Monday, May 1, 2017

Page 1

Moe’s offers cheeseburgers, cheer to the hungry and hungover see FEATURES / PAGE 5

MEN’S TRACK AND FIELD

Jumbos clinch 20 top-five finishes in NESCAC Championships

‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ draws eerie parallels to contemporary United States see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 6

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 58

tuftsdaily.com

Monday, May 1, 2017

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

Arts and Sciences graduate students to hold unionization vote by Natasha Mayor

Assistant News Editor

Graduate student employees of Tufts’ School of Arts and Sciences and School of the Museum of Fine Arts (SMFA) will begin the process of voting to unionize with Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 509 today. Votes will be sent via mail today, and eligible voters will have until May 16 to send their mail-in ballot to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). Ballots will be counted by NLRB on May 18, according to an email sent to graduate students by Dean of Arts and Sciences James Glaser and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Robert Cook. The election was announced on April 18 when the university received a petition filed with the NLRB on behalf of the union, the email said. More than

RAY BERNOFF / THE TUFTS DAILY

Computer science Ph.D candidate Sam Burck, English Ph.D candidate James Rizzi and psychology Ph.D candidate Eric Fields are part of the group of graduate students pushing for unionization at Tufts.

30 percent of employees signed cards indicating interest in holding an election, according to Tufts Associate General Counsel for Labor and Employment Lili Palacios-Baldwin. After the 30-percent threshold is reached, federal law requires an election to be held. Graduate students are allowed to unionize after an August NLRB 2016 decision granted private university graduate students the right to do so. According to a university-provided list of frequently asked questions, all Ph.D. students in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and masters students in the School of Museum of Fine Arts who receive compensation for teaching or conducting research are eligible to be part of the union. If a majority of students in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences see GRAD STUDENT, page 2

Vice President of Operations Linda Snyder to retire by Emily Burke

Assistant News Editor

Vice President of Operations Linda Snyder will retire from Tufts at the end of this semester, after about four and a half years at the university. Since beginning her term in 2012, Snyder has overseen facilities services, dining, public safety and campus planning, among other departments. Current Director of Capital Programs Barb Stein has been appointed as interim vice president. A search is already underway for a new vice president, and the replacement process will take between three and four months, according to Snyder. “We have begun a search by posting the position of vice president for operations online and widely distributing the job description with many organizations that can bring wide attention among diverse candidates and organizations,” Executive Vice President Patricia Campbell told the Daily in an email. “I expect to have a new VP in place by the start of the fall semester.” Snyder said that since joining Tufts, several positive changes have been made, which have strengthened the university’s commitment to mindful campus planning and sustainability. “Tufts has a long and very well-respected commitment to sustainability, and I

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think that that’s been continued in strength while I’ve been here,” Snyder said. Snyder mentioned specific steps that have been taken to try to reduce Tufts’ environmental impact, including the Sustainability Council, the American College & University Presidents’ Climate Commitment and the construction of the Central Energy Plant. Snyder explained that steps such as the Central Energy Plant amount to long-term investments for the university. “Tufts didn’t have to decide to build a new Central Energy Plant with cogeneration and central chilled water. It could’ve just replaced boilers in the old power plant,” Snyder said. “It didn’t have to take that step, and that step is enormously important for the university.” However, Nicole Joseph, a member of Tufts Labor Coalition (TLC), noted that many employees in Tufts Facilities Services have spoken about the struggle to keep up with these frequent changes to operations systems, which have not necessarily increased efficiency. “There’s been a lot of history of [worker struggle] on this campus, and a big part of that is because people felt like there were a lot of sudden changes that didn’t make sense to them,” Joseph, a junior, said. “A lot of people don’t think that a lot of the changes that have been made are see SNYDER, page 2

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MAX LALANNE / THE TUFTS DAILY

Oath Craft Pizza’s Davis Square location, which now accepts Tufts’ JumboCash as a form of payment, is pictured on April 27.

Oath Craft Pizza joins JumboCash program by Amanda Rose

Contributing Writer

Oath Craft Pizza in Davis Square is the newest off-campus venue to join the JumboCash program. The pizza restaurant approached the university about joining the program a little over a month ago, Oath’s general manager Christopher Ryder recalled.

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“We definitely heard that there were a couple of businesses around Davis that were [accepting] JumboCash,” he said. “I had a couple of students over the summer who worked here, and we wanted to get more of the college experience in the restaurant.” First-year Tufts Community

NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................5 ARTS & LIVING.......................6

see JUMBOCASH, page 3

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


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