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THE TUFTS DAILY
TUFTSDAILY.COM
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
VOLUME LXV, NUMBER 1
Where You Read It First Est. 1980
New Digital Library Student hikers rescued in New interface updates Hampshire mountains organizational features by Jenna
Buckle
Daily Editorial Board
Tufts Digital Collections and Archives collaborated with University Information Technology Educational and Scholarly Technology Services (UIT ESTS) to launch a new user-friendly interface for the Tufts Digital Library, an online service for sharing resources related to Tufts. The collection, found at dl.tufts.edu, includes student and faculty scholarship as well as historical materials associated with Tufts, such as photographs, old issues of the Tufts Daily and audio recordings of broadcast journalist Edward R. Murrow’s radio show, according to Digital Resources Archivist Deborah Kaplan. Although Digital Collections and Archives and UIT ESTS had been discussing the redesign for several years, the interface only took one year to create, Director and University Archivist Anne Sauer said. “We had a period of very intense design and planning by
Annabelle Roberts
Daily Editorial Board
meetings in the spring and early summer, and since then it’s been focused on the development side of the work,” she said. “This was a major undertaking, and the fact that we were able to get it done in a year took a lot of hard work from a lot of people.” The new interface was designed using Hydra, a system that will make it easier for viewers to search, add and organize new materials, according to Kaplan. As Hydra is an open source project, the Tufts collections are now public and globally accessible, she said. “Hydra was used partly because it is so easy, and partly because it was something that our peers were using that was easy to use and that we could see was going to have continuing support,” Kaplan said. The old interface was custom-designed using Java and coded entirely from scratch, Director of Education and Scholarly Technology Services Gina Siesing said. Although see DIGITAL, page 2
Obama nominates Tufts professor for U.S. chemical safety board by
Daniel Gottfried
Daily Editorial Board
After being nominated by President Barack Obama to serve on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board on Sept. 20 of last year, Assistant Professor of Public Health and Community Medicine at the Tufts University School of Medicine Beth Rosenberg was officially confirmed to the position by the United States Senate on Jan. 1. Rosenberg will be leaving Tufts for five years to serve in Washington, D.C. and plans to return to campus at the end of her appointment, she said. She arrived in the nation’s capital earlier this week. “I am very sad to leave my home at Tufts,” Rosenberg said. “I was [at Tufts] for 15 years and there are many people in my department whom I love. I feel like I am going off on a big adventure, and I will come home in a few years,” Rosenberg said. The role of the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board is to
investigate industrial chemical accidents and to discover their causes, according to a mission statement on the board’s website. The board then makes safety recommendations with the hope of preventing future accidents. “One of the advocacy roles is to convince other agencies and other stake holders, whether it is the Occupational Health and Sa f e t y Administration (OSHA), or the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), or the National Fire Protection Association, or the chemical industry, about what steps need to happen next in order to prevent the incident from happening again,” Rosenberg said. After applying for the position, the process leading up to confirmation took about 10 months, according to Rosenberg. “To be confirmed felt exciting and a little scary, because I had been thinking for the last 25 years about what makes work places safe and see ROSENBERG, page 2
Six members of Tufts Mountain Club ( TMC) were rescued early Saturday morning after taking a wrong trail during their return hike down Mount Pierce in New Hampshire’s White Mountain National Forest. The New Hampshire Fish and Game Department dispatched a four-person rescue team after receiving a 911 call from the hikers at around 6 p.m. on Friday. Rescuers found the students at 2:30 a.m. on Saturday and guided them to safety. The hikers reached their car at 5:15 a.m. and returned uninjured to the Loj, TMC’s base camp in Woodstock, N.H., according to sophomore trip leaders Emily Melick and Glen Zinck. “It’s a wake-up call in terms of no matter how many times you go out into the woods to enjoy the outdoors, to go on these hikes, to go on these adventures, it doesn’t matter how experienced you are because you’re always going out into nature,” Melick said. The group’s excursion was one of many hiking trips that TMC oversees every weekend, according to TMC President Julia Ouimet, a junior. The club has nearly 580 members and regularly sends out hiking, kayaking and rock-climbing trips from the Loj. Ouimet said the incident see MOUNTAIN, page 2
Caroline Geiling / The Tufts Daily
Six Tufts Mountain Club (TMC) members were rescued from New Hampshire’s White Mountain National Forest during the early morning hours on Jan. 12 after taking a wrong trail while hiking down Mount Pierce.
Health Services out of flu vaccine After administering the flu vaccine to over 40 percent of full-time Tufts students and employees on the Medford/ Somerville campus last fall, Tufts Health Service announced that it ran out of the vaccination and will not be receiving any more this school year. According to Senior Director of Health and Wellness Services Michelle Bowdler, 3,000 Tufts community members received the vaccination at Health Service last semester. The vaccination is generally 60 to 85 percent effective against preventing the flu, Bowdler said. All of the students who were diagnosed with the flu while at Tufts last semester had not been vaccinated before falling ill, she explained. Although this year’s flu outbreak came earlier and with greater intensity than usual, it is no more threatening than it had been in past years, Medical
Inside this issue
enough sleep and staying home when one experiences a fever or flu-like symptoms. The most common symptoms include fever, body ache, headache and severe cough. The flu can be particularly dangerous for those suffering from chronic medical problems such as bad asthma and those taking immune-suppressing medication, Higham said. Bowdler said that the outbreak should not cause excessive anxiety because so much of the Tufts community has received the vaccination. “If you have a small community and a huge percentage of the community is protected, it seems likely that not only will this be helpful to those who are vaccinated, but also to those who have not been vaccinated,” she said. “We can hope that less will spread to them.”
Director of Tufts Health Service Margaret Higham said. “It’s not any different from the flu we’ve been seeing in the past couple of years,” she said. “It’s not the [Influenza A] H1N1 [virus], not some new strain.” The Boston Globe reported in a Jan. 11 article that over 750 cases have been found within the city so far this season, a number significantly higher than the 70 that had been confirmed at this time last year. However, Boston Mayor Thomas Menino’s declaration of a flu emergency in the city of Boston was mostly an attempt to mobilize efforts to acquire more vaccinations and make citizens aware of preventative measures, Higham said. According to a Jan. 10 blog post by Higham on the Tufts Emergency Preparedness website that was linked to in an email to the Tufts community, preventative measures include proper hand washing, getting
—by Xander Landen and Justin McCallum
Today’s sections
Get to know two members of the Class of 2017 before they head to the Hill.
Jessica Chastain carries “Zero Dark Thirty’s” monumental story.
see FEATURES, page 3
see ARTS, page 6
News Features Arts & Living Editorial | Letters
1 3 5 8
Op-Ed Comics Classifieds Sports
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