TfutsDaily11-20-2012

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THE TUFTS DAILY

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Tufts alumna Mitra was spirited fighter and healer by Jennifer

White

Daily Editorial Board

Tanya Mitra (LA ’10), whose joyful energy sparked team spirit at tae kwon do tournaments and whose nurturing personality bonded her to people and medicine, died suddenly at her home on Nov. 3. She was 24. At Tufts, Mitra double majored in biology and German while excelling on the pre-medical track. She was in her second year of medical school in Newark at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. Associate Professor of Biology Philip Starks, Mitra’s faculty advisor at Tufts, said that Mitra decided to become a doctor at a very early age and stood out because of her sincerity and determination in helping others. “My guess is that not too many of her medical school colleagues had tutored children and parents living in poverty or had volunteered with the aged since before their 12th birthday,” Starks said. “Tanya was a caregiver before she knew that her future job

Student grazed by car at Curtis intersection

The Department of Public and Environmental Safety issued a Pedestrian Safety Alert on Nov. 16 via email following the second of two studentvehicle accidents that have occurred in the last week and a half at intersections bordering campus. On Friday, a vehicle grazed a student at the intersection of Curtis Street and Curtis Avenue, according to the email. The student was uninjured. On Nov. 8, another student was struck by a motor vehicle at the intersection of Packard Avenue and Powderhouse Boulevard and seriously injured. The student is undergoing treatment at Massachusetts General Hospital. Both incidents occurred after dusk, according to Director of Public and Environmental Safety Kevin Maguire. The alert also provided tips for staying safe while walking around or near campus, which included wearing light-colored or easily visible clothing at night, establishing eye contact with drivers when crossing an intersection and being aware of traffic signals and crosswalks. According to Maguire, while motorists are more likely to suffer legal consequences in a pedestrian accident, the pedestrian is usually in more danger. “A pedestrian walking has much more to lose than a motorist driving,” Maguire said. —by Audrey Michael

TUFTSDAILY.COM

tuesday, november 20, 2012

VOLUME LXIV, NUMBER 48

Courtesy Nicholas Bayhi

Tanya Mitra (LA ‘10) brought joy and energy to the Tufts Tae Kwon Do team. She died suddenly at her home on Nov. 3. would require it.” Mitra was born in Morristown, N.J., and while growing up her family moved to other parts of New Jersey and spent three years living in India when Mitra was in middle school.

Matthew Davenport (LA’10), Mitra’s boyfriend, said it was her experience of witnessing widespread poverty and sickness in India that solidified her see MITRA, page 2

Where You Read It First Est. 1980

Johnnie’s Foodmaster closes all locations James Pouliot

Daily Editorial Board

The family-owned supermarket chain Johnnie’s Foodmaster earlier this month announced plans to permanently shutter its 10 locations, including the store on Alewife Brook Parkway in Somerville, a few blocks from Tufts’ Medford/Somerville campus. Although Whole Foods Market purchased the leases for six of the stores, and Stop & Shop another, Foodmaster has yet to find a buyer for the three stores located in Whitman, Lynn and on Alewife Brook Parkway. Whole Foods purchased the six leases at an estimated price of $30 million. The deal will bring the total number of Whole Foods stores in Massachusetts up to 26. The six stores, including one on Beacon Street in Somerville, will re-open following a period of renovation, according to Whole Foods Public Relations Manager for the North Atlantic Region Heather McCready.

“We don’t have the exact date, but we are projecting all of the stores will be open by the end of the fiscal year 2013, which ends at the end of September,” McCready told the Daily. The Foodmaster on Salem Street in Medford will be converted into a Stop & Shop by the end of the current year. The remaining three locations without a buyer are nonetheless scheduled to close by Nov. 30. The Alewife Brook Parkway location closed its doors for good this Sunday. Whole Foods did not purchase Foodmaster on Alewife Brook Parkway, which is located one mile away from the existing Whole Foods on Mystic Valley Parkway and 1.8 miles away from the Whole Foods at Fresh Pond. “There were a number of factors [involved in the decision], including size and proximity to an existing store,” McCready said. John DeJesus, the owner of see FOODMASTER, page 2

Senior awarded $8,000 ACE Fellows program for social media app looks to expand by

Menghan Liu

Daily Editorial Board

This month, senior Foster Lockwood was awarded $8,000 from the Paul and Elizabeth Montle Prize for Entrepreneurial Achievement for his messaging application Wyre, currently available on the iPhone and iPad. Lockwood, a computer science major and entrepreneurial leadership studies minor, applied for the Montle award after developing the pilot version of Wyre at the beginning of the school year. Wyre is described in the App Store as “a user-friendly messaging tool designed for fast and comprehensive communication,” and iOSnoops.com rated it five stars. The free app allows users to easily share “wyres” such as audio clips, video clips, YouTube videos, photos, in-app drawings, locations, contacts and calendar events. While many of these capabilities already exist on the iOS platform, Wyre fully integrates these options into one convenient location, Lockwood said. It also allows users to delete already-sent wyres from a receiver’s phone because all the data is encrypted and stored on a backend server rather than on the receiver’s phone, he added. “It’s often that we are translating our experiences into text,” Lockwood said. “The goal of Wyre was to make it equally accessible in any kind of medium.” He explained that the name Wyre was chosen ironically, since

wires are a very old technology for communication. The inspiration for the app came this past summer when Lockwood was trying to leave a voicemail for his girlfriend and began to wonder if there was an app for easily sending someone an audio message. From there, the idea moved beyond simply text and audio, he said. “It’s not a novel idea,” Lockwood said, acknowledging that he found inspiration in popular apps like WhatsApp, which allows users to send each other texts, photos, videos and locations. However, Lockwood believes such apps are still too focused on texting. “People are looking for alternatives,” he said. Last week, over 1,100 users around the world had signed up for Wyre, and over 500 of them were verified and active, according to Lockwood. Senior Brad DeBattista, a friend of Lockwood’s, was one of Wyre’s first users. DeBattista beta tested the app before it moved to the App Store, helping to brainstorm new features such as sharing calendar events. “Some of these things you can already do through plain old iPhone, but it’s very involved, it’s too many clicks, it’s not readily available,” DeBattista said. “I think Wyre is really good because it takes all of the capabilities that you have, and maybe didn’t even know you had, in your phone and puts it all

Inside this issue

see WYRE, page 2

by

Martha Shanahan

Daily Editorial Board

In a pilot program finishing its first semester, students known as Academic and Community Engagement (ACE) Fellows are serving as academic and social mentors meant to ease new students’ transition to Tufts and connect them to the world outside their dorm rooms. Run jointly by the Dean of Undergraduate Education’s office and the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service, the ACE

Fellows program this year placed one upperclassman student in each of four residence halls, providing freshmen and sophomores with academic, social and extracurricular guidance as needed. “They operate as role models in the residence halls,” Associate Dean for Orientation and Student Transition Laura Doane, who directs the program, said. “They’re not RAs [resident assistants] and they’re not tutors. They’re sort of combining aspects of both see FELLOWS, page 2

Annie Wermiel / Tufts Daily Archives

After a successful pilot semester, the Academic and Community Engagement Fellows program is now accepting applications for next year’s fellows.

Today’s sections

Bias incidents on campus can be reported and handled in multiple ways.

Brian Eno’s latest album, “Lux,”S is pleasantly unpredictable.

see FEATURES, page 3

see ARTS, page 5

News Features Arts & Living Comics

1 3 5 7

Editorial | Op-Ed Op-Ed Classifieds Sports

8 9 10 Back


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