Tufts University

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Tufts University

Motto: Pax et Lux
(Peace and Light)
Established 1852
Type: Private
Endowment: $1.5 billion USD
President: Lawrence S. Bacow
Provost: Jamshed Bharucha
Faculty: 583
Undergraduates: 4,900
Postgraduates: 4,300
Location Medford/Somerville, MA, USA
Campus: Urban/Suburban
Colors: Brown and blue
Mascot: Jumbo
Affiliations: NESCAC
Website: www.tufts.edu
Tufts logo

Tufts University is a private research university in Medford/Somerville, Massachusetts, suburbs of Boston. The school emphasizes public service in all disciplines[1] and is well-known for internationalism and its study abroad programs.[2] The university is home to the nation's oldest graduate school of international relations, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

In 1852, Tufts College was founded by Universalists who had for years worked to open a non-sectarian institution of higher learning.[3] Charles Tufts donated the land for the campus on Walnut Hill, the highest point in Medford. Tufts said that he wanted to set a "light on the hill." Originally affiliated with the Universalist Church, Tufts is now non-sectarian. The name was changed to "Tufts University" in 1954, although the corporate name remains "the Trustees of Tufts College."

In the late 1970s, the French-American nutritionist Jean Mayer became president of Tufts and, through a series of rapid acquisitions, transformed the school from a small liberal arts college into an international research university.[4]

Contents

Seal of Tufts College, c. 1943
Seal of Tufts College, c. 1943

Charles Tufts was the donor of the land the university now occupies on the Medford-Somerville line. The twenty-acre plot, given to the Universalist church on the condition that it be used for a college, was valued at $20,000 and located on one of the highest hills in the Boston area, Walnut Hill. In 1852, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts chartered Tufts College. Having been one of the biggest influences in the establishment of the College, Hosea Ballou II became the first president in 1853.

P.T. Barnum was one of the earliest benefactors of Tufts College, and the Barnum Museum of Natural History was constructed in 1884 with funds donated by him. On April 14, 1975, fire gutted Barnum Hall; the collection housed in the building was completely lost, including numerous animal specimens, Barnum's desk and bust, and the stuffed hide of Jumbo the elephant.

On July 15, 1892, the Board of Trustees voted to admit women to Tufts College.[2]

The university soared to new heights under the presidency of Jean Mayer (1976–1992). Mayer was, by all accounts, some combination of "charming, witty, duplicitous, ambitious, brilliant, intellectual, opportunistic, generous, vain, slippery, loyal, possessed of an inner standard of excellence, and charismatic".[5] Mayer established Tufts' veterinary, nutrition, and biomedical schools and acquired the Grafton and Talloires campuses, at the same time lifting the university out of its crippling financial situation.

Financially, the university has received the three largest donations in its history during 2005 and 2006. On 4 November 2005, eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and his wife Pam donated $100 million to Tufts to establish the Omidyar-Tufts Microfinance Fund.[6] On 12 May 2006, Jonathan Tisch gave $40 million to endow the University College of Citizenship and Public Service, which now bears his name.[7] The veterinary school was named in honor of William S. Cummings after a $50 million donation to the school in 2005. On September 4, 2007, it was announced that Steve Tisch had donated $10 million to support a $30-million athletics and fitness facilities expansion planned to begin in late 2008. In addition, the Jaharis Family Foundation donated $15 million to renovate the Sackler Center for Health Communications and build a new campus center for the Boston campus and medical school.[8]

On 3 November 2006, Tufts officially launched a capital campaign entitled Beyond Boundaries with the intent of raising $1.2 billion and fully implementing need-blind admission.[9]

On 12 December 2006, it was reported nationally (via the Associated Press) that a controversy had erupted on the Tufts undergraduate campus regarding two anonymous articles published in the conservative undergraduate publication The Primary Source.[10]

In August 2006, Tufts subsidy TUDC LLC and development partner Hines Interests LP secured approval to build a 621-foot tower atop Boston's South Station. The complex, designed by César Pelli, was conceived by Jean Mayer in 1991 as a medical research hub. Construction is expected to begin in late 2007 and is an example of transit-oriented development.[11][12]

The President's Lawn on the Medford campus
The President's Lawn on the Medford campus
Oft-cited view of Boston from the public area on the Tisch library roof
Oft-cited view of Boston from the public area on the Tisch library roof

  • Tufts has a satellite campus in Talloires, France at the Tufts European Center, a former Benedictine priory built in the 11th century. The priory was purchased in 1958 by Donald MacJannet and his wife Charlotte and used as a summer camp site for several years before the MacJannets gave the campus to Tufts in 1978. Each year the center hosts a number of summer study programs, and enrolled students live with local families. The site is frequently the host of international conferences and summits.

Tufts employs 3,500 people with 8,500 students from across the United States and more than 100 countries attending classes on the university's three campuses in Massachusetts (Boston, Medford/Somerville and Grafton) and one in Talloires, France. In addition, the university is affiliated with the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the New England Conservatory of Music.

Tufts is ranked 28 in the "National Universities" category of the America's Best Colleges 2008 list by U.S. News & World Report. The institution is also categorized as a "Doctoral/Research Extensive" institution by the Carnegie Foundation.

In the Princeton Review's 2006 Best 361 Colleges, Tufts was named #7 in a list of the 20 schools in the country where students are happiest, and #17 in a list of the 20 schools in the country with the best food.

Tufts accepted 28% of applicants to its Class of 2011. The middle fifty-percent of enrolled freshmen scored between 1340 and 1490 on the SAT and ninety-percent ranked in the top 10% of their high school class.

In selecting its most recent freshmen class, Dean of Arts and Sciences Robert Sternberg added experimental criteria to the application process for undergraduates to test "creativity and other non-academic factors." Calling it the "first major university to try such a departure from the norm", Inside Higher Ed also notes that Tufts continues to consider the SAT and other traditional criteria.[13][14]

Tufts University comprises eight schools including [15] :

Each school has its own faculty and is lead by a dean appointed by the president and the provost with the consent of the board of trustees (formally the Trustees of Tufts College).

The School of Arts and Sciences and the School of Engineering are the only schools that award both undergraduate and graduate degrees. The Jackson College for Women, established in 1910 as a coordinate college adjacent to the Tufts campus, was integrated with the College of Liberal Arts in 1980, but is recognized in the formal name of the undergraduate arts and sciences division, the "College of Liberal Arts and Jackson College". The campus land that was Jackson College is in the city of Somerville. Undergraduate women in arts and sciences continued to receive their diplomas from Jackson College (not Arts and Sciences) until 2002.

The Fletcher School, the School of Medicine, the Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, the School of Dental Medicine, the Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, and the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine are exclusively graduate and professional schools. All of these schools, with the exception of dental medicine, award the Ph.D.

The Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service was founded in 2000 "to educate for active citizenship" with the help of a $10 million gift from eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and his wife Pam. In 2006 the school was renamed after a $40 million dollar gift from Jonathan Tisch. It has been called the "most ambitious attempt by any research university to make public service part of its core academic mission."[16] Unlike the other seven schools, Tisch College does not grant degrees. Instead, the college facilitates and supports a wide range of community service and civil engagement programs, research and teaching initiatives involving students, faculty, staff, and alumni across the university.

Under the purview of the School of Arts and Sciences is the Experimental College, a non-degree granting entity created in 1964 as a proving ground for innovative, experimental, and interdisciplinary curricula and courses. By far, the most successful component of the Ex College is EPIIC, a year-long program begun in 1985 to immerse students in a global issue, culminating in an annual symposium of scholars and experts from the field.

A fixture on the Medford campus is a replica of a cannon taken from the deck of the USS Constitution, donated to the university by the city of Medford in 1956.[17] Since 1977, it has been used by student groups and individual students who paint advertisements, political statements, birthday greetings, and other messages on the cannon under the cover of night. Painting the cannon is a competitive activity; students must guard their handiwork or risk of having their message painted over by a rival group before dawn.[18]

Football players pose with Jumbo in 1935. Jumbo was destroyed by fire in 1975.
Football players pose with Jumbo in 1935. Jumbo was destroyed by fire in 1975.

The Tufts school mascot is Jumbo the elephant, in honor of a major donation from circus owner P.T. Barnum in 1882. While Barnum gave the skeleton of the animal to the American Museum of Natural History, the stuffed remains of Jumbo were put on display in the basement of Barnum Hall until the building burned down in 1974. The alleged ashes of Jumbo currently reside in a peanut butter jar in the athletic director's office. A large plaster-statue elephant, Jumbo II, now sits on the academic quad.

The Leonard Carmichael Society is the largest student group at Tufts, an umbrella organization for community and public service projects. LCS is comprised of a volunteer corps of over 1,000 and a staff of eighty-five.

Tufts Homecoming
Tufts Homecoming
  • The Naked Quad Run takes place just before fall finals, where several hundred students unwind by stripping and running circuit around the Rez Quad. Most students run naked, but some wear costumes such as capes or shrink wrap.
  • A concert known as Spring Fling takes place in the spring semester immediately before final exams on the President's Lawn; acts over the past several years have included The Roots, Less than Jake, and Tufts alumni Guster. 2007 featured Lupe Fiasco, Spoon and T.I.
  • The night before Spring Fling, the Tuftonia's Day fireworks take place on the Rez Quad.
  • The Tufts Mountain Club famously "pumpkins" the campus on the night before Halloween, placing pumpkins in prominent and increasingly absurd locations such as atop buildings and statues. Although the ritual is over 75 years old, the TMC has never officially taken credit for it.

Tufts Athletics' logo features campus mascot Jumbo.
Tufts Athletics' logo features campus mascot Jumbo.

Tufts is a member of the Division III National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC), which includes Amherst, Bates, Bowdoin, Colby, Connecticut College, Hamilton, Middlebury, Trinity, Williams, and Wesleyan. Tufts does not offer athletic scholarships. Men's and women's squash and coed and women's sailing are the only Division I sports at the school.

The Tufts football program is one of the oldest in the country. The 1,000th game in team history was played during the 2006 season. Historians point [3] to a Tufts versus Harvard game in 1875 as the first game of College Football between two American colleges using American football rules [19].

In 2007, Tufts men's lacrosse made their first appearance in the NCAA Division III Men's Lacrosse Tournament in 2007, making it to the second round before losing to Gettysburg College. In addition, the Jumbos had the best regular season NESCAC record, earning the first seed in the NESCAC tournament. Also in 2007, Women’s softball won the NESCAC Championship and advanced to the final of the 2007 NCAA Div. III Softball New England Regional Tournament.

Tufts Sailing has a long history of success. The team won the 2001 Intercollegiate Sailing Association (ICSA) Dinghy National Championship and also won more championships in the 1990s than any other team. 2007´s snipe class world champion Tomas Hornos belongs to the class of 2010 and is a member of the co-ed team.

Men's Squash maintains a top 20 Division I national ranking and Women’s tennis has made the NCAA Division III tournament seven years in a row. [20]

Tufts Baseball has had 15 players reach the majors, including Heinie Stafford, Hod Ford, & Bill Morrell [4]

In 1943, the Boston Red Sox used the Tufts athletic facilities during spring training due to gasoline rationing limiting the team's travel. [5]

  • Tufts Daily, the daily student newspaper and the most prominent source of news for the last two decades; the Daily is notable for its financial independence, receiving no funding from the student activities fee.
  • Tufts Observer, a weekly newsmagazine and the oldest student organization on campus, having been founded in 1895 as the university's first student newspaper.
  • The Primary Source, a journal of conservative thought.
  • Zamboni, a humor and satire magazine.
  • Tufts Traveler, a travel journal founded in 2005.
  • WMFO (91.5 FM Medford) is freeform radio operated by students and community volunteers since 1970; the station broadcasts 365 days a year and operates out of Curtis Hall.
  • TUTV, the campus television station, operated by Tufts students in partnership with the Ex College.
  • JumboCast, a student-run broadcast group that specializes in streaming Tufts events live over the internet via webcast.
  • Hemispheres, since 1976 one of the few undergraduate journals dedicated to international relations in the United States.
  • Public Journal, an alternative literary magazine, founded in 2005, which focuses on publishing found literature.
  • Outbreath, a literary magazine which publishes short, fictional stories, photography, and one-act plays.
  • Melisma, a journal of independent music and culture founded in 2004.
  • Tuftscope, the interdisciplinary journal of health, ethics, and policy founded in 2001.

Esssence: A Tufts A Capella Group
Esssence: A Tufts A Capella Group

Tufts funds a number of student groups, and some 150 are recognized by the university. [21] Several groups became involved in 2006 political campaigns, with a number of members of the Tufts Democrats campaigning for Tufts alum Joe Courtney in his bid for representation of Connecticut's 2nd congressional district.[22] (Courtney won by 83 votes.)

Tufts is home to the only college mime performance troupe in the Northeast, Hype! Alumni of Hype! went on to found Boston mime group, Ellipsis.[citation needed]

Notable Tufts alumni include New Mexico Governor and Presidential candidate Bill Richardson, US Senator from New York Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Maxine Kumin, television personality Meredith Vieira, eBay founder Pierre Omidyar, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, lawyer and statesman John G. Sargent, Actress Amisha Patel and Nobel laureate Roderick MacKinnon.

Notable Tufts academics include philosopher Daniel C. Dennett (active), Nobel Prize recipient Allan M. Cormack (deceased) and Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Martin J. Sherwin (retired).

  • Hannah, the heroine in Curtis Sittenfeld's second novel, The Man of My Dreams, goes to Tufts. Interestingly, the heroine in Sittenfeld's first novel, Prep, was rejected from Tufts.
  • Pete and Berg, the lead characters in the sitcom Two Guys and a Girl met as undergraduates at Tufts.
  • The gate to the President's Lawn was featured in the opening credits of the sitcom Sabrina, the Teenage Witch.
  • Elaine Benes, played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus in the sitcom Seinfeld, mentions that she attended Tufts, and that it was her "safety school".
  • Large portions of Tufts' alumnus and bestselling author Darin Strauss's forthcoming novel, More Than It Hurts You, take place at the university.
  • Scott Adler, recurring character in Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan series. Eventual U.S. Secretary of State, Adler graduated first in his class at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.
  • In Daria, the title character goes off to attend fictional Raft College around Boston. Many Daria fans think that Raft may be a thinly veiled fictional version of Tufts.
  • Dr. Jordan Cavanaugh, title character from Crossing Jordan, played by Jill Hennessy, graduated from Tufts' medical school.
  • Amy Abbott on the WB drama Everwood was rejected from Tufts in an episode of the show.
  • Ken Erdedy, character in the novel Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace. It is likely that the fictional marijuana addict and resident of Ennet House attended Tufts University, evidenced among other things by the memorabilia in his household (p.25, 360, 362).
  • Dr. Jennifer Melfi, psychiatrist to Tony Soprano on The Sopranos graduated from Tufts Medical School.
  • Julie Merkel, a cutthroat prep school student in the film Cheats, a 2002 comedy starring Mary Tyler Moore, wants desperately to attend Tufts.
  • Kenny, a Stuckeybowl employee on the TV show Ed, graduated from Tufts (and, when asked about it by Ed, replied, "It's in Massachusetts").
  • Jenna Blake in the Body of Evidence mystery novels attends Somerset University, a fictional version of the Tufts campus.
  • Susan Silverman of Robert B. Parker's Spenser mystery series teaches at "Taft University", a thinly-veiled stand-in for Tufts, and Parker uses the Taft setting in several books.
  • Toyota ran an ad in the late 1970s/early 1980s that portrayed a student setting off for college in his new Toyota and driving cross-country from his home in Southern California. The ad finished with his triumphant arrival in front of Eaton Hall. For years, this commercial was shown before all campus movies.
  • Some outdoor footage of the Tufts campus was shot in fall of 1967 for the 1969 movie Charly starring Cliff Robertson and Claire Bloom. The movie is based on the short story "Flowers for Algernon" by Daniel Keyes and is about a slow man made into a genius — temporarily.
  • The indoor shots of the prom scene in the movie The Next Karate Kid were filmed in the Cousen's Gymnasium at Tufts.

  1. ^ Bacow, Lawrence S. "How Universities Can Teach Public Service." The Boston Globe. 15 October 2005.
  2. ^ Kantrowitz, Barbara. "America's Hot 25 Schools." Newsweek Kaplan College Guide.
  3. ^ Concise Encyclopedia of Tufts History [http://dl.tufts.edu/view_text.jsp?urn=tufts:central:dca:UA069:UA069.005.DO.00001&chapter=T00041 "Tufts University, 1852"
  4. ^ Gittleman, Sol. (November 2004) An Entrepreneurial University: The Transformation Of Tufts, 1976-2002. Tufts University, ISBN 1-58465-416-3.
  5. ^ Gittleman, Sol. "The Accidental President." Tufts Magazine, Winter 2005.
  6. ^ Hopkins, jim. "Ebay founder takes lead in social entrepreneurship." USA Today, 3 November 2005.
  7. ^ Tisch announces $40 million gift to Tufts University. Boston Globe. 12 May 2006.
  8. ^ E-mail sent from President Bacow to campus students, faculty and staff on September 4, 2007 at 1:18pm EST.
  9. ^ [1] Chronicle of Higher Education.
  10. ^ http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articles/2007/05/10/university_panel_says_student_parody_harassed_blacks/
  11. ^ http://media.www.tuftsdaily.com/media/storage/paper856/news/2007/03/16/News/LongAwaited.South.Station.Tower.Construction.Progresses-2778184.shtml
  12. ^ http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2006/06/29/south_stations_mega_makeover/
  13. ^ Jaschik, Scott (2006). A "Rainbow" Approach to Admissions. Inside Higher Ed, July 6, 2006.
  14. ^ McAnerny, Kelly (2005). From Sternberg, a new take on what makes kids Tufts-worthy. Tufts Daily, November 15, 2005.
  15. ^ of the Trustees of Tufts College, Article VI, sec. 6.1
  16. ^ Bombardieri, Marcella. At Tufts, civic engagement stretches across the globe. Boston Globe, 14 March 2004.
  17. ^ http://www.tufts.edu/home/timeline/html/1956-e-cannon.html
  18. ^ http://www.tufts.edu/alumni/magazine/winter2006/features/feature1.html
  19. ^ Smith, R.A. "Sports and Freedom: The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics", New York: Oxford University Press, 1988
  20. ^ http://ase.tufts.edu/athletics/default.htm
  21. ^ http://ase.tufts.edu/stu-org/
  22. ^ http://media.www.tuftsdaily.com/media/storage/paper856/news/2006/11/08/News/Jumbos.Work.Hard.To.Get.Out.The.Vote.Locally-2446153.shtml

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