The Tufts Daily - Thursday, April 12, 2018

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ACCESSIBILITY AT TUFTS

‘A Quiet Place’ a silent hit see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 6

Tufts presents mobility, accommodation challenges for students with disabilities

Jumbos top podium six times in home meet see SPORTS / PAGE 10

SEE INVESTIGATIVE / PAGE 3 THE

VOLUME LXXV, ISSUE 48

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Katy Tur headlines Murrow Forum, encourages resilient, fact-driven journalism by Shantel Bartolome Staff Writer

Katy Tur, NBC News correspondent, MSNBC anchor and author of “Unbelievable: My Front-Row Seat to the Craziest Campaign in American History,” discussed contemporary media issues and the state of journalism at Distler Performance Hall in the Granoff Music Center yesterday. Tur is best-known for covering the Donald Trump presidential campaign for NBC News and MSNBC, as well as for receiving frequent, direct taunting from President Trump. Approximately 100 people were in attendance. The event was the 13th annual Edward R. Murrow Forum on Issues in Journalism, sponsored by the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life, the Film and Media Studies program and the Edward R. Murrow Center for a Digital World, according to the event’s program. The lecture is also part of Tisch College’s Distinguished Speaker Series. Tur was welcomed by University President Anthony Monaco and Julie Dobrow, a senior fellow for media and civic engagement at Tisch College.

In her remarks, Dobrow emphasized the importance of journalism. “We here at Tufts are honored to welcome you here today, not only because of your achievements, but also because your work has demonstrated the intelligence, the compassion and the commitment to journalism as a form of public service that we try to impart with our students,” Dobrow said. Neal Shapiro (LA ’80), former executive producer of “Dateline NBC” and current president and CEO of WNET, guided the conversation with questions. In her talk, Tur stressed the importance of good political journalism. “This job is really important. Informing people about the election; their candidates; how they should vote; giving them the tools to make the best decision they can make personally is one of the most important jobs we have in our democracy. Period, end of story. It is crucial,” she asserted. She explained that aggressive campaign supporters and President Trump’s personal attacks did not dissuade her from reporting the facts. see KATY TUR, page 2

Tufts China Care Club cancels LUX spring fashion show by Abbie Gruskin Staff Writer

Tufts China Care Club, a student-run club supporting foster care in China through the One Sky Foundation, the Family Village Program and the China Care Home, will not be holding its annual LUX Charity Fashion Show this April, according to Tufts China Care Club Fundraising Co-Chair Ada Huang, a sophomore. It is the first time in 10 years that this event has been canceled, according to Co-President Julia Bell, a senior. LUX was previously held every spring in Cohen Auditorium and featured Tufts students modeling various clothing brands, according to Bell. The event also served as one of Tufts China Care Club’s largest fundraising events, according to Huang. “LUX was our main spring fundraising event in the past as a charity fashion show with sponsors from the shops along Newbury Street,” said Huang. The fashion show generated awareness for the club, and all proceeds were donated to the OneSky Foundation, according

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Thursday, April 12, 2018

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to Tufts China Care social chair Hannah Shaich, a junior. “We have raised thousands of dollars for the OneSky Foundation and have changed the lives of many children in the Chinese foster care system,” Co-Presidents Julia Bell and Michelle Luo, a junior, said in a statement on Facebook last November. “With the funds provided by LUX, we have funded critical surgeries and placed children into permanent and loving foster families.” At the beginning of this academic year, however, members of Tufts China Care Club decided against continuing the annual fashion show, according to Bell. Shaich explained the reason for the change. “This change was [decided] because the club felt that LUX, although well known, was incredibly difficult to organize and set up,” Shaich told the Daily in an electronic message. “A lot of work and connections as well as personal investment of time would have to be done, and the club didn’t want to put that strain on someone.” see LUX FASHION SHOW, page 7

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Director of Women’s Center K. Martinez leaves Tufts after 11 months

RAY BERNOFF / THE TUFTS DAILY

K. Martinez, director of the Women’s Center, poses there on May 8, 2017. by Jenna Fleischer

Assistant News Editor

K. Martinez, the director of the Women’s Center, will be leaving Tufts on April 13. In their past 11 months as director, Martinez has spearheaded a number of changes and updates to the Women’s Center and overseen projects and programs on a larger scale. Martinez’s first order of business as director was to renovate the Women’s Center. “Luckily we had money in our budget, and I was able to use those funds to create a new aesthetic [in the Women’s Center],” Martinez said. “We changed the paint, the artwork, the furniture, and that was really big to change how people engaged with the space. I’ve heard nothing but really positive comments from people; they feel like it’s a really welcoming space.” Artwork in the Women’s Center features women of color, exposing students to images they might not often see on campus, according to Martinez. In this sense, Martinez emphasized that the Women’s Center seeks to be countercultural. “[With the makeover] I think we sent a message to the campus that we are really intentional with our space, what it looks like and what it feels like, and that we’re paying particular attention to people who don’t often see themselves elsewhere on this campus,” they said. Fatima Blanca Munoz, a staff assistant at the Women’s Center, stressed that Martinez has done important work not just for the Women’s Center, but also for the university as a whole. “I have been at Tufts for about 3 years now and I now see more and more students enter

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the space more than I did previously,” Munoz told the Daily in an email. “Almost every day, the center is packed with students from all genders and races.” Dean of Student Affairs Mary Pat McMahon echoed this sentiment. “During their time at Tufts, K. spearheaded a number of interdepartmental initiatives for the Office of Student Affairs, including working with the Provost’s Bridging [Differences] campaign throughout the 2017-18 academic year,” McMahon told the Daily in an email. “They also have overseen various projects and programs at the Women’s Center, including a highly acclaimed update to the Center’s space and the creation of programs like the P.O.C. Circle.” From personal experience and first-hand account, Munoz knows the impact Martinez has had on the Women’s Center as a space, as well as the students that inhabit it. “I have repeatedly heard from students that the Women’s Center is a place they feel most comfortable and I think that speaks to the hard work K has put into the physical transformation of the center and its intersectional programmings,” Munoz said. Martinez has made a lot of effort to go to people and tell them, “You are welcome at the Women’s Center.” “I’ve gotten to meet other students who haven’t had a relationship to the Women’s Center before, and they have been here for some time. Because of me, they have come here,” they said. “Something about what I’ve done and how I’ve done it has reached a new audience of people who have already been here.”

NEWS............................................1 INVESTIGATIVE....................3 ARTS & LIVING.......................6

see K. MARTINEZ, page 2

COMICS.......................................8 OPINION.....................................9 SPORTS.....................................10


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