2011-04-14.pdf

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THE TUFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXI, NUMBER 48

Where You Read It First Est. 1980 TUFTSDAILY.COM

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Curtatone prescribes growth measures at town meeting by

Rachel Rampino

Daily Editorial Board

Mayor Joseph Curtatone last night challenged Somerville business owners to work with the government to promote long-term economic growth, emphasizing the city’s potential to compete with economic centers like Boston or Cambridge. Curtatone, speaking at the sixth annual Somerville Business Town Meeting at the Somerville Theatre in Davis Square, said that the city is ready to shake off its nickname of “Slumerville.” With help from local business owners, he said, Somerville aims to transform the outdated disrepute by revitalizing infrastructure and employment growth. “We need to think about how we are going to be in the position to take advantage of the next economic cycle,” Curtatone said. “During the most recent economic waves, we got leapfrogged again. We can’t hide in a corner.” Community business owners and civil servants of Somerville attended the talk, which was sponsored by the Somerville Chamber of Commerce. Curtatone, now in his fourth term as mayor, described Somerville as a family-friendly environment and discussed the city’s economic and historical past, present and future. “We’re always chasing this train and we’ve never caught up to it. We’re going to catch it now,” he added. “We need to identify the next wave of innovation and market to it.”

It is most important to the future of the city to keep successful small businesses and the valuable workforce in the city and attract new industry, the mayor said. “We know where we’re going and what it’s going to mean 15 to 20 years down the road,” Curtatone said. “We need to identify where we conserve, enhance and transform.” Curtatone explained how past changes curtailed Somerville’s development as a major center of commerce. The removal of public trolley stops in the 1950s cut Somerville off from commuters and the business they bring. “When the stops were taken away, things changed. That’s when Somerville started to become ‘Slumerville,’” Curtatone said. Curtatone compared Somerville population statistics with those of other Massachusetts cities in the Boston area. Since the 1990s, there has been almost no job growth, he said, though the percentage of college-educated residents has risen to 55 percent of today’s adult population. “We have a talented, educated workforce in this city,” Curtatone said. “There’s a disconnect between Somerville jobs and Somerville workers.” Somerville Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Stephen Mackey emphasized the importance of continuing diversity among industries in the area. see SOMERVILLE, page 2

Meredith Klein/Tufts Daily

The spring Senate election season saw no contest, as 17 senators ran unopposed.

With uncontested Senate seats, many look to ECOM by

Kathryn Olson

Daily Editorial Board

In the wake of a spring Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate election season that saw atypically low participation and no competition for any of the 17 candidates, senators and administrators have cited an inadequate effort on the part of the Elections Commission (ECOM). Twenty-one seats were available to rising sophomores, juniors and seniors; since only 17 students submitted the required signatures and paperwork, each seat was uncontested and there will be no election for senators held this spring. The lack of contested seats has led a number of individuals, both in and out-

side the Senate, to question whether ECOM, whose five student members receive a $500 stipend per year-long term they serve, held up its end of the bargain in effectively advertising the open seats. According to Senator Wyatt Cadley, a sophomore, ECOM this semester did not provide potential candidates or voters with sufficient information about the upcoming elections. “Multiple factors went into the Senate seats going uncontested; the most important was ECOM,” Cadley said. “Every student with a stipend has responsibilities, and the student body expects certain things to be provided right now that are not being see ELECTION, page 2

Tufts to gauge perception of alcohol, sex norms with survey by

Martha Shanahan

Daily Editorial Board

Danai Macridi/Tufts Daily

Somerville Mayor Joseph Curtatone last night challenged Somerville business owners to promote long-term growth at a business town meeting at the Somerville Theatre in Davis Square.

Inside this issue

Students are getting a chance to anonymously voice their perceptions about Tufts’ alcohol and drug culture in a confidential survey circulated this week by the university for use in future programming and policy decisions. A randomly selected group of 2,400 undergraduates received requests via email to participate in an American College Health Association (ACHA) survey, which Director of Alcohol and Health Education Ian Wong said will provide a fresh look at how the university should address, among other things, education about the alcohol culture at Tufts. While the survey’s questions also address sexual health and violence, as well as dietary and exercise habits, Wong said one of the survey’s most important aims is giving the university a more accurate view of alcohol consumption and clearing up misconceptions about the drinking culture at Tufts. “It will tell us how many students are, and how many students are not, drinking on campus,” Wong said. The survey, which takes about thirty minutes to complete, is following up on

a census that the university circulated in the spring of 2009 to gauge sentiments about the same issues, according to Wong. The data collected in that original census have been especially influential in Wong’s approach to educating students, he said, citing specifically the information he received from the original census in his approach to dealing with students who have violated the school’s alcohol policy. “I was really looking at my data, and I was coming into my discussions and know[ing] that not everyone who might have an alcohol violation is … necessarily a problem drinker,” Wong said. The survey fits into coordinated efforts between Wong and the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate to run a campaign correcting students misconceptions of social norms relating to health on campus, according to Wong. Yulia Korovikov, a sophomore senator who is chair of the Senate’s Administration and Policy Committee, said the new data would provide a boost to the campaign. “It is an incredibly important survey,” Korovikov, who is chair of the Senate’s see SURVEY, page 2

Today’s sections

The crusade against obesity has led to a stigmatization of being overweight.

Despite some advances, diversity on television is sorely lacking.

see FEATURES, page 3

see WEEKENDER, page 5

News Features Weekender Editorial | Letters

1 3 5 12

Op-Ed Comics Classifieds Sports

13 14 17 Back


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