After Parkland shooting, medical student Teron Nezwek and campus political groups mobilize against gun violence see FEATURES / PAGE 4
MEN’S LACROSSE
Jumbos maintain strong start to season with road win
‘A Wrinkle in Time’ fails to transport audiences see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 7
SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE
THE
VOLUME LXXV, ISSUE 32
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Wednesday, March 14, 2018
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WOMEN'S TRACK AND FIELD
MEN'S TRACK AND FIELD
Record-breaking Bowman wins Duvivier’s national title leads national championship in 5,000 Tufts to 13th-place finish at meters NCAA Championships by Sam Weitzman Sports Editor
Senior co-captain Brittany Bowman won the 5,000-meter race to lead the Tufts women’s track and field team to a tie for 11th place at the NCAA Div. III Indoor Track and Field Championships over the weekend. The two-day meet — hosted by Birmingham-Southern University and held at the CrossPlex complex in Birmingham, Ala. — featured athletes representing schools from all across the country. Last year, only two Jumbos made it to the national championships: Bowman and now-senior co-captain Annalisa DeBari. This year, Tufts tripled the size of its contingent, sending six women to vie in four events. Bowman lauded the efforts of her teammates, including Tufts’ four first-time qualifiers. “It was great to qualify six people, especially since for four out of [the] six of us, it was their first experience,” she said. “They
all earned the trip. They definitely were deserving of it.” Bowman added that the experience of going to Nationals should help the younger Jumbos in the future. “It was good for them to see what running at Nationals is like because it’s so different than regular season meets or even our New England postseason meet,” she said. “The level of competition is much higher, but also [there is more] pressure because you’re running on the national level. The whole country is watching.” The Jumbos competed in three different events on Friday, with the standout result coming in the 5,000 meters. Based on her previous performances this season, Bowman was seeded seventh. Among those ranked ahead of her was Ithaca senior Taryn Cordani, who won both the 3,000 and 5,000-meter events at last year’s indoor national championships. Cordani particularly excels in the 5K, as her time of 16:28.15 at the 2017 indoor championship meet is the third-fastest mark in Div. III see WOMEN'S TRACK AND FIELD, back
by Liam Finnegan Sports Editor
On Friday and Saturday, the Tufts men’s track and field team competed at the NCAA Div. III Championships held at Birmingham-Southern College in Birmingham, Ala. It was a strenuous weekend for the Jumbos, but the athletes competed at the top level and placed highly in their respective events. Led by a host of All-American performances, including a national title in the high jump for senior Stefan Duvivier, the Jumbos earned enough team points to tie for 13th place in the 66-team field. On Friday, the distance medley relay (DMR) team posted a superb performance, while Tufts’ runners faced strong fields in a pair of individual events. Junior Christian Swenson ran the first leg (1,200 meters) of the DMR and was followed by senior co-captain Drew DiMaiti on the 400-meter leg and sophomore Matt D’Anieri on the 800-meter leg. Junior Colin Raposo anchored the relay in the 1,600
meters. After qualifying for the race with a 10:00.62 mark (converted to 9:52.58) at the Tufts National Qualifying Meet, the team combined for a time of 10:00.49 to finish eighth in Birmingham. The topeight finish earned all four Tufts runners All-American honors. “It was very exciting to make AllAmerican in the DMR,” DiMaiti said. “It was a great group of guys, and we really left it all out there to place in what was a very competitive field.” Junior Hiroto Watanabe, a member of the DMR team who qualified for Nationals, did not partake in the event in order to focus on his individual race. Nonetheless, the Yarmouth Port, Mass. native did not miss out on All-American honors. Watanabe competed in the first qualifying heat of the 800 meters, grabbing an eighth-place finish with a time of 1:53.13 — only 0.10 seconds in front of the ninth-place finisher — to advance to the event finals on Saturday. Watanabe’s qualification earned him All-American see MEN'S TRACK AND FIELD, back
Fletcher alumnus Kingsley Moghalu campaigns for Nigerian presidency by Natasha Mayor News Editor
Kingsley Moghalu (F ’92), senior fellow in The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy’s Council on Emerging Market Enterprises, announced his campaign for the 2019 presidential election in Nigeria on Feb. 28. After 16 years of working for the United Nations and five years as the Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Moghalu was a professor of the practice at The Fletcher School from 2015 to 2017. Moghalu said that as a student, he had never considered going into politics. However, he credited his time as a professor at The Fletcher School as influential in his decision to run for the presidency. He said the class he taught at The Fletcher School, “Emerging Africa in the World Economy,” was made up of 30 students from diverse countries and career backgrounds. “That period in which I was teaching at Fletcher was a very important period
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of reflection, based on the experience I’d had holding a very senior role in the government,” Moghalu said. “It also gave me a very healthy distance from the situation to be able to appraise it and to decide how do I want to continue to contribute.” The three main issues Moghalu wants to tackle are the disunity of the Nigerian people, high levels of poverty and Nigeria’s decline as a world power. “We need to heal Nigeria and build a nation out of a country,” Moghalu said. Moghalu said that in a country with a population of almost 190 million people, 150 million Nigerians are living on less than two dollars a day. Moghalu said that he personally has lived a comfortable life and now he wants to take action. “I realized that the only way this can change is that you have the right kind of political leadership,” Moghalu said. “The rate of poverty exists because our political leadership class is not as competent as it should be, unfortunately.” In terms of obstacles he faces, Moghalu said that voter apathy is the biggest. He
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COURTESY KINGSLEY CHIEDU MOGHALU
Kingsley Chiedu Moghalu is pictured. said many young Nigerians are well-educated but are now disillusioned by the democratic process. Moghalu said his campaign has about ten months to restore hope in non-voting Nigerians and con-
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vince them to register to vote. Roqeebah Olaoniye works for StateCraft Inc., “Africa’s leading governance communication firm, with a mission to galvanise see MOGHALU, page 2
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................4 ARTS & LIVING....................... 7
COMICS.......................................9 OPINION....................................11 SPORTS............................ BACK