urged her to get up and continue working. Julio Quintanilla was the janitor assigned to clean the second floor of Granoff while Posadas was also on shift, but only from 7:30 a.m. to 9:00 a.m, according to Posadas. Quintanilla said he was present in the building when Posadas fell, though only Guerra was in the exact location at the time of the fall. Quintanilla said his boss called him to tell him what had happened, and he came down to find Posadas crying on the stairs. Posadas said that she blacked out at this point. She said she doesn’t remember the subsequent events, but Quintanilla confirmed that Posadas was put in an ambulance. see POSADAS, page 2
by Sophie Lehrenbaum News Editor
Tufts’ Athletics Department hired Matt Callahan in October to assume the role of assistant director of recreation and club sports, a position that is new to the university. Although the position just recently came into being, the idea of adding a full-time employee to focus on club sports and student recreation to the payroll has been percolating across different administrative bodies on campus for years, according to Director of Athletics John Morris and Senior Associate Athletic Director Alexis Mastronardi. “In the winter of 2017, conversations about adding such a position began in earnest among representatives from the
TCU [Tufts Community Union] Senate, the Division of Student Affairs, the Department of Athletics, the Provost’s Office and the Office for Campus Life,” Morris and Mastronardi told the Daily in an email. Callahan explained that he came across postings advertising the position on the NCAA website and initiated the application process in early September. At the time, he was in the midst of a fiveyear stint at his alma mater, Brandeis University, where he served in a position coordinating club sports. Prior to overseeing Brandeis’ club sports program, Callahan explained that he rose through the athletics department at the university during his college career, after a concussion see CALLAHAN, page 3
TCU town hall discusses developments on Capen Village by Liza Harris Staff Writer
Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate held a town hall on Monday night to discuss plans for the upcoming Capen Village, a cluster of houses owned by Tufts that will be available as housing options for juniors and seniors starting next fall. The Brown & Blueprint Initiative, a series of listening sessions to help senate learn more about spacial inequalities, was also slated to be discussed; however, there were so many questions around Capen Village that the initiative was not talked about. The meeting included a panel of four people: TCU President Benya Kraus, Associate Director of Housing Operations Matt Austin, co-director of Tufts Energy Group Marianne Ray and Director of Campus Planning Lois Stanley. According to Stanley, construction of Capen Village, which will likely include themed housing, will be completed in three phases, the first of which will start in January or February of 2018. Capen Village will consist of 15 houses located between Wren Hall and Boston Avenue; 13 of these houses currently exist, and two will be built as a part of the Capen Village construction plan, Stanley said. When construction is completed, there will be 145 single-occupancy bedrooms available, with each house having one full bath per floor, she added.
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Each house will be comprised of apartments, the smallest of which can house three students and the largest of which can hold ten, Stanley said. Furthermore, each apartment will have a renovated kitchen, but there will be no parking available to students, either on the street or in the garages. There will, however, be bike parking. According to Austin, the houses will not be separated by class year, but will instead integrate juniors and seniors throughout the various houses. The project also allows for Tufts to control the rising rents that many students face when signing leases for off-campus housing, Kraus said in an Oct. 15 TCU Senate meeting where the project was discussed. Construction on the first phase of Capen Village will begin this upcoming winter; by the fall of 2018, 45 bedrooms will be available for upperclassmen housing, according to Stanley. There will also be a common backyard for students living in these houses, which could be used in many ways, such as gardening or sports, she said. The Tufts administration is considering implementing the idea of themed housing in Capen Village, according to Kraus. Kraus adopted the idea of themed housing from Whitworth University. She said the themes would likely change every year to incorporate a changing social environment and would be selected through a student-pitch process. According to
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TCU Senate holds a town hall on equitable social spaces and the new Capen Village. The forum is pictured here on Oct. 30. Kraus, the themes would be part of a larger attempt to give back to the community; the houses would hold campus-wide events and attempt to diversify the social space at Tufts. Kraus stressed that “themed housing is different than identity-based housing” and that Capen Village would not replace housing options for marginalized students in the Tufts community. Students and administrators involved in this project are also working to make Capen Village environmentally friendly, Ray, a senior, said.
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Some of these sustainable features could be triple-pane windows and solar panels. “We want to bring in a sustainable aspect to this village,” Ray said. Ray also mentioned the possibility of using the eco-friendly component of Capen Village to offer classes and seminars on sustainability and to advance research opportunities, including measuring the use of energy over time. According to Ray, Capen Village will
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................4 ARTS & LIVING.......................5
see TOWN HALL , page 3
COMICS....................................... 7 OPINION.....................................8 SPORTS............................ BACK