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 LXXXI, ISSUE 37
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
tuftsdaily.com
Tuesday, April 6, 2021
Carmichael Dining Center to be rebranded as gluten, peanut, tree nut-free establishment by Alex Viveros News Editor
Carmichael Dining Center will be converted and rebranded into a gluten, peanut and tree nut free facility starting fall 2021. In addition to a complete menu redesign to accommodate those with a gluten, peanut or tree nut allergy — the three most common food allergies on the Medford/Somerville campus — the dining center will also undergo a complete rebranding and unspecified name change, according to Kelly Shaw, Tufts Dining nutrition specialist. “The plan is that by fall 2021, the entire unit will be free from these three allergens,” Shaw said. “While there won’t be a stark physical change, we are completely redoing the menu.” Patti Klos, director of Tufts Dining and Business Services, explained the motivation behind the proposed change. “For many years we’ve provided gluten free foods in the dining centers, but because we continue to use gluten containing ingredients in those locations, students could inadvertently be affected by cross contact,” Klos wrote in an email to the Daily. “Many AIDAN CHANG / THE TUFTS DAILY
Students are pictured waiting in line outside of Carmichael Hall on Aug. 31, 2020.
Tufts research lab aids states with redistricting process by Matt Chen
Contributing Writer
As state legislatures across the country prepare to undergo the decennial process of redrawing congressional districts, the MGGG Redistricting Lab at Tufts University has become an invaluable resource for many states. The MGGG Redistricting Lab, which is affiliated with the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life, grew out of an informal research collective called the Metric Geometry and Gerrymandering Group. The lab is led by Moon Duchin, an associate professor in the mathematics department and director of the Science, Technology, and Society program at Tufts. “As a lab, we have researchers, several with PhDs in different fields, like math, computer science and geography … I would say the lab is devoted to data science for civil rights,” Duchin said. JN Matthews, a computational engineer at MGGG, explained the group’s work in an email to the Daily.
“Our group does a mixture of empirical and theoretical research in this space, public outreach, and open-source software development,” Matthews said.
The process of redistricting is generally seen as a partisan affair, but MGGG takes a non-partisan approach to the process. “Our lab collects election and census geodata, research-
es redistricting and election reform, focuses on building free, open-source tools like Districtr, and building relationships with community partners,” Liz Kopecky, a program administra-
see CARMICHAEL, page 2
tor at MGGG, wrote in an email to the Daily. Kopecky added that in recent years, several states established independent commissions that accept map submissions from the public to aid their redistricting efforts. “Wisconsin and Michigan are two states that have commissions that will be accepting public map submissions and drawing district plans for Congress and the state legislature,” Kopecky said. Matthews expanded on this. “Our group is consulting for the Wisconsin People’s Maps Commission and the Michigan Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission to help them collect and analyze public input as well as to work with them to evaluate potential tradeoffs in mapping criteria,” Matthews said. Duchin explained that split control states including Wisconsin, are especially keen on maintaining transparency during redistricting. Split control states
COURTESY MOON DUCHIN
see MGGG, page 2
Associate Professor Moon Duchin leads MGGG, examining the fairness of congressional maps.
SPORTS / back
FEATURES / page 3
ARTS / page 5
Tufts softball overcomes early deficit in first win of season
Successful Tufts Energy Conference opens discussion of conference’s future
Mugler’s spring runway looks embrace gender and the body
NEWS
1
FEATURES
3
ARTS & POP CULTURE
5
FUN & GAMES
6
OPINION
7
SPORTS
BACK