2011-04-28

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Thunderstorms 67/55

THE TUFTS DAILY

TUFTSDAILY.COM

Thursday, April 28, 2011

VOLUME LXI, NUMBER 57

Where You Read It First Est. 1980

Social action class protests plastic bag use on campus by

Rachel Rampino

Daily Editorial Board

Student environmental activists gathered yesterday in various areas on campus to protest Hodgdon Good-toGo’s use of plastic bags and to garner student support for the effort to abolish them. “We’re trying to ban plastic bags at Tufts; they’re found in too much abundance on this campus,” junior Alisha Sett said. The students, part of a Tufts class called Environmental Justice and U.S. Literature, are looking to lead a charge to reduce plastic waste on campus. The students held their protests on the Tisch Library patio, on the Mayer Campus Center upper patio, and in the Dewick-MacPhie and Carmichael Dining Halls, using displays consisting of posters and plastic bags to grab attention. The students also collected signatures on a petition asking the Tufts Community Union ( TCU) Senate to assist in banning plastic bags from Hodgdon Good-to-Go, Sett said. “We’re starting with Hodgdon, a place people go all the time,” Sett said. “People pick up a Gatorade, throw it in a plastic bag and walk out — there’s no need for it, no point.” Freshman Rahiel Tazele signed the petition outside of Tisch. “We don’t need them; it’s an unnecessary waste of a plastic bag,” she said.

“I can just carry the food myself.” The class hopes to educate students and also encourage behavioral change, Sett said. “We’re first educating people that they’re using all these plastic bags … where they [are] going and who are they’re affecting. It’s not only people far away … but also very close to here,” Sett said. “It’s educating people that Tufts has a big impact on a daily basis.” Sett said she hopes the petition will encourage the Senate to write a resolution in support of their cause, she said. The class has already collaborated with students who have lobbied the Senate on the use of plastic bags on campus. “We’re partnering with people who have been working with the [TCU] Senate on this for a long time to help spur momentum,” Sett said, adding that she considered today’s effort a success. “We’ve had a lot of people come up and sign the petition,” she said. The movement represents the final class project of the students in the Environmental Justice and U.S. Literature course taught by Professor of English Elizabeth Ammons. Students are given free reign to choose the focus of the project, Ammons said. “The class ends with student-conceived and -organized social action. see PLASTIC BAGS, page 2

courtesy Brad DeBattista

Students gather on the roof of Tisch Library last year to celebrate April 20, during which participants traditionally smoke marijuana.

Students question TUPD’s unexpected 4/20 response by

Martha Shanahan

Daily Editorial Board

Students present on the roof of Tisch Library last Wednesday, an unofficial holiday to celebrate marijuana culture, have raised questions as to why Tufts University Police Department (TUPD) this year responded more vigilantly than they could remember in years past to students smoking marijuana. According to TUPD Capt. Mark Keith, TUPD officers aimed to pursue mari-

juana smokers more persistently after having just that day learned of the tradition of gathering at midnight and 4:20 p.m. on the holiday. Keith said that while TUPD has been aware for several years of the April 20 tradition and had stationed officers across the campus in response, it had not generally collected IDs or apprehended students specifically at a midnight or 4:20 p.m. gathering. see 4/20, page 2

Recent Yale death triggers machine safety re-evaluation by Jenny

White

Daily Editorial Board

Danai Macridi/Tufts Daily

As part of an environmental justice course, students yesterday collected signatures for a petition encouraging a ban of plastic bags at Hodgdon Good-To-Go.

Inside this issue

The recent death of a Yale University student in a university laboratory has prompted institutions nationwide to reassess machine shop safety protocol. For its part, Tufts officials remain confident that its existing safety policies will guard against such tragedies on the Medford/Somerville campus. Yale senior Michele Dufault died April 12 while using a machine in a chemistry laboratory. An investigation determined Dufault’s death was caused by asphyxiation after her hair became caught in the fastspinning components of a lathe, a machine that shapes material, such as wood or metal, and choked her to death. According to various news reports, the Yale accident occurred around 2 a.m., when Dufault was alone in a campus lab. The university is now conducting a review of its machine safety procedures and policies. In the wake of the incident, Tufts has determined its own current safety policies, which impose strict regulations on student machine use, to be sufficient precautions for its on-campus machine shops. “Tufts has a very good record on student injuries associated with shop work,” Stephen Larson, director of Tufts Environmental Health and Safety (TEHS) said. “One of the reasons there hasn’t been a fatality or life-

changing injury has to be more than luck. Tufts buys good equipment, trains faculty, staff and students, sets up shops correctly, and … we’re not allowing students to work alone.” The Yale tragedy has prompted Tufts administrators to ask departments to reexamine safety protocols. “The senior administration and academic administration asked me to review what’s happening today with respect to shop safety in Medford,” Larson said. “We reviewed and discussed with shop supervisors. We made clear what each supervisor and department is doing in terms of safety.” TEHS staff, Larson said, conduct routine inspections of each campus machine shop and laboratory at least once per year. There are three machine shops on the Medford/Somerville campus. The Bray Laboratory Building’s machine shop is the only one open to students. The remaining two — a small shop that belongs to the theater department and one located in the Science and Technology Center (Sci-Tech) — may only be operated by professional machinists. Access to the Bray Machine Shop is limited to daytime hours, and machine shop coordinator Jim Hoffman monitors each machine. A variety of Jumbos, including undersee MACHINES, page 2

Today’s sections

Newsweek says over a third of Americans would fail the citizenship test — how do Tufts students stack up?

The ninth annual Boston independent film festival is upon us and the Daily has your guide.

see FEATURES, page 3

see WEEKENDER, page 5

News Features Weekender Editorial | Letters

1 3 5 10

Op-Ed Comics Sports Classifieds

11 12 15 19


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2011-04-28 by The Tufts Daily - Issuu