THE TUFTS DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2020 VOLUME LXXIX, ISSUE 21 - “WHERE YOU READ IT FIRST”
40 years of student activists organize, demand change by Madeleine Aitken Assistant News Editor
Social and political activism have been integral parts of Tufts’ campus culture for generations. Since its founding in 1980, the Daily has been covering campus activism in its many forms for various issues throughout the years. In commemoration of its 40th anniversary issue, the Daily is highlighting the most memorable moments of student activism captured in print since 1980. 1980s In its inaugural issue, published on Feb. 25, 1980, the Daily covered a tuition protest of hundreds of students who objected to the proposed $1,126 tuition hike. In 1982, students rallied on a day that the Board of Trustees gathered on campus for a meeting to demand that Tufts divest itself from companies producing nuclear weapons. Students, faculty, clergy
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and administrators attended and voiced their concerns about the nuclear arms race andTufts’ implicit participation in it. In 1987, then University President Jean Mayer marched in Cumming, Ga., as part of one of the largest civil rights demonstrations in the South since the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. Mayer’s march led to a call by Afro-American Society President Arnold Kee for greater on-campus activism. Additionally, Kee advocated for the hiring of a minority recruiter in the admissions office after the position was vacated at the end of August 1986. 1989 saw Tufts students gathering at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, along with more than 50 special interest groups and other college students, to protest the appearance of MobutuSeseSeko,presidentofZaire.Studentsshowed up to oppose the human rights abuses in Zaire, which is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Mobutu’s support of South African apartheid.
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1990s During a Catholic mass at Goddard Chapel in 1990, eight students staged a silent protest of the Catholic Church’s position on AIDS and attitude toward LGBTQ individuals. Most students involved were openly gay and wore t-shirts that said “Silence = Death.” In 1994, a group of students and faculty, called the Tufts Coalition for Peace, organized a protest at an event where former President George H. W. Bush spoke on U.S. foreign policy in the Persian Gulf during his administration. They did not claim to oppose his right to speak, but rather objected to the foreign policy pursued during his presidency. Later that year, students attended aTrustee committee forum to demand divestment from HydroQuebec following a rally in front of the Jumbo statue. Hydro-Quebec is a Canadian energy company which was criticized at the time for disrupting and displacing Cree and Inuit peoples.
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In 1996, members of Tufts’ African American and Asian American communities demonstrated at a Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate meeting to protest the Senate’s decision to remove culture representatives from its body, thereby making it less diverse and representative. Tufts workers led campus activism at the beginning of the 1997 school year in opposition to Tufts’ decision to transition from their previous cleaning service, the UNICCO Service Company, to the International Service System (ISS). The switch was for cost savings reasons, but it caused 110 UNICCO workers to lose their jobs. In 1997, it was discovered that Trustee Monte Haymon was involved with Sappi Ltd., a South African paper manufacturer that was under attack at the time for its labor policies in both the U.S. and South Africa as well as its violations of safety, health and environmental standards. Approximately 75 see ACTIVISM, page 2
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