SERIES SPOTLIGHT
Women’s track and field races to top three finish at Bowdoin see SPORTS / BACK PAGE
‘Sex Education’ offers relatable glimpse into teenage years
Students, administrators offer feedback about Canvas see FEATURES / PAGE 5
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VOLUME LXXVII, ISSUE 5
tuftsdaily.com
Thursday, January 24, 2019
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Students share stories of resilience and hope at annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. celebration
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Martin Luther King Jr., speaking at the Washington Monument, is pictured. by Alejandra Carrillo Assistant News Editor
Disclaimer: Jesse Najarro is a former news editor for the Tufts Daily. He was not involved in the writing or editing of this article. Students, faculty and alumni gathered on Jan. 22 in Breed Memorial Hall to commemorate the life and legacy of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. by sharing stories of overcoming hardship and discrimination, both at and outside of Tufts. The event, titled
“A Single Garment of Destiny: Stories of Resilience and Hope,” draws its name from a King quote and was sponsored by the University chaplaincy. Grace Talusan, a lecturer in the English department, opened the event with welcoming remarks before introducing a time for student stories. The students recounted their experiences related to race, faith, hardship and family. First-year Kamar Godoy, the first student speaker, opened his speech with a quote from Dr. King, focusing on the faith and courage of the civil rights
activist. He recalled actively attending church in his hometown of Los Angelés, Calif., and his decision to continue strengthening his faith at Tufts by attending Mass on campus. “Faith is a cup, and it is a cup within you, and when I go to church it refills that cup with encouragement and refills that cup with the word … with everything that I need to get through the rest of my week,” Godoy, a first-year, said. Jesse Najarro spoke next, sharing the challenges he faced growing up as a Latino from an immigrant family. Najarro, a senior, spoke about the
lack of Latino representation in film and media and emphasized the exclusion and isolation he felt as a result. “I remember watching a movie called ‘Latter Days’ and the film is so sad and what made me sadder was that I couldn’t relate to some of the characters,” he said. “I was a Latino kid from a Central American immigrant family and I remember just crying and not understanding what I was going through.” Najarro concluded by describing how he has worked to find his voice in this environment. “I broke the silence and spoke my truth … little by little I have tried to build myself up,” he said. Senior Ashley Alphonse then spoke about her own experience overcoming sadness. Dedicating her speech to her mother, she detailed the overwhelming grief her family felt after her father’s passing and her admiration for her mother’s strength. “Whenever I feel like I’m struggling and I really just can’t persevere, I think about how much she had on her shoulder and how much she had to do for us and how hard that must’ve been,” Alphonse said. Next, Xavier Brooks spoke about his father’s love for rap music and how it impacted the process of his father’s divorce. Brooks, a first-year, said that his father often hummed songs and spoke confidently, but during the divorce, he could not. “That was the first time where he has ever spoken to me and it looked see MLK DAY, page 3
Nadine Aubry named as new university provost by Zachary Hertz News Editor
Tufts has appointed Nadine Aubry as the university’s next provost and senior vice president. Aubry will begin as provost on July 1, according to a university press release provided to the Daily. “I am deeply honored and extremely excited to be named the next provost of Tufts, a premier university with superb students, prominent faculty, dedicated staff, and accomplished alumni,” Aubry said in a comment in the press release.
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Aubry will replace Deborah Kochevar, who served as provost ad interim following Provost David Harris’s departure last year to assume the presidency of Union College. Previously, Aubry served as dean of the College of Engineering at Northeastern University beginning in 2012, where she received the award of university distinguished professor in 2013. Before coming to Northeastern, Aubry was head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University. According to the press release,
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Aubry has valuable experience working to create a stronger and more dynamic academic program and nurturing interdisciplinary academics. “She has demonstrated an ability to build innovative academic programs, grow research, enhance academic quality, generate new resources, and create interdisciplinary programs bridging disparate areas of study,” the statement said. At Northeastern, Aubry spearheaded numerous initiatives, including the College of Engineering Diversity and Inclusion Council, which aimed to increase enrollment among under-
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represented minority students. In an interview with the Daily, she said that she also worked on creating a center for entrepreneurship education, encouraging students to use interdisciplinary methods to create new methods, ideas and products. Her academic research focuses on fluid dynamics and the modeling of complex flows using advanced decomposition techniques. For her contributions, Aubry was awarded the 2017 G.I. Taylor Medal from the Society of Engineering Science and
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................5 ARTS & LIVING.......................6
see PROVOST, page 4
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