THE
INDEPENDENT
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N E W S PA P E R
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXXI, ISSUE 37
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
tuftsdaily.com
Tuesday, November 30, 2021
SCIENCE
3D-printing class pushes students to frontier of modern medicine by Avery Hanna
Contributing Writer
Among the 3D printers throughout the room, Vincent Fitzpatrick, a postdoctoral biomedical researcher at Tufts University, holds up a gray unassuming piece of plastic, crisscrossed with a cage-like structure. Hidden beneath a series of support structures that have yet to be removed, he explains, lies a perfect replica of a patient’s bone — assembled from data isolated from a CT scan so that it would have a Cinderella-like fit if surgically implanted. This is just one of the many models throughout the room that students in 3D Printing the Human Body — a new course in the biomedical engineering department — have created, and it represents just one way 3D printing has revolutionized and continues to redefine modern medicine. Fitzpatrick decided to teach the class when he noticed the lack of classes available for students interested in 3D printing. “The idea of the class is to cover as wide a range as possible
WILL FLAMM / THE TUFTS DAILY, COURTESY MICHELLE MA
A working 3D printer, 3D-printed tweezers and several skeletal models are pictured. of new technologies and applications of 3D printing in the medical field,” Fitzpatrick said.
What makes the course unique is the opportunity for hands-on work with a variety of bioprinters.
Kenann McKenzie named director of GLAD Center
Self-described “3D-printer-guy” Riley Patten, a teaching assistant for the class and a member of the
Contributing Writer
COURTESY ALONSO NICHOLS
by Evelyn Altschuler Contributing Writer
On Oct. 25, the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life announced that Kenann McKenzie, educator and civic leader, will direct the newly
created Generous Listening and Dialogue (GLAD) Center. The GLAD Center was established this May and intended to “serve as a hub and educational resource for the Tufts University community to promote authentic dialogue and
generous listening across differences.” McKenzie said that immigrating to the United States exposed her to the disparities in the country’s access to education see GLAD, page 2
see 3D PRINT, page 2
Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth discusses memoir, race, America in lecture by Maggie Monahan
Kenann McKenzie, program director of the GLAD Center, is pictured on Nov. 16.
Kaplan Lab, where Fitzpatrick also works, said the value of the course comes primarily from the 3D printing experience. “I remember it was always very scary to look at a 3D printer or a bioprinter and be like, ‘Well I have no idea how that works; I’ll do something else,’” Patten, a senior, said. “I think the goal is getting people comfortable looking at them and using them.” Because it’s the first year the class has run, Fitzpatrick has had to adapt the course as it unfolds. Though he initially expected moderate interest that would lead to a small class of between 10–15 students, he wound up with over 30. Patten said this presented additional challenges. “3D printing is a lot of sitting down next to each other and trying to figure out why [things] didn’t work,” Patten said. “It’s tough with a lot of people. We didn’t have that experience going in, but we’re figuring it out, and each week, we have a set plan of what we want to do. Usually [it] never works, but we’re figuring it out.”
The Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life hosted Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth on Nov. 17. She discussed the recent release of her memoir, a recent uptick in violence against Asian Americans and her experience during the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. She also brought to the discussion her story as one of the first women to fly combat missions while serving in the Iraq war, her experience co-founding the Senate’s first environmental justice caucus and her status as the first U.S. senator to give birth while in office. She began by telling the audience what motivated her to write her new book. “The book is really a letter to my daughters,” Duckworth said. “I’m just writing letters to my daughters explaining why America’s worth the sacrifice.” Duckworth lives the effects of the sacrifice everyday. She served
SPORTS / back
FEATURES / page 4
ARTS / page 6
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23 years in the military and she lost both legs when her helicopter was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade. “I started writing little paragraphs in my notes apps on my phone trying to explain to my daughter why it was worth it to go lose my legs [in combat],” Duckworth said. “As we were sitting around waiting for something, [my chief of staff] took [my phone] from me and said, ‘This is a book.'” At the lecture, Duckworth also touched on her reflections on race, having grown up as the daughter of a Thai mother and a white American father. She also discussed the intersections of the Black Lives Matter and the Stop Asian Hate movements. In one episode, Duckworth recalled being proud yet nervous for her staffers — many of whom were young Black Americans — who wanted to be involved in the Black Lives Matter protests of last summer. see SENATOR, page 3 NEWS
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