The Tufts Daily - October 5, 2021

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THE

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXXI, ISSUE 14

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

tuftsdaily.com

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Tufts Hong Kong Student Association considers restructuring amid concerns of exclusivity by Flora Meng News Editor

The Tufts Hong Kong Student Association is actively considering restructuring its application process to be more inclusive and accessible to everyone in the Tufts community. According to HKSA President Josh Chung, the current application process takes into account applicants’ cultural background and connection to Hong Kong, which he acknowledges as outdated. Sophomore Samantha Chan explained that she was initially contacted by HKSA prior to arriving at Tufts and attended a meet-up in Hong Kong, where she was encouraged to apply for the club. However, after applying to HKSA this past semester, Chan was among many others who were not accepted into the organization. “I can’t exactly say for the club themselves because I’m not exactly sure what criteria they have in looking through the applications, but knowing some people who did apply at the

COURTESY JOSHUA CHUNG

Members of the Hong Kong Student Association are pictured on Sept. 28. same time as I did and didn’t get in as well, I can say that it’s quite competitive,” Chan said. Chan discussed why she thinks opening HKSA to more members is beneficial. “I have nothing against the application process or HKSA themselves, but I do think that it should be open to everyone,” Chan said. “I feel like not only

should it be just people that are from Hong Kong, it’s also a chance for other people to get to know about the culture and people from Hong Kong as well. So, I think it should be open.” Despite the application-based nature of the club, Chung explained that HKSA aims to reach students all around campus and described how HKSA’s

Clingan, Mbah drop threats, Tufts lodging permits pass by Yiyun Tom Guan News Editor

structure and application process differ from other groups. “[In some culture clubs], students … go through the application process for [an] E-Board [position], while other people are just general members who don’t really participate much in the general week-to-week planning of the club,” Chung, a junior, said. “However, HKSA members

are people who plan the club [events] … and then people who go to the events … they’re from the wider Tufts community.” Chung also explained that HKSA is currently discussing how to update its structure and application process, noting that many club members consider the current application process to be outdated and unfair. According to Chung, many club members are open to the idea of restructuring the club to create an executive board and a general membership base. “Some of them suggested a revamp of the application process, someone suggested to open the club [to all students] … as well as some compromise where [the club is] open … but you have to attend a certain amount of events,” Chung explained. “A lot of us suggested to structure our club like other culture clubs where … [there would be an] E-Board and then they would be having weekly meetings while the general club would be on the see HKSA, page 2

Diane Hessan talks the American electorate, political polarization by Amelia Colafati

Despite threats from city councilors, the lodging license renewal for 31 Tufts University properties in Somerville passed Somerville City Council’s Licenses and Permits Committee unanimously. The normally mundane annual license renewal gained attention when Ward 4 City Councilor Jesse Clingan and City Councilor-at-Large Will Mbah, who is also running for mayor, said during a Sept. 9 City Council meeting that they would oppose the permit renewals unless Tufts paid all of its dining workers summer wages. However, Clingan and Mbah later dropped their threats during the Sept. 22 meeting of the city council’s three-member Licenses and Permits Committee. Clingan does not sit on the committee. The three members of the committee, which includes Mbah, then voted unanimously to renew the permits, which will now go to a full vote of the city council to be approved.

Contributing Writer

MICHELLE LI / THE TUFTS DAILY

Dewick-MacPhie Dining Center, one of the dining locations on the Medford campus, is pictured. Before the committee voted, Rocco DiRico, executive director of government and community relations at Tufts, argued that city councilors did not have the jurisdiction to vote “no” on this issue other than for inspectional and operational reasons, and that if the lodging permits do not pass, many Tufts students living on campus would be forced to live off campus. At the Sept. 9 council meeting, Clingan expressed that Tufts does not do enough to support its dining workers.

“Tufts President Tony Monaco gets paid for three months of work $273,847, a Tufts Dining worker gets paid for three months of work $9,594,” Clingan said at the Sept. 9 meeting. “I can’t support an institution that doesn’t support its workers who were there for them through the pandemic when [the workers] would have to individually wrap every meal and deliver them to students. They went above and beyond and then they were treated like this.” see PERMITS, page 2

Diane Hessan (J’76), entrepreneur, researcher and author of “Our Common Ground” spoke over Zoom on Sept. 28 to the Tufts community about her work researching the true face of the American electorate. Sol Gittleman, the Alice and Nathan Gantcher university professor emeritus and Brighter World Campaign co-chair, led the discussion. “Something about the condition of this nation got to her a few years ago and led her in a somewhat different direction,” Gittleman said. “[She acknowledged] the nastiness of what was turning into political campaigns four, five years ago and decided that she wanted to do something about it.” That led her to recruit 500 voters of varying demographics from across the nation, meeting with them once a week for four years to get to know them and to understand their interpretation of politics. She sent them everything from video clips to surveys,

FEATURES / page 3

ARTS / page 4

SPORTS / back

A closer look into Tufts’ rare books

Sex Education is back in session

Men’s soccer: one weekend, two shutouts

VIA AMAZON

The cover of Diane Hessan’s book “Our Common Ground: Insights from Four Years of Listening to American Voters” is pictured. asking them to respond honestly and compiling the responses in “Our Common Ground,” as well as in a column in The Boston Globe entitled “Understanding the undecided voters.” One of Gittleman’s first questions related to the name of Hessan’s book. He asked if she ended up finding any common ground among voters. see POLITICS, page 2 NEWS

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