TuftsDaily11-29-2012

Page 1

Sunny 41/26

THE TUFTS DAILY

TUFTSDAILY.COM

thursday, november 29, 2012

VOLUME LXIV, NUMBER 52

Where You Read It First Est. 1980

Tufts looks to improve pedestrian safety by

Nina Goldman

Daily Editorial Board

Tufts administrators are currently working with the City of Somerville to improve pedestrian safety at the intersection of Powderhouse Boulevard and Packard Avenue, where a student was struck by a car and seriously injured on Nov. 8. Immediately following the accident, the city added a radar feedback sign on Powderhouse Blvd., put pedestrian crossing signs in the intersection, updated the traffic light with LED technology to improve visibility and updated signage in the area, according to Somerville Director of Communications Tom Champion. “The City of Somerville is looking at that entire intersection, and we’re going to help them do that,” Tufts Director of Public and Environmental Safety Kevin Maguire said. “Somerville has been a very good neighbor with this.” Other improvements are yet to come, according to Maguire. The university has hired a traffic engineering consultant from Vanasse Hangen Brustlin Inc. to examine the intersections around the Tufts campus. “They will be looking at the intersections all around the perimeter of the Tufts campus, in Medford as well as Somerville,” Champion said. “Now we will be working with them to review and imple-

ment any recommendations they get.” Maguire said that Tufts is pushing the consultant to complete the pedestrian safety study within a month, but Champion said the factors that contributed to the Nov. 8 accident — important information for making future improvements — would not become clear until the Somerville Police Department releases an incident report. Somerville police are still investigating the accident, and they could not be reached for a comment. Improvements to the intersection following the accident come in addition to several updates that were made there last spring and summer, including a repainted crosswalk and double yellow traffic lines, as well as several new signs warning vehicles of crossing pedestrians and reinforcing parking laws. The city also cleared tree branches to improve visibility and replaced the faded signs at the intersection. “These changes were not to bring into compliance but to add additional margins of safety,” Champion said. The earlier improvements, although funded by the City, included input from the university as well, according to Maguire. “We worked directly with the City of Somerville to facilitate those changes,” he said. According to Champion, Somerville frequently consults see SAFETY, page 2

‘Fast Food Nation’ author speaks on food injustice by

Nina Goldman

Daily Editorial Board

Author and journalist Eric Schlosser discussed mistreatment of the poor laborers who power the food industry in a soldout lecture in Cohen Auditorium Tuesday night. The talk was part of Tufts Hillel’s Moral Voices Merrin Distinguished Lecture Series, which this year is focusing on food justice. Junior Rose Pollard, who chaired the committee organizing the program, introduced Schlosser by referencing the impact his 2001 book, “Fast Food Nation,” had on the rise of the food movement during the last decade. “This book helped start a revolution about how Americans think about what they eat,” Pollard said. However, Schlosser had not come to talk about organic food or abuse of livestock, although he acknowledged these as important aspects of food justice. “The injustices in today’s food system are merely symptoms, and they cannot be understood and they cannot

be changed without addressing the underlying problems,” Schlosser said. Schlosser’s focus throughout the talk was the racism, poverty and the unchecked corporate power surrounding the treatment of workers on the produce farms and in the slaughterhouses that feed America. “Discussions about sustainability usually neglect to mention human beings and human rights,” he said. “We have to ask ourselves as a society why is it we seem to care more about the animals we eat than about the poor people that feed us.” His concern with the abuse of food industry workers began in the early 1990s as Californian politicians were decrying undocumented immigrants as “parasites.” Schlosser started examining the role immigrants play in California’s economy, eventually following strawberry harvesters for a full year. “It totally opened my eyes to see where food is coming from,” he said. see SCHLOSSER, page 2

Courtesy Ethan Finkelstein

The confetti used at the parade appeared to be shredded police documents containing Social Security numbers and other classified information.

Tufts student discovers classified information in Thanksgiving parade confetti by

Martha Shanahan

Daily Editorial Board

The discovery made by freshman Ethan Finkelstein that shreds of highly classified police documents were used as confetti during last week’s Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade has prompted an internal investigation in the Nassau County Police Department and a review of how the department disposes of its documents. Finkelstein, who is from Manhattan and attends the parade every year, was standing with his family at 65th St. and Central Park West when a strip

of confetti paper landed on his friend’s coat. “On the block we were standing on ... someone was throwing all these white shreds of paper,” Finkelstein said. “It was everywhere, thousands of these pieces of paper.” Finkelstein said that one of the pieces that landed on another parade-goer caught his eye. “It said SSN, and there was a number on it,” he said. “We didn’t think much of it at first. We thought it was like a one in a million thing.” They picked up more of the pieces of paper and found more Social Security numbers, license

plate numbers, car descriptions, names of detectives in the Nassau County Police Department and the phrase “Romney motorcade.” “We didn’t know what to make of it at all,” Finkelstein said. Finkelstein and his family contacted a local New York television news station, WPIXTV, about the strips in the hope of bringing to light the story of how such sensitive information ended up flying through the air at the Macy’s parade. “We thought that maybe they would look into the story,” he said. WPIX reported Monday that see CONFETTI, page 2

Paperclip Challenge to kick off tomorrow Tomorrow, the Tufts Venture Fund and Entrepreneurs Society will hold the Red Paperclip Challenge for the first time. The 24-hour national event involves teams of up to five participants who begin the competition with a red paperclip and trade it up for more valuable items, according to Tufts Venture Fund Co-founder and senior Eric Peckham. The race will begin at the Mayer Campus Center at 6 p.m. Teams will then photograph their trades and post the photos to a running Twitter feed for the duration of the event, Peckham explained. Teams have to return by 6 p.m. the following day to showcase their final item to a panel of celebrity Jumbos, including famous professors, deans or well-known students like the president of the Tufts Community Union Senate, according to Tufts Venture Fund Co-founder and junior Alexandra Halbeck. “We’re working on putting together a panel of judges — fun people connected with Tufts in various ways,” Peckham said.

Inside this issue

The judges will determine which teams win prizes for the items that they bring back. “We’ll have a few different categories, like most ridiculous, biggest, most expensive, most impressive,” Peckham said. The challenge has no concrete rules and originality is encouraged, Halbeck said. “We just want people to get creative,” she said. “Entrepreneurship always seems so inaccessible and we just want to show people that anyone can have an idea and make something happen.” Junior Glendon Gong, who plans to participate in the challenge, expressed excitement about the opportunity to compete with other students who have similar entrepreneurial mindsets. “My team’s strategy is to be eager and persistent,” Gong said. “Some items could be seen as garbage in other people’s eyes, but it could be precious and a worthy trade to us.” “It’s a very interesting challenge and idea,” Gong added. “I can’t wait to collaborate with some of my best friends to try to do something impossible to unimaginable.”

The inspiration for bringing this challenge to Tufts was Entrepreneurial Leadership Program Director James Barlow’s experience with organizing a similar event at the University of Bristol in England. At the end of that event, one team came back with two live sheep and another brought back a kayak, Peckham said. “It’s a pretty grassroots effort in terms of us having just a bunch of students who got together and thought that this would be a fun idea,” he said. “The challenge has a goofy and adventurous spirit and that just fit with the spirit of our two organizations.” The Paperclip Challenge was first inspired by Canadian blogger Kyle MacDonald, who made 15 trades in one year, beginning with exchanging his paperclip and eventually ending up with a house. “We’re looking for creativity and wildness,” Halbeck said. “Our goal is just to get as many students as possible to meet up and exercise their entrepreneurial spirit.” —by Sarah Zheng

Today’s sections

The Tufts Venture Fund seeks to encourage new ideas and the development of student businesses.

Graffiti jumps from the streets to the galleries as the oncefringe art form rises in popularity.

see FEATURES, page 3

see WEEKENDER, page 5

News Features Weekender Editorial | Letters

1 3 5 10

Op-Ed Comics Classifieds Sports

11 12 13 Back


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
TuftsDaily11-29-2012 by The Tufts Daily - Issuu