The Tufts Daily - Friday, November 13, 2020

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VOLUME LXXX, ISSUE 40

INDEPENDENT

STUDENT

N E W S PA P E R

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TUFTS

UNIVERSITY

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T HE T UFTS DAILY tuftsdaily.com

Friday, November 13, 2020

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

TCU JUDICIARY SUSPENDS SENATE EXECUTIVE BOARD

Senate Executive Board and ECOM suspended, suspension later rescinded

by Alejandra Carrillo Executive News Editor

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published online at 10:53 a.m. on Thursday. At approximately 5 p.m. on Thursday, the TCU Judiciary rescinded its suspension of the Senate Executive Board, according to an email by the Senate Executive Board to the Daily. The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Judiciary filed two official orders yesterday temporarily suspending the Senate Executive Board and the Elections

Commission (ECOM) for their combined efforts to appoint members of the TCU Senate. The historian and the treasurer of the TCU are exempt from suspension. The orders mean TCU President Sarah Wiener, Vice President Grant Gebetsberger, Parliamentarian Taylor Lewis and Diversity Officer Matthew Peña are, for the time being, suspended from their roles. The Judiciary believes the Senate’s efforts could set a bad precedent and encourage TCU elections to become appointments,

according to an official statement signed by members of the Judiciary, including Chair Holden Dahlerbruch, Vice Chair Zachary Ferretti, Re-Recognition Chair John Youssef, Member at Large Max Price and Member at Large Andres Borjas. The Judiciary has the power to issue orders against organizations, such as the TCU Senate, that they believe fail to uphold their own constitutions or the established regulations of the TCU. Typically, a hearing would be held by the Judiciary for cases such as these, yet

all members of the Judiciary have opted out of participating, citing their personal bias in the case. The Judiciary has filed a formal complaint with the Committee on Student Life in the interest of a fair, objective trial. The order does not apply to the historian and the treasurer of the TCU Senate due to their role in attending to supplementary funding requests, student organizations’ budget fulfillment and other initiatives that have a large impact on the broader TCU.

Special Counsel Norman Eisen Tufts opposes proposed discusses experience in politics, rule limiting legal status of role in Trump’s impeachment trial international students by Coco Arcand

Contributing Writer

Norman Eisen, who served as special counsel to the House Judiciary Committee for the impeachment and trial of President Donald Trump from 2019–20, addressed the Tufts community on Nov. 9 in a webinar. The event was co-sponsored by the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life, the Department of Political Science, JumboVote, the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and the Pre-Law Society. Following an opening statement by senior Joseph Berrafati, Alan Solomont, dean of Tisch College, moderated the conversation. Eisen mainly spoke about his role in Trump’s impeachment trial, which is also the subject of his new book, “A Case for the American People: The United States v. Donald J. Trump” (2020). The book focuses on the impeachment case, which Eisen brought before Congress. Solomont began the conversation by asking Eisen to explain his childhood and the circumstances that eventually led to his career in politics. Eisen described his childhood as “a very typical immigrant story.” Before he was born, Eisen’s father immigrated from Poland, and his mother from Czechoslovakia. At 5 or 6 years old, he worked alongside his parents and siblings in their family hamburger stand. Eisen remarked on one of his earliest memories. “I remember watching those Watergate hearings with my father on our tiny little grease-splattered, black-and-white television and … my dad saying to me, ‘Those are American heroes. That’s the meaning of our country, what’s going on, holding people accountable,’” Eisen said.

After graduating from Brown University, Eisen worked for the Anti-Defamation League before attending Harvard Law School. At Harvard, Eisen met fellow student and future President Barack Obama. After graduating from law school, Eisen worked for 20 years as a criminal defense attorney before transitioning to work on Obama’s presidential campaign. “The event campaign was so wonderful,” Eisen said. “It was an underdog campaign, you know the people were not joining that campaign because they wanted to win … [it was] because they believed in the mission.” After Obama’s presidential win in 2008, Eisen acted as special counsel and special assistant to the president for ethics and government reform. Eisen said he has maintained a tough stance on ethics rules. “I was [nicknamed] the White House ‘epic czar,'” he said. Later, he became involved in facilitating the transition of power from Obama to the 2016 president-elect, Donald Trump. However, it was during this transition of power that Eisen recognized problems with Trump that would eventually culminate in his role in the president’s impeachment trial. “I was helping on the Trump transition and then Donald Trump announced … that he was going to take unconstitutional foreign payments, so-called emoluments, [which] is the one ethics rule that the founders and the framers [of the United States were] so worried about,” Eisen said. Eisen described Trump’s presidency. “Donald Trump has betrayed the constitution and his oath … through a pattern see IMPEACHMENT, page 2

by Flora Meng

Contributing Writer

In a recent letter to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), University President Anthony Monaco expressed concern toward a newly proposed rule that would impose fixed time limits to the legal status of international students. According to Andrew Shiotani, director of the Tufts International Center, the DHS plans to change a system that has been in place since the 1980s. “Under the current system when a student … comes to the United States to study on a student visa, they are allowed to stay in the United States as long as they’re pursuing their program,” Shiotani said. “If [students] need an extension … the school can extend their staff stay in the United States.” However, the new DHS proposal seeks not only to enforce a fixed time period of admission, but to alter the process of applying for an extension of stay. “Under the new rule, regardless of how long your program is, a student would only get either two years or four years of legal status in the United States,” Shiotani said. In his letter, Monaco urged the DHS to maintain the rules it already has in place. “Each year, Tufts welcomes more than 2,000 international students and scholars to study and work in Massachusetts and each of these individuals rely on the department’s longstanding rule that their admission to the United States will extend through the ‘duration of status,’” Monaco wrote. If the proposed rule were to be ratified, Shiotani anticipates that these increased administrative procedures would burden international students.

“[The new extension process] means an application that you have to file with the government costs several hundred dollars per application, and can take six, seven, eight months or longer before the application is decided and processed,” Shiotani said. “It’s a much more rigid system. It’s a much more expensive system.” First-year Jose Atienza, who is an international student, expressed concern over the DHS proposal. “I personally think it’s nonsensical because initially when we get our visas, we have to go through a very rigorous process to ensure that, firstly, we can pay for our program, and secondly, that we can prove that we won’t go to the U.S. illegally through our student visas,” Atienza said. Atienza said he believes the DHS proposal would provide an extra layer of bureaucracy and uncertainty to an already frustrating process. Shiotani explained the potential impact of the DHS proposal on Tufts students, more specifically. “Many [undergraduate students] would have to file complicated legal applications to extend their status,” Shiotani said. “It would definitely impact our Ph.D. and graduate students because if you were only given two years or four years to stay in the United States and your program is automatically five to seven years, you’re going to be doing at least one or two extensions.” Another concern Monaco raised in the letter was the proposal’s potential interference with international students’ capacity to undertake curricular

EDITORIAL / page 7

ARTS / page 3

SPORTS / back

Duration of status is vital for the protection of international students

Gaga’s ‘ARTPOP’ may have been ahead of its time

Jumbo baseball players set their eyes on MLB

see SECURITY, page 2 NEWS

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ARTS & POP CULTURE

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FUN & GAMES

6

OPINION

7

SPORTS

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