Tufts provides opportunities in data science, applied computational science see FEATURES / PAGE 4
OPINION
The challenges of migration, integration
Arts editors share favorite movies, fun facts see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 6
SEE OPINION / PAGE 9
THE
VOLUME LXXVII, ISSUE 21
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Monday, February 25, 2019
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Women’s basketball wins NESCAC Championship over undefeated Bowdoin by Alex Viveros
Assistant Sports Editor
For the first time since the 2014–2015 season, the No. 6 ranked Jumbos (25–2) are once again NESCAC champions. En route to the title, Tufts saw off the only two teams that they had lost to in the regular season. On Saturday, the Jumbos beat the No. 4 ranked Amherst College Mammoths (23–3) by one point, finding a miraculous last-second victory with a final score of 47–46. The Jumbos then followed up the stunning performance by upsetting the previously undefeated Bowdoin College Polar Bears (26–1) in their own gym, defeating the No. 1 team in the country by a final score of 75–69 to claim the crown of the top team in the NESCAC. In what is certain to become two instant classics, the weekend was chock-full of clutch plays and nail-biting moments, as both games were held to extremely close scores as a result of the stingy defensive play that the NESCAC is notorious for. Following a stunning win on Saturday against Amherst, Tufts returned to Morrell Gymnasium the following day, where they narrowly but securely defeated the Polar Bears — who had beaten the Jumbos by a
COURTESY TUFTS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM
see WOMEN'S BASKETBALL, page 11
The women’s basketball team poses for a photo after defeating Bowdoin 75–69 in the NESCAC Championship game on Feb. 24.
Women’s Center Symposium discusses feminism, labor through art, literature
TCU Senate passes resolution calling for due process in Professor Abowd’s contract renewal
by Jillian Rolnick
by Robert Kaplan
Assistant News Editor
The annual Women’s Center Symposium on Gender and Culture was held on Friday, Feb. 22, in the Crane Room. The fourhour event, themed “Divisions/Revisions of Labor,” tackled the meaning of modern labor, beyond the traditional definition, and dealt with topics including gendered and emotional labor. Jessica Mitzner, a graduate assistant at the Women’s Center who organized the event, said she came up with the theme when questioning how labor interacts with identity. “There’s a lot of discussions right now relating to gender and emotional labor so we were just kind of interested in asking questions about what kind of labor do we expect from different sorts of people?” Mitzner, a Ph.D. candidate in the English
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department, said. “How do our identities inform the work? … What do we expect from different people because of their identity?” The event featured two panels, an art performance, a display of visual artwork and a keynote address entitled “Catwalking in Bombay: Cruising, Pride, and Fashion as Queer Work” by Brian Horton, a Ph.D candidate in anthropology at Brown University. Mitzner said that event included people from a myriad of disciplines and universities and people with a variety of interpretations of what labor is. Although predominantly featuring students from Tufts and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts (SMFA), the event also hosted presenters from other colleges such as Simmons University and Brandeis University. see SYMPOSIUM, page 2 For breaking news, our content archive and exclusive content, visit tuftsdaily.com @tuftsdaily
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Assistant News Editor
The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate convened in a packed Sophia Gordon Multipurpose Room on Sunday night, passing a resolution calling for “an open and just renewal process” for American Studies Professor Thomas Abowd’s contract as well as academic freedom and an intimidation-free workplace. The TCU Senate also discussed the social networking app Raftr with founder Sue Decker and heard several supplementary funding requests. Abowd’s contract has been a subject of controversy since his fall 2018 course “Colonizing Palestine” (CST-0094) drew criticism for alleged anti-Israel bias, according to the text of the resolution. The resolution further states that “Professor Abowd is at risk of his contract not being renewed beyond the current school year.”
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The resolution, titled “S. 19-4 A Resolution Calling for an Intimidation-Free Workplace, Academic Freedom, and Support for Due Process in Professor Thomas Abowd’s Contract Renewal,” passed with 22 senators in favor, two opposed and six abstaining. TCU Senate Historian Rebeca Becdach, a sophomore, read the text of the resolution to the full meeting room, after which Amira Al-Subaey began a prepared statement in support of the resolution. The resolution was authored by seniors Al-Subaey, Katelyn Mullikin, Parker Breza and Elise Sommers; juniors Molly Tunis and Emily Burke; sophomore Nina Chukwura; and first-years Ava Dimond, Rabiya Ismail and Melia Harlan. “We wrote this resolution because we are concerned with Professor Abowd’s contact status, specifically in light of the mali-
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................4 ARTS & LIVING.......................6
see SENATE, page 3
FUN & GAMES.........................8 OPINION.....................................9 SPORTS............................ BACK