The Tufts Daily - Thursday, November 2, 2017

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TUFTS VOLLEYBALL

Two parties, three opinions at CIVIC debate see FEATURES / PAGE 4

Jumbos to host NESCACs with perfect conference record

Novel notes from ‘New at Noon’ see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 7

SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE

THE

INDEPENDENT

STUDENT

N E W S PA P E R

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TUFTS

UNIVERSITY

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXIV, ISSUE 39

tuftsdaily.com

Thursday, November 2, 2017

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

Tufts in China to become Tufts in Beijing by Aneurin Canham-Clyne News Editor

The Tufts-in-China Program will move from Zhejiang University to Beijing Normal University (BNU) next fall. According to Sheila Bayne, the director of Tufts Programs Abroad, the Tufts-in-China Program began in 2002 at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, a city in eastern China on the Yangtze River Delta. “At the time, the director of the Chinese program investigated a number of different possibilities in China, over a period of years. For a number of factors, they felt like Zhejiang University was the right place,” Bayne said. Zhejiang University has a well-respected Chinese language program, Bayne noted. BNU is also well known for its language program. Harrison Rubin, a junior currently studying abroad at Zhejiang, told the Daily in an electronic message that the school has deep connections with the business community in the region. Mingquan Wang, the faculty advisor to the program and senior lecturer in the Chinese program, said that the retirement of Jay Yang, who oversaw the program, brought its future in question. Bayne said Yang, a residential director and history professor, taught a history course and one of the two culture courses. “We started looking for a new partner institution. Through the Confucius Institute we got in contact with Beijing Normal University,” Bayne said.

COURTESY BEIJING NORMAL UNIVERSITY

The south gate of Beijing Normal University, the institution where the new Tufts-in-China program will be held, is pictured. Rubin noted that Beijing, which is the capital of China and a metropolis with a sizeable international community, offers more opportunities than Hangzhou.

“They are pretty different…Hangzhou is a very quaint and low key city. It’s situated next to the west lake, one of the prettiest locations in China, it’s a tier

two city so not as developed as a tier one city,” Rubin told the Daily in electronic message. see TUFTS IN BEIJING, page 2

New Virtual Desktop Somerville partners with Infrastructure (VDI) allows ACLU to enact surveillance students to use software outside transparency policy of Eaton Lab by Robert Katz News Editor

by Natasha Mayor News Editor

This fall, Tufts Technology Services (TTS) has launched the Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI), a program that allows students to remotely access software that was previously only available in Eaton Lab. Christine Fitzgerald, manager of service marketing and communication for TTS, said that the VDI can be accessed by going to https://vdi.it.tufts.edu. From there, students can choose to download the program directly onto their desktops or access it through the online portal, using their university credentials.

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Fitzgerald said there are over 55 programs available to students through the VDI. Some of these programs include ArcGIS, Mathematica, Java, Stata and SPSS. George Moore, manager of enterprise systems and services at Tufts University, explained that TTS had to identify which software could be included in the VDI without violating licensing restrictions. “This was mostly an effort in checking with the software vendors and working with our Contracts team to make sure we weren’t in violation of any of the licensing restrictions,” Moore told the Daily in an see VDI, page 2

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The city of Somerville, in cooperation with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), enacted the Executive Policy on Surveillance Technology on Oct. 4. The new policy is intended to enforce heightened transparency and public control over government surveillance technology. According to the city’s accompanying press release, the policy includes “new approval, operational, and public notification and meeting requirements on the purchase and implementation of surveillance technology,” barring any “emergency police investigative or public safety needs.” Mayor Joseph Curtatone, who signed the policy with the full support of the Somerville

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Police Department (SPD), said in that the policy would attempt to reconcile civil liberty protections with the need for “effective police work,” according to the press release. “This policy introduces checks and balances designed to keep the public safe from crime as well as from privacy and rights violations,” he said in a statement quoted in the press release. SPD Police Chief David Fallon stated in the press release that the policy’s intention of encouraging more transparent surveillance implementation alines with the department’s community policing goals. “When we build trust and confidence in our force and our methods, we strengthen the community connections that ultimately help us keep Somerville safe,” Fallon said. see SURVEILLANCE, page 3

NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................4 ARTS & LIVING....................... 7

COMICS.......................................9 OPINION...................................10 SPORTS............................ BACK


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