The Tufts Daily - Wednesday, February 27, 2019

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TRUSTEE ELECTION

EPIIC Symposium next week to focus on migration see OPINION / PAGE 9

A look at trustee candidates’ backgrounds, future hopes

Swimmer Colleen Doolan qualifies for nationals see SPORTS / PAGE 11

SEE FEATURES / PAGE 4

THE

INDEPENDENT

STUDENT

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UNIVERSITY

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXVII, ISSUE 24

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

tuftsdaily.com

Four candidates campaign in Trustee Election, university works to boost turnout by Alexander Thompson Assistant News Editor

The Tufts University Alumni Association sent ballots for two open Alumni Trustee seats on the Tufts University Board of Trustees as well as nine open seats on the Tufts University Alumni Council to Tufts alumni by email last Thursday. The voting period will end March 31 and results of the election will be announced at the Alumni Council meeting on April 7, Ed Ellison (A ’83), executive director of the Office of Alumni Relations, said in an email to the Daily. The Board of Trustees is the governing body of the university, making decisions on university issues ranging from tuition hikes to facilities, and is composed of 40 members, 10 of whom are Alumni Trustees who are directly elected by all of Tufts’ alumni for terms of five years. This year the seats currently held by Laurie Gabriel ( J ’76) and Hugh R. Roome III (A ’74, F ’77, FG ’80, FG ’80) are being contested by four candidates: Sonja Bartlett (A ’90), Kenneth C. Fan (E ’01, F ’07), David B. Meyers (A ’96) and Lori Roth ( J ’86), all who had been selected to run for the position from a larger field of candidates by the Nominating Committee of the Alumni Council in December. The Alumni Council is a group of around 250 alumni which organizes activities and provides career services to alumni, according to its website.

SOFIE HECHT / THE TUFTS DAILY ARCHIVES

Ballou Hall is pictured on May 5, 2016. Sixteen candidates are vying for nine seats, though the seats are divided up by school and are elected separately. For instance, eight candidates are in contention for six seats allotted to the School of Arts and Sciences and the School of Engineering. All four candidates for Alumni Trustee told the Daily in interviews they accepted nominations so that

they could keep giving back to Tufts, a school they love. “When I was asked if I would be interested in being nominated to be alumni trustee, I jumped at the opportunity because it would allow me to have another great opportunity to volunteer on behalf of alumni everywhere,” Meyers, the immediate past president of the Alumni Council who works in media, explained.

Roth, senior managing director at Ashley Capital in New York City, said she saw this as a chance to bring her involvement to “the next level,” building upon her experience as a non-voting alumni representative on the Board of Trustees’ Administration and Finance Committee. see TRUSTEES, page 3

New admissions programs give prospective students personal view of Tufts by Bridget Wall Staff Writer

The Tufts Admissions Office has been working with students in recent months to create new outreach programs to appeal to different groups of prospective students. All of these programs aim to reach specifically targeted groups of students, and encourage them to apply to and eventually attend Tufts University. One of these new programs is called “Podcasts from the Practice Room,” which was created by sophomore Keesha Patron.

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“I was sitting in the practice rooms of Granoff one afternoon, when I realized that I was experiencing such a diverse crossover of different soundscapes,” Patron said. She used this experience to form the idea for Podcasts from the Practice Room, a weekly podcast where Patron interviews different students about their time at Tufts and their different modes of involvement with music at Tufts. These interviews are very informal and are a place where the students can talk about how their music and creFor breaking news, our content archive and exclusive content, visit tuftsdaily.com @tuftsdaily

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ativity influence their learning inside and outside the classroom, according to Patron. “My intention for this project is to give prospective applicants and [firstyears] a better look into the diverse identities and unique interests that we have on this campus,” Patron explained. This program was recently implemented, but Patron is excited to interview more musicians and hear their interesting stories. She has been conducting interviews for the past two

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weeks, and the first podcast is scheduled to come out next week. “I really like to carry the podcasts out inside the practice room because that way in the background, you can hear the different instruments taking over the entire space,” she said. Another effort to reach different prospective students is this semester’s creation of specialized engineering facilities tours along with regular tours to appeal to prospective engineers.

NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................4 ARTS & LIVING.......................6

see ADMISSIONS, page 2

FUN & GAMES.........................8 OPINION.....................................9 SPORTS............................ BACK


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