Q&A: New anthropology and WGSS professor Sarah Luna shares her interdisciplinary interests, goals see FEATURES / PAGE 2
MEN’S AND WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY
Jumbos set the pace at weekend meets
You better Believe it: Cher’s new album proves that she still has the chops see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 3
SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE
THE
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXVI, ISSUE 18
tuftsdaily.com
Tuesday, October 2, 2018
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Friends, family celebrate Jolie Dion-Gottfried’s life
by Jillian Rolnick
Contributing Writer
After Jolie H. Dion-Gottfried’s unexpected death on Aug. 7 in her hometown of Portage, Wis., friends and family gathered at a celebration of her life on Sept. 29 at the Interfaith Center. The celebration commemorated DionGottfried’s activism, passion for social justice and personality. Dion-Gottfried is survived by her mother, younger brother Sam, and many other members of the family. Sam Dion-Gottfried, her brother, remembered when his sister arrived at Tufts. “I just remember how much of a change in her life it was coming to Tufts and how amazing it was for her,” he said. Dion-Gottfried was passionate about social justice and involved in various clubs and activities around campus. During her time on the Hill, DionGottfried served as a tutor for Tufts Literacy Corps, a member of Tufts Freethought Society, and a leader for Conversation Action Faith and Education (CAFE), an interfaith, social justice pre-orientation program, according to the Portage Register and Humanist Chaplain Walker Bristol. Junior Salomon HerreraMontesdeoca, who worked with DionGottfried as a CAFE leader, shared his experience of getting to know DionGottfried. “When we were both CAFE peer leaders, during our training, we had an
activity where we all sat in a circle and questions were asked and we were asked to stand up if that question or scenario applied to us,” Herrera-Montesdeoca said. “Right after that, we were asked to pair up to discuss a couple things with each other and, as soon as whoever was leading the activity said that, Jo just stood up and ran over to me and said ‘Hey let’s talk.’” At the event, many attendees brought objects, such as books, flowers, pictures and cards that reminded them of DionGottfried. Dion-Gottfried, according to her friends, was a nurturing and loving person. “She was just so aggressively happy and enthusiastic when she was around people,” Herrera-Montesdeoca said. “Every time I would see her around we would just run at each other and hug one another.” Maya Velasquez, who had DionGottfried as her CAFE leader, also spoke to Dion-Gottfried’s character, citing the time Dion-Gottfried had brought Velasquez and her friends a box of food during the first week of school. “She was a really, really special person,” Velasquez, a sophomore, said. “She had so much love to give everyone. The last time I talked to her she called me a ‘radiant galaxy.’” Dion-Gottfried was also passionate about the Humanist community at Tufts, according to Bristol, who described how Dion-Gottfried would spend much of her time in the Interfaith Center,
COURTESY WALKER BRISTOL
A smiling Jolie Dion-Gottfried is pictured. often just dropping by to talk, relax or do work. “She gave so much energy, her and her peers who were the leaders in that group, trying to make it possible to capture the very complicated feelings that non-religious people might want out of a community,” Bristol said. “I was always very grateful for the energy she put into that.” Bristol added that Dion-Gottfried was enthusiastic about exploring and understanding other faiths and religions, citing that at one point, DionGottfried had a goal to visit a different religious community every week and
to compile a calendar that listed all the religious holidays for the month. “She cared a lot about the idea of going to new places and learning about communities different from her own,” Bristol said. Dion-Gottfried also often looked outside of Tufts to the broader community, according to Bristol. “She was a very giving person and someone who cared so much about justice and joining other people on whatever journeys they are going on,” they said. “She knew a lot of people and connected with a lot of people who weren’t necessarily part of the Tufts community.”
Pollsters discuss upcoming midterm elections, youth voting trends by Talia Protos
Contributing Writer
Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, director of the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) at the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life, and David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center, shared insights on current trends in youth voting at a panel entitled “The Midterm Elections and the Youth Vote” on Sept. 26 in the Alumnae Lounge. Tufts Democrats, Tufts Republicans, Tufts Cooperation and Innovation in Citizenship (CIVIC) and JumboVote co-hosted the event with Tisch College as part of a series aiming to galvanize the Tufts student body for the midterm elections, according to George Behrakis, president of the Tufts Republicans. He also moderated the conversation. Behrakis, a junior, began by asking about youth voting trends. Kawashima-
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Ginsberg responded that many political organizations, especially those that are Democratic or non-partisan, have seen an uptick in youth voting, and are consequently investing more in engaging young voters. Kawashima-Ginsberg went on to suggest ways to make sure young people are showing up to the polls, including through the implementation of automatic mechanisms for voter registration. Behrakis then asked if there were issues that particularly inspired young people, noting the youth-led response to the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. Kawashima-Ginsberg noted economic issues were especially important for young people with variations across racial groups. “What’s important varies by people’s background,” Kawashima-Ginsberg said. “For Hispanics, immigration was a top issue; for Asian-Americans it was
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education; for [African-Americans] it was race relations.” Young people are not only catalyzed by the issues, but the candidates themselves, Kawashima-Ginsberg said, noting that young liberals in particular have been energized by minority candidates. “I think it’s about being able to listen and reflect the priorities that actually come in an authentic way from young people, who often feel trivialized in political debate,” Kawashima-Ginsberg said. While pull factors this election cycle may be bringing young people to the ballot box, the current political system is still not entirely conducive to engagement, according to both Kawashima-Ginsberg and Paleologos. They noted that young voters feel alienated by the polarization between political parties. Paleologos cited a survey statistic showing that 60 percent of non-voters felt that neither major political party aligned with their views and that a third party should be introduced to American politics.
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Izzy Essman, a first-year who attended the discussion, said she thought Tufts political groups chose rightly to focus on the youth vote at this event. “I’m excited to see how these groups continue their voter outreach,” Essman said. “I would love to see them do more educational programming for voters who aren’t sure what the issues are or who they support. Making sure young people understand why they vote the way they do is just as important as getting them to vote.” In the remaining weeks before the midterm elections, the Tufts Democrats and Tufts Republicans, working again with CIVIC and JumboVote, plan to host a columnist from The Boston Globe to talk about the role of mass media in politics, as well as Beth Myers (J ’79), who served as both Mitt Romney’s chief of staff during his governorship and his campaign manager during the 2008 campaign, according to Behrakis.
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................2 ARTS & LIVING.......................3
FUN & GAMES.........................5 OPINION.....................................6 SPORTS............................ BACK