Showers 47/31
THE TUFTS DAILY
TUFTSDAILY.COM
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
VOLUME LXV, NUMBER 18
Where You Read It First Est. 1980
Impeachment papers retracted, funds allocated for Spring Fling opening act The two Tufts Community Union (TCU) senators who last week filed papers with the Senate calling for the impeachment of TCU Treasurer Matthew Roy, a sophomore, have withdrawn their submitted papers in the interest of avoiding disrupting the upcoming budgeting season for student groups, which begins this week. Sophomore senators Jessie Serrino and Darien Headen, who submitted the papers last week, said they have no plans to resubmit any new calls for impeachment. The Senate at last night voted to revise its bylaws to clarify rules about releasing internal documents without the consent of the proper Senate authorities. The Senate also voted to amend its bylaws to reflect additional language clarifying Senate procedures in the event of any future impeachment proceedings. In the Treasurer’s report, the Senate allocated $45,000 to the Concert Board to hire talent for April’s Spring Fling concert. Concert Board has already hired the headlining band and plans to use these funds to book opening acts. The board has not yet released the names of the bands that will perform at the concert in April. The Senate allocated
the student group Tufts Association of South Asians $6,984 to send its Bhangra and Tamasha dance teams to competitions at other universities. Funds were deducted based on Senate precedent against paying for hotels, then partially re-added to cover food costs. Another student organization, Tufts Urban Policy, Planning and Prosperity, was allocated $68 from funds for new groups to cover advertisement and speaker fees for potential upcoming events. The Tufts Student Garden was granted $625 to host a sustainability and agricultural conference at Tufts. The Tufts chapter of the international organization Students for Sensible Drug Policy was allocated $350 to cover speaking fees for an event tomorrow featuring drug policy reform advocate Jack Cole, the former executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. The Senate allocated to the Tufts chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers $155.10 for a career path event to increase awareness of opportunities available to students after graduation.
—by James Pouliot
Nick Pfosi / The Tufts Daily
Winter Bash is currently under review by university administrators following “unprecedented” alchohol-fueled misconduct at this month’s event at the Westin Copley Place Boston Hotel.
Misconduct prompts plan for adminstrative changes to Winter Bash by Stephanie
Haven
Daily Editorial Board
A multi-department administrative review of Winter Bash will likely result in major logistical changes to the event in the wake of alcohol-fueled student misconduct at this year’s event. The review, conducted annually after most major campus events, has been underway since the Feb. 1 event at the Westin Copley Place Boston Hotel saw an unprecedented level of alcohol-related incidents, including public urination and over 15 students’ receiving treatment for exces-
sive intoxication, Dean of Student Affairs Bruce Reitman said in an email to the Daily. Several offices, including the Office for Campus Life (OCL), the Tufts University Police Department, Programming Board, the Department of Public & Environmental Safety, the Office of the Dean of Student Affairs and Event Staff will continue to re-evaluate the event’s purpose and develop plans to prevent such behavior at Winter Bash — and other campus-wide events — in the future. “What many o anticipation among the student body that the Winter Bash is a drinking
see WINTER BASH, page 2
Neighborhood fund awards grants to community nonprofits
TASA brings South Asian dance to Cohen
by
Xander Landen
Daily Editorial Board
Justin McCallum / The Tufts Daily
The Tufts Garba Team, also known as JumboRaas, performed Friday at the Tufts Association of South Asians (TASA) Culture Show this weekend in Cohen Auditorium. The show also featured pieces by the South Asian dance troupes Bhangra, Tamasha and Pulse.
Inside this issue
opportunity,” Reitman told the Daily in an email. “There has been talk of a change in the focus of the event to make it special again.” Reitman, in an op-ed piece submitted to the Daily explaining the review, cited students at the event who urinated and vomited in the hotel bathrooms and lobby, and behaved rudely to hotel and university staff at the event. He also placed blame on the “15 to 20” intoxicated students hospitalized at the event. “This year was kind of in shambles,” Programming Board
The Tufts Neighborhood Service Fund ( TNSF) in December awarded 32 grants, totaling over $20,000, to nonprofit community organizations surrounding Tufts’ Medford/Somerville, Grafton and Boston campuses. According to Assistant Director of Community Relations Susan Fuller-DeAmato, every year the Tufts Community Appeal gives staff and faculty members the opportunity to donate to various organizations including Tufts Financial Aid, charities of preference and the TNSF. The TNSF was established in 1995 and is made possible by these annual donations from Tufts faculty and staff. “It’s important for people to understand that it’s not the university giving away money,” Director of Community Relations Barbara Rubel said.
“This is people who work for Tufts putting their money into the fund. They appreciate that recipients are local and involved with the university.” Fuller-DeAmato said that in 2012 the TNSF received 49 applications. The number of applications matched 2011’s total, and the $20,380 available to give away was an increase from the 2011 amount of $19,500. The largest grant for the year was $2,000 to the Community Cupboard Food Pantry of the Unitarian Universalist Church in Medford for needs such as paying off increased operational and fuel costs in the winter months and accommodating a higher number of clients. Some other Medford/ Somerville organizations that received funds were Medford Family Resource Coalition, Community Action Agency of see COMMUNITY, page 2
Today’s sections
In the new installment of “A Taste of Tufts,” Nina Gerassi-Navarro gives her take on race and science.
The Bowdoin Polar Bears upset the Jumbos 60-54 in the NESCAC tournament quarterfinals.
see FEATURES, page 3
see SPORTS, back
News Features Arts & Living Editorial | Letters
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Op-Ed Comics Classifieds Sports
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