The Tufts Daily - Thursday, April 19, 2018

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Tufts researchers use silk to create diet sensor that can be placed on a tooth see FEATURES / PAGE 3

MEN’S LACROSS

Tufts tied atop NESCAC with two games left

Nicki Minaj, Drake, Calvin Harris & Dua Lipa release new singles see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 5

SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE

THE

VOLUME LXXV, ISSUE 52

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Thursday, April 19, 2018

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Holocaust survivor Anna Ornstein stresses importance of hope in trying political times by Elie Levine

Executive News Editor

Anna Ornstein, a Holocaust survivor who pursued a career in psychiatry, addressed 200 people in a packed ASEAN Auditorium in Cabot Intercultural Center yesterday. Ornstein, who survived Auschwitz and several work camps, detailed her experiences in the book “My Mother’s Eyes,” copies of which were available at the event. Her lecture was the 2018 keynote address of the Cummings / Hillel Program for Holocaust and Genocide Education. Rabbi Jeffrey Summit, the outgoing Jewish chaplain and Neubauer executive director of Tufts Hillel, gave the opening remarks. Stressing the importance of innovative programming, he spoke about Tufts Hillel’s various educational programs about genocide with the support of Joyce and Bill Cummings,

describing the interfaith delegations Hillel has recently sent to the Holocaust Museum in Washington D.C., Germany and the AgahozoShalom Youth Village in Rwanda. Summit referenced the significance of hearing from a Holocaust survivor at a time when their numbers are increasingly few. “There will come a time in your lifetime … when people will not be able to meet and hear survivors of the Holocaust tell their story. But you can now, and people in this room will be able to say to your children, God willing, that you heard a survivor from the Holocaust speak,” he said. He also spoke about the intended goals of Tufts Hillel’s genocide-education programming. “Some people will tell you that you can never change the world, you can never end genocide, it’s beyond us to fix what’s broken in society. We don’t believe that at Tufts … [or]

at Tufts Hillel. We see change is slow, change is incremental, but we believe that education can and should move us to action, and actively engaged citizens can and will raise a moral voice to make real changes in our society and in our world,” he said. Jennifer Gray, a member of the Cummings / Hillel Program for Holocaust and Genocide Education, then gave a brief introduction for Ornstein, emphasizing the importance of resisting hatred and preventing future atrocities. “We are at a crucial moment in history, when many are choosing to either forget or deny the events that happened 75 years ago,” Gray, a sophomore, said. “It is our responsibility to make sure that the world never forgets.” For the first 40 minutes of the event, Ornstein read from papers. The last 20 minutes were reserved for questions from the audience.

She gave an account of her experience at the Auschwitz concentration camp with her mother by her side, describing a chaotic scene with barking dogs and screaming crowds. “I heard my mother tell my cousin that the heavy, sweet-smelling black smoke could be human flesh burning,” she said. “I believe almost instantly, my mother realized that we were in an extermination camp. She grabbed my hand, and from here on, we did not dare to lose sight of each other.” Ornstein, her mother and a cousin were selected for labor. Their heads were shaved, their clothes were removed and they were made to wait for their selection in barn-like holding chambers with only grass to eat. She said her father, grandmother and other members of her extended family were taken into see ORNSTEIN, page 2

IGC hosts discussion on past, future of Greek life at Tufts by Conor Friedmann Staff Writer

Yesterday evening, the Inter-Greek Council (IGC) and its Diversity and Inclusion Task Force hosted a discussion in Cohen Auditorium entitled “Greek Life at Tufts: Where We Were, Where We’re Going” about the the history of Greek life and its current state at Tufts. The discussion focused on diversity and inclusion, shaping campus life and impact on the national Greek life scene. About 40 people were in attendance. Charlie Trantanella (E ’89), author of the book “Brown and Blue and Greek: A History of Fraternities, Sororities, and Early Student Organizations at Tufts University,” gave a presentation on student culture and development, social justice and Greek life at Tufts. Trantanella was a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity while at Tufts. He began his presentation by talking about the history of student life at Tufts since the university’s inception. “Student life was just not something … [the administration] cared about. Student life was left to the students,” Trantanella said. Trantanella walked the audience through the history of Greek life at Tufts, which began with the formation of Zeta Psi and Theta Delta Chi in 1855 and 1856, respectively. These first fraternities established Tufts’ first undergraduate publications, according to Trantanella. “The first fraternities published annual yearbooks and ‘The Tuftonian’ publication, which became The Tufts Weekly. They also organized sports teams, like baseball and crew,” Trantanella said.

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Greek life representatives speak at the Inter-Greek Council’s “Greek Life at Tufts: Where We Were, Where We’re Going” student panel in Cohen Auditorium on Apr. 18. Trantanella also described the history of sororities at Tufts, the first of which, Alpha Delta Sigma, was founded in 1895 and would eventually become Alpha Omicron Pi (AOII). Trantanella described the sororities as having similar contributions to campus social life

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as fraternities, while also establishing scholarships for women to study at Tufts. He also emphasized the history of black Greek-letter organizations at Tufts. “Historians overlooked black Greek-letter organizations, which have a rich history at

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Tufts for over a century,” Trantanella said. Black Greek-letter organizations established scholarships and attracted black stu-

NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................3 ARTS & LIVING.......................5

see GREEK LIFE, page 2

COMICS....................................... 7 OPINION.....................................8 SPORTS............................ BACK


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