THE
VOLUME LXXX, ISSUE 46
INDEPENDENT
STUDENT
N E W S PA P E R
OF
TUFTS
UNIVERSITY
E S T. 1 9 8 0
T HE T UFTS DAILY
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
tuftsdaily.com
Monday, November 23, 2020
Referendums from SJP, TREE to appear on TCU special election ballot
ANN MARIE BURKE / THE TUFTS DAILY
West Hall and the Academic Quad are pictured on Oct. 18. by Madeleine Aitken Deputy News Editor
Tufts Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) and Tufts for a Racially Equitable Endowment (TREE) recently completed the process to get their referendums on the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate special election ballot that will go out to the student body on Nov. 24. SJP’s referendum is in regard to the demilitarization of the Tufts University Police Department (TUPD), and TREE’s involves the divestment from corporations that profit off of the private prison system.
Julia, a member of SJP, told the Daily in a written statement that SJP is “an organization working toward the liberation of Palestinians … [with] on-campus campaigns including organizing for the Boycott, Divest, and Sanctions movement and organizing for the demilitarization of the Tufts University Police Department.” Julia, Leila and another member of SJP asked that part or all of their names be omitted to protect their safety. “Our referendum is seeking to promote the safety of students (especially POC students) by demanding the Tufts administration prohibit TUPD officers from
attending military-led and/or similar international trips in the future, refine the vetting process to prevent prior attendees from being hired, and apologize for sending the former Tufts police chief to a militarized training trip,” Julia and the anonymous member of SJP collectively wrote to the Daily. In December of 2017, Kevin Maguire, who served as director of public and environmental safety and oversaw TUPD, traveled to Israel for a National Counter-Terrorism Seminar (NCTS) along with various Massachusetts police officials, according to previous Daily reporting. Although Maguire did not disclose the details of the 2017 trip,
a previously reported 2016 NCTS itinerary listed speakers who were affiliated with organizations that had claims of human rights abuses made against them. This included Alan Moss, the former head of the Israel Security Agency, also known as Shin Bet. Shin Bet has been accused of using torture tactics. Controversy later surrounded the 2017 trip itself, prompting community response at Tufts. Patrick Collins, executive director of media relations at Tufts, wrote in an email to the Daily that the 2017 trip to Israel, which SJP refers to in their referendum, was not a military training trip.
“The Anti-Defamation League-sponsored trip to Israel— which over 200 different federal, state and local agencies from across the U.S. have participated in over the years—was not a military training program, nor was it intended to serve as an endorsement of any particular policy or policing strategy,” Collins said. He also said the university strongly disagrees with SJP’s classification of TUPD as militarized. “TUPD has made community policing a priority for many years and has policies and training in place that emphasize that see REFERENDUM, page 2
Actor Hank Azaria talks career, mental health, racial justice by Yiyun Tom Guan News Editor
Hank Azaria (LA’87), an Emmy Award-winning actor and comedian, addressed the Tufts community on Friday as part of the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life’s Distinguished Speaker Series, as the last speaker of the semester. The discussion was moderated by Jim Glaser, dean of the School of Arts and Sciences. Glaser began the conversation by asking Azaria about how his experiences at Tufts informed his career trajectory.
Azaria explained that the liberal arts education he received allowed him to explore many subjects from journalism to psychology but his experiences with theater convinced him to pursue an acting career. “I figured this is a really long shot, pursuing a career in acting. Let me try it when I’m young though because I knew that I would always regret it if I didn’t try it,” Azaria said. “If I [hadn’t] made any headway as an actor, I [was] going to go back to grad school for psychology; I knew because I really enjoyed psychology at Tufts.”
Glaser then asked Azaria about his extracurricular life at Tufts. Azaria confessed that while he made meaningful friendships, his extracurricular life was vexed by substance abuse. He then noted that his own experiences seeking recovery, along with seeing others undergo the same path, later inspired him to help bring The Haven at College, an organization through which students can receive rehabilitation services, to the Tufts campus. “I had a student come out of [Los Angeles] that went to Tufts and ran into some difficulty with drugs and alcohol on campus,
and had to take a year off to go get sober and get well and, in talking to Tufts [about] how to support him, we started thinking … is there a better way to support students who might run into this problem?” Azaria said. “And I knew a lot of folks in this sober community, which led me to the Haven.” Glaser later noted that with the COVID-19 pandemic and the presidential election, people are living in a stressful moment. He asked Azaria what advice he would give to people experiencing substance abuse to cope with the stress.
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Azaria stressed that one of Alcoholics Anonymous’ precepts is “I can do today,” and said that focusing on each day is a healthy way to reduce anxiety induced by the current environment. “There’s so much worry and fear of the future in this pandemic and in this political climate, in this wild society we live in right now, that it’s easy to get lost in another program phase in the wreckage of our future,” Azaria said. “If you can just focus on today, and what you see CAREER, page 2 NEWS
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