Tuesday, April 26, 2016

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Alumni and Senior Awards honor service, leadership achievements see FEATURE / PAGE 4

MEN’S TRACK

Jumbos poised to win another NESCAC title this Saturday

A$AP Ferg’s ‘Always Strive’ a bizzare hopdgepodge of styles, moods see ARTS AND LIVING / PAGE 5

SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE

THE

INDEPENDENT

STUDENT

N E W S PA P E R

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXI, NUMBER 61

tuftsdaily.com

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

Linda Daniels hired as staff psychologist, liaison to the Africana Center a better understanding of the issues facing students of color and to create an environment that de-stigmatizes those seeking help for mental health issues and concerns. “As I fulfill my various roles at CMHS and the broader university community, I hope to serve as a role model for students who might be reluctant to seek mental health services,” Daniels wrote in an email to the Daily. “I also wish to foster RAY BERNOFF / THE TUFTS DAILY a campus culture Tufts Counseling and Mental Health Services’ newest counselor Linda Daniels in her office on March 7. that does not stigby Emma Steiner Health Services (CMHS) this semester. In matize individuals with mental health needs.” News Editor addition, Daniels will act as a CMHS liaison Daniels said that, as a Black woman, she to the Africana Center, and work on issues of can better understand the experiences of stuLinda Daniels, Psy.D. joined the team of diversity and inclusion at the university. dents of color than those who may not have staff psychologists at Counseling and Mental At Tufts, Daniels said she hopes to get had similar experiences.

“As a first-generation Black student myself, I ‘get it’ on a visceral level,” Daniels said. “My lived life as an African-American female in the United States (i.e. experience with micro and macro aggressions) is a shared experience between myself and other persons of color. Yet, while understanding the commonalities, I also respect the uniqueness of each person’s lived experience.” Director of the Africana Center Katrina Moore said that Daniels will be working together with the Africana Center on developing workshops and training for students and staff. “Since her arrival to Tufts, Dr. Daniels has extended her time and expertise to the Africana community in a variety of settings,” Moore said. “We are looking forward to building a strong relationship with Dr. Daniels as we work collectively to identify workshops and trainings that will address the concerns and needs of not only students of color but faculty and staff as well.” Daniels explained that prior to her work at Tufts, she spent 20 years as a psychotherapist in private practice working with individuals, couples and groups — many of whom were people of color or members of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning and Intersex (LGBTQI) community. According see STAFF PSYCHOLOGIST, page 2

Tufts EMT members celebrate program after 30 years of service by Isabel Banta Staff Writer

ALEX KNAPP / THE TUFTS DAILY

Jeffrey Cukor (A ’90) talks about his time as a TEMS member during the first years after its founding at the TEMS’ 30th anniversary celebration at 51 Winthrop on April 24.

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Approximately 30 current members of Tufts Emergency Medical Services (TEMS) and 10 to 15 TEMS alumni celebrated the program’s 30th anniversary on Sunday afternoon at the Breed Memorial Hall. The event, which celebrated the program’s history and accomplishments since its start in the 1980s, commemorated the roots of the program with photos and memories. Jeffrey Cukor (A ’90) opened the event by speaking about his experience as one of the first four original members of TEMS. A number of other alumni then spoke about their previous experiences on TEMS, followed by Cukor sharing photos of the program’s alumni. TEMS Medical Director Dr. Stacey Sperling then reminisced about the progress of the group and praised its success. She explained that some prospective students have said to her that the state of the TEMS program has been a determining factor in their college decision processes.The celebration was organized by TEMS officer Rosie Quinn, in conjunction with TEMS’ advisor Geoffrey

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Bartlett and Gina Regonini, the Shared Interest Group coordinator from the Office of Alumni Relations, Quinn, a junior, said. “The planning for this celebration began at the end of last semester with a brainstorm of the general format of the event …” Quinn told the Daily in an email. “Additionally, we were lucky to have input from a group of alumni in many of the logistic decisions in the planning of the event.” She explained that connecting with alumni, who represent the long history of the program, was a key focus of the anniversary. “I hope that the 30th Anniversary luncheon serves to create a stronger connection with our alumni base,” she explained. “I think it’s a shame that in our history thus far, we haven’t reached out to the alumni more frequently. They stand to serve as a tremendous resource to our current membership, and it was such a pleasure meeting those who were able to come on Sunday.” The inception of TEMS traces back to the fall of 1984 when founder David Levitt (LA ’88) noticed a lack of sufficient emergency

NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................4 ARTS & LIVING.......................5

see TEMS, page 2

OPINION.....................................8 COMICS.....................................10 SPORTS............................ BACK


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