Students of color share experiences with diversity in a capella
Football: Jumbos look to tackle 0–7 Mules see SPORTS / PAGE 8 New initiative aims to address lack of STEM diversity see FEATURES / PAGE 3
SEE WEEKENDER / PAGE 4
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MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Tisch College, Jumbo Vote host Medford Mayoral Debate between Burke and McKillop by Robert Katz News Editor
The two Medford mayoral candidates, incumbent Stephanie M. Burke and David McKillop, Sr., discussed the past and future of Medford at the Medford Chamber of Commerce Mayoral Debate. The debate, hosted by the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life and JumboVote, was held in Cohen Auditorium on the evening of Nov. 2 in preparation for the mayoral election on Tuesday. Opening remarks were given by Dean of Arts and Sciences James Glaser and Tina Caruso, president of the Medford Chamber of Commerce. The debate was hosted by Dan Kennedy, an associate professor of journalism at Northeastern University and a panelist on WGBH-TV’s Beat the Press. Kennedy offered ten questions over an hour, which touched on subjects such as infrastructure reconstruction, supporting the review of the town’s charter, how to preserve housing for current residents as housing costs rise, how to address the opioid epidemic and whether or not to establish Medford as a “sanctuary city,” or a city that promises to limit cooperation with federal authorities to prosecute undocumented residents. McKillop criticized Burke over various aspects of her tenure as mayor, including the execution of her Medford Square Master Plan, her use of capital from the Complete Streets Funding Program and the efficiency of her response to the continuing opioid epidemic. The incumbent, meanwhile, defended the initiatives she had begun since her term began in January 2016. In particular, she encouraged the town to protect undocu-
mented residents. Medford is not officially designated a sanctuary city, though the city council passed a resolution by Burke affirming the city’s commitment to diversity and inclusion in November 2016. “Sanctuary city isn’t really defined anywhere. It’s a philosophy,” Burke said. “It’s how you treat people that you come across.” Burke added it is especially important that immigrant status not factor into local law enforcement. “What I wanted to make sure with the [police] chief, is if someone is volunteering information about crime, that we’re not asking them, ‘are you a US citizen?’ It really doesn’t matter,” Burke said. “We want them to be volunteering information to us. We can’t put up that wall [of threatening federal intervention] so that they feel like they’ll be scooted away.” McKillop, meanwhile, argued that the city should focus on other priorities. “It’s already been defined that we will take care of the people that are in the city,” McKillop said. “But … the law is the law. My job as the mayor is … to focus on something that’s even twice as important, and that’s the opioid crisis.” Kennedy said in an interview with the Daily that he did not notice any significant differences in answers from the candidates, with the answers tending to be more subtly different. In the most divergent instance he mentioned, as the candidates discussed funding the reconstruction of the Medford Public Library, McKillop stated that the town police and fire station should have been renovated prior to the library, while Burke implied that she had dealt with police facilities concurrently.
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Medford mayoral candidates Stephanie M. Burke and David McKillop engage in debate in Cohen Auditorium on Nov. 2. “That seemed like the clearest difference that I heard between the two of them,” Kennedy said. “I’m not sure if it’s a major difference but it was something people could pick up on and say, well, you know, that’s interesting.” JumboVote, which co-hosted the event, was originally created to support student political learning and engagement during the 2016 presidential election season. However, the project has continued to branch out in its operations, including into local politics, according to Jen McAndrew, director of communications strategy and planning at Tisch College, which houses JumboVote. “When the opportunity came to host the mayoral debate on campus through
JumboVote, it’s sort of one and the same [with involving students in politics], so we decided to get engaged and help sponsor,” McAndrew said. “We obviously don’t take a side in these things, as this is a non-partisan event, but we do think it’s a great opportunity for political learning on our campus to have the candidates from one of our host communities.” Hosting the debate allowed JumboVote to encourage a two-way relationship between Tufts students and the Medford community in terms of political engagement. “There’s two sides to why this is important,” McAndrew said. “It gives an opportunity for Tufts students to hear from people who see DEBATE, page 2
New Athletic Hall of Fame to honor past, unite present
Coach John Casey, who helped found the poses for a potrait in his office at the Steve Center on Oct 26. by Honor Kalkin Contributing Writer
The Tufts Athletics Department instated its very own Athletics Hall of Fame
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this September. The Hall of Fame will honor and celebrate the full history of athletics at Tufts, inducting its first honorees in the spring of 2018. Although it does not yet have a physical space on campus, the hall’s existence is a step BEN KIM / THE TUFTS DAILY toward the unificaAthletics Hall of Fame, tion of the greater Tisch Sports and Fitness Tufts athletics community. Long in the works, the Athletics Hall of Fame finally came into fruition under the leadership of the Director of Athletics John Morris. According to Baseball Coach and Assistant Director of For breaking news, our content archive and exclusive content, visit tuftsdaily.com @tuftsdaily
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Athletics John Casey, Morris was the main impetus behind making the hall a reality. “Like any process, it’s been going on for a long time,” Casey said. “I like to say that things percolate for a while… You get all these wonderful ideas and great things, but it usually takes someone to really grab the bull by the horns and say ‘okay, we’re going.’ John is the guy who’s done all that [for the Hall of Fame].” When asked who he believed responsible for finally setting the project into motion, meanwhile, Morris named Casey as “a proponent of the idea for years” in an email to the Daily. Morris also mentioned that the project would not have been feasible without the support from coaches, staff, administrators and alumni, as well as the Office of Alumni Relations. Tufts is now on the same page as many of the NCAA Div. I, II and even many other Div. III universities who boast Athletic Halls
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of Fame. This group includes multiple fellow NESCAC members, including Wesleyan, Bowdoin, Middlebury and Conn. College. “With our long and rich tradition of Jumbo athletic excellence,” Morris said. “The time was right to create our own athletics hall of fame here at Tufts.” While the Hall of Fame now officially exists, the first inductees will not be revealed until the spring. Meanwhile, the question of where and how to erect the physical hall is still up in the air. Casey was satisfied that the project finally came to fruition, even despite the delay before the first inductions. He knew that once in existence, the hall would continue to develop until it reached its full standing as a physical and symbolic point of pride for the university. “There’s still some details to be ironed out, but I think halls grow as times go,” Casey said. see HALL OF FAME, page 7
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THE TUFTS DAILY | News | Friday, November 3, 2017
THE TUFTS DAILY Gil Jacobson Editor-in-Chief
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Eddie Samuels Joe Walsh
Data Intensive Studies Center aims to transform research at Tufts by Sarah Minster
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Tufts’ initiative to increase data science research and education, first outlined in the T10 Strategic Plan in 2013 has made progress with the creation of the Data Intensive Studies Center (DISC) this fall and its first all-day symposium next Wednesday. With the creation of DISC, Tufts hopes to bring together both students and faculty to better utilize data science in ways that are relevant to understanding the world today. Vice Provost for Research Simin Nikbin Meydani is spearheading the implementation and creation of DISC. She works jointly with an advisory committee made up of Tufts faculty from all schools and Eric Hughes, who works for MITRE Corporation. DISC was created after the T10 Strategic Plan identified a need for additional expertise and interest in the data area, according to Meydani. Meydani works closely with University Provost and Senior Vice President David Harris and University President Anthony Monaco to lead the data science initiative. Meydani identified DISC as a center for data that will address educational, research and service needs. Bruce Boghosian, a professor of mathematics and a member of the DISC Advisory Committee, similarly explained the breakdown of the DISC’s three initiatives. “I’d think of it as maybe 50 percent research, 30 percent teaching and pedagogy and 20 percent as a service organization to the rest of the university,” Boghosian said. He emphasized that spearheading research is the primary goal of DISC. By bringing people within the Tufts community together — in addition to bringing in notable outside researchers — DISC aims to catalyze those interactions and make progress in the realm of data science. DISC will aim to help the Tufts community overcome problems they have encountered in their research by making resources accessible and applicable to all, Boghosian said. “We want to be a university that is on the forefront of these new techniques,” Boghosian said. “We want to develop the fundamental science underlying data science: new algorithms, new machine-learning methods, new artificial intelligence methods, all of these things. But we also want to be the university that uses them in the social sciences, the humanities, the arts, as well as the STEM field.” Meydani expanded on these goals, adding that she sees data science programs as essential to the advancement of research. “We hope to bring together faculty and trainees to create synergy around studying the science of data and applying the tools of data science to specific areas of interest,” Meydani stated. According to Meydani, an immediate goal for DISC is to bring on a director to lead the center. The Advisory Committee is currently identifying potential candidates and hopes to have the director start in fall of 2018, Meydani said. The university’s initiative to expand data science opportunities has also involved the potential development of a data science major, as described in a September 2016 Daily article. Data science majors are being developed through both the School of Engineering and the School of Arts and Sciences. Meydani explained that she hopes to have the major available by fall 2018 under the School of Engineering; she added the program would have connections with DISC. Boghosian noted that the data science major under the School of Arts and Sciences is taking longer to develop, and other potential majors or minors for topics related to data science are still in conversation.
W h i l e Boghosian said there was overwhelming consensus from Tufts faculty that a data science center was necessary, he noted the challenge of reaching a shared understanding of what data science and DISC would mean for the university. Peter Levine, the associate dean for research at Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life and a member of the Advisory Committee, also identified this difficulty. “People from different disciplines have diverse perspectives on Big Data, and it will take time for us to build an intellectual community in which people can learn from each other across those lines,” Levine told the Daily in an email. DISC is aiming to further its goal of collaboration through its fall symposium next week by providing an opportunity to meet others in the field, as well as providing a networking opportunity for both students and faculty. Meydani noted that the symposium will include keynote presentations, panel discussions and poster sessions, and that it will be a forum for students to hear about data science, become interested in it and apply it to their studies. “[The symposium] will provide a venue for students to hear from the best experts in this area about the science of data and the applications of data science to different domains that would be of interest,” Meydani said. Data science plays a vital role in today’s world and is especially prevalent in the future world, Meydani said. She added that it is crucial for universities to have programs for students to learn how to make meaningful interpretations from data. “One of the major problems is misinterpretation of data,” she said. “My hope is for all university students to graduate with the ability to work with big data in a way that
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enables them to make accurate judgments about information.” Levine also identified the importance of understanding how to use data science for all majors. “Almost all disciplines are turning to Big Data — from classical languages to cancer research …. This shift is exciting and promises important discoveries,” Levine said. “We must both improve our capacity to use Big Data and investigate its drawbacks and dangers.” This is a transformative time in academia, Boghosian said, due to the pertinence of data sciences in today’s world of research. Boghosian added that DISC is a timely initiative that will not only help the research done at Tufts, but will make the school a leader in the rapidly growing field of data science. “[Data science] is completely transforming the academic endeavor in every fundamental way. It’s perhaps the biggest change in the way that research and academics are conducted in a significant amount of time,” Boghosian said. “It’s transforming the way that one does research, the way that one poses scientific questions, the way that one goes about answering those questions. And the ability to gather, store, curate, analyze and draw conclusions from research has never been greater.”
Tisch College promotes civic engagement among Tufts students, Medford residents at mayoral debate DEBATE
continued from page 1 want to represent them as mayor. It’s also important because it provides an opportunity for Tufts to partner with one of our host communities and partner with that community’s political engagement.” Tufts Community Relations Co-Director Director Rocco DiRico, who was present at the debate, stressed that Tufts was only supplying the venue for the debate, and that the Medford Chamber of Commerce was organizing, promoting and managing the debate. Before the debate began, members of Our Revolution Medford, a chapter of the
progressive national organization Our Revolution, collected signatures to help Raise Up Massachusetts put initiatives on the 2018 Massachusetts ballot for a gradual increase toward a $15 minimum wage and paid medical leave. They also collected signatures for a petition for the review of Medford’s town charter. Simultaneously, at the intersection of College Avenue and Talbot Avenue, residents held campaign signs for both Burke and McKillop before the debate began. The Somerville mayoral debate, held in the lead-up to Somerville’s own mayoral election on Nov. 7, was broadcast on Somerville Community Access Television about a week prior, on Oct. 23.
Friday, November 3, 2017
Features
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Tufts, Northeastern students aim to increase diversity in technology through startup TechSpark by Fina Short
Features Editor
Sophomores Kingsley Udoyi and Timi Dayo-Kayode are not your average computer science students. In just three semesters, the two have launched, pitched and gained funding for their business called TechSpark. This multi-branch startup aims to reduce bias impacting marginalized students in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields both at Tufts and beyond. The pair — in partnership with Disha Rajdev, a junior at Northeastern University — decided to start the venture after noticing a lack of diversity in STEM classes at Tufts. “We realized that there aren’t that many people of color in our tech classes,” Udoyi said, who switched into the school of engineering his second semester. “We struggled a lot in class, especially me, being that I had no experience with computer science prior to college.” At Tufts, where 59.8 percent of students in the School of Engineering are white, according to Tufts’ diversity data, both students said they felt there could be more support for people of color in STEM fields. “As a computer science major at Tufts, I had seen a lot of the issues facing people of color [and] minorities in the tech sector, personally and by other peoples’ accounts,” Dayo-Kayode said. “I just wanted to help do something.” Udoyi said that if he had had more of a support network in computer science, he would have felt more comfortable seeking out help when taking Introduction to Computer Science (Comp 11). “I was kind of scared to approach [my TA] and ask for help, but I realized that if I had that exposure to comp sci early on, maybe I would have been more interested and do better in class,” he said. While Udoyi went on to succeed in Comp 11, even after switching his major to computer engineering, he said that he wants to provide support for other students who may initially struggle with the material. The main branch of TechSpark aims to provide students from disadvantaged areas with the opportunity to try coding through an eight week summer boot camp, according to Udoyi. “We reach out to high schoolers in underdeveloped communities and we expose them to computer science, teach them how to code and just show them that this is a path that they can take,” Udoyi said. He explained that after a summer of learning web development, HTML and CSS, the students in TechSpark’s boot camp are placed into companies where they can test their new skills. “After the boot camp, we give them the opportunity to work with a nonprofit that is local to Boston, where they get to practice what they’ve learned,” Udoyi said. “The following summer they get placed into an internship in an actual tech company.” The pair has already started travelling to local high schools to pitch the idea to parents, administrators and potential students. “[Dayo-Kayode] has been going into schools and speaking to principals and students,” Udoyi said. “I have been reaching out into nonprofits in the area to
see if they could partner with us and be willing to take these students under their wing after the boot camp.” The group also hopes to address a lack of diversity in technology with a new sub-branch of the organization called TechSpark Connect, spearheaded by Dayo-Kayode. “TechSpark Connect is a diversity recruiting software that helps companies recruit technical minorities for jobs and internships,” Dayo-Kayode said. With this branch of the company, the pair aims to match students already involved in STEM with technology companies, simultaneously helping students find job opportunities and encouraging companies to diversify. “It tries to eliminate the unconscious bias in campus recruiting,” Udoyi said. “It’s a diversity recruiting platform that takes in résumés from college students and sends [them] out to companies that pay us to post jobs.” Through a website built entirely by Dayo-Kayode, he described how the program automatically pairs résumés submitted by students with jobs posted by companies that partner with TechSpark Connect. “A company says, we want to fill this job posting,” he said. “So we send that job posting to everyone in our database and they can pick whether or not they’re interested.” Dayo-Kayode then explained how the website also fully anonymizes résumés to prevent the automatic bias that often occurs when recruiters see the names of candidates from marginalized communities. “For everyone who selects that they’re interested … we anonymize résumés, we give them a ranking, and this ranking places them in some sort of array,” DayoKayode said. “So every week we then send the top five in that array to the companies.” While none of the students have previously worked at a startup, Dayo-Kayode is confident that each brings distinct experience in the fields of computer science, business and finance. Dayo-Kayode, a computer science major, has been coding since his senior year of high school. He said he was inspired after watching a movie in which someone hacked a computer. “I started looking into it, learning stuff online, basic programming,” he said. “I got super into it. I would skip school to go to hackathons in high school… It just became something I really enjoyed.” Conversely, Udoyi had never tried coding before college, even originally intending to pursue a pre-med track. But after taking Comp 11, he decided to switch his major to computer engineering. “I like the reward of it after, I like the hands-on part of it, I like the creativity, I like the problem-solving,” Udoyi said. “I was like, I want to do something like this.” Over the summer, Udoyi interned at Bloomberg, where he learned to use the coding language Python as part of an assignment in the Bloomberg engineering department. “I taught myself Python and was able to put together a Python boot camp tutorial for high schoolers,” he said. “So if high schoolers came into Bloomberg and wanted to learn how to code, they would learn how to code in Python … using my program from now on.” Udoyi also brings business experience to the venture, which he gained after sum-
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Timi Doye-Kayode (left) and Kingsley Udoyi (right), co-founders of TechSpark, pose for a photo in the Science and Engineering Complex on Nov. 2. mers at Bloomberg, JetBlue and through an intensive high school career-readiness program he participated in called Pencil. “They put me through two years of intensive training of career readiness, and they also gave me internships,” Udoyi said of Pencil. “After going through this intensive training, they helped us build our résumés and practice our interview skills — just being more sociable and personable and more confident in interviews.” In partnership with Rajdev, a junior majoring in economics at Northeastern, the three plan to have both ventures launched and ready for students to enroll in by next summer. “The original idea was to start up a tutoring program for high school kids,”
Rajdev, who met Dayo-Kayode at a student innovation night last fall, said. “Then I met [Dayo-Kayode]… and we kind of talked and pivoted to what it is now.” She expressed that while starting a business has been challenging at times, she finds a lot of meaning in their work. “The whole experience has been kind of rewarding because it teaches you so much doing it, the way you take things in your own hands and try to actually do it for once,” she said. Radjev, who manages the marketing and finance aspects of the business, said her passion for the business’s mission motivated her to get involved. “Diversity matters,” she said. “It’s a really pressing issue right now.”
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All-female a capella group Jackson Jills perform in Goddard Chapel on Oct. 6.
Student performers of color share their hopes, concerns for a cappella at Tufts by Issay Matsumoto and Justin Krakoff Staff Writer and Arts Editor
Known for elaborate showcases of vocal talent, Tufts’ numerous a cappella groups have established themselves as vibrant fixtures on campus. In recent years, these groups have also become sites of intentional dialogue to address issues of race and identity within their respective groups and in the broader Tufts community. These student efforts to create both music and community not only reflect greater questions of race and identity in a political world but also actively shape Tufts’ culture, both inside and out. Indicative of this are groups such as The Ladies of Essence and S-Factor, which both perform music exclusively of the African diaspora. For S-Factor social chair Jordan Haney, who is Black, the group not only provides a space for him to sing songs he grew up with, but also acts as an educational tool for members of the group and the broader community. “We all come from different backgrounds in our group, Some of us are from the African diaspora, some of us are not. So even within our group, we’re educating people who may not know as much about the African diaspora… We educate them on the music and the culture in general … It’s all of us just learning from each other, which is great for both parties involved: people from the African diaspora and people not from the African diaspora,” Haney, a sophomore, said. In a predominantly white institution like Tufts, immersion into music that is not in the white American pop culture canon is both fun and affirmiring for members of these a cappella groups. Among other a cappella groups without identity orientation, a cultural shift toward broader awareness of racial and identity-related issues has brought much-needed meta-assessment
into spaces that were traditionally focused solely on vocal performance. For senior S-Factor member Travis Percy, issues of race and identity are deeply ingrained in Tufts and the university’s a cappella history. These tensions have long been on the minds of people of color and marginalized identities within Tufts and its a cappella community, manifesting themselves in diverse ways. Percy recounted some of his own experiences during his first year at Tufts in the Beelzebubs, a group he eventually left before joining S-Factor his sophomore year. “Particularly as a black male in [the Bubs], [a group] which has existed now for over fifty years and has a tradition of singing certain styles of music and having a certain culture that is not inclusive of people of color,” Percy said. I knew I was fighting an uphill battle by joining that group… Now where it fell short ultimately, [was when] I realized that I don’t belong in this space and in order to make myself feel a sense of belonging, I [would] have to change too much of myself to conform to the standard of this culture.” Percy believes that specific dialogues where students of marginalized identities feel more comfortable bringing their genuine selves can be productive. But during his tenure as a Bubs member, these dialogues did not occur. Percy explained, “There are certain spaces where there is hope to change because the culture is willing, meaning that the people in that group are saying, ‘Okay we need to be self-critical about how we operate, figure out how we can be more inclusive, how we can meet you where you are as a minority in this group of majority white males from wealthier background.’ But there was none of that [in the Bubs]. It wasn’t a reciprocal interaction. And so I said, after about a
month and a half, this isn’t for me.” Percy later found a community more attuned to his needs when he joined S-Factor the following year but acknowledged the continued struggle for people of color and marginalized identities to find their places in the Tufts community. “[Being part of an inclusive, supportive community in S-Factor] is not something I could have envisioned in the Bubs. And unfortunately, I know that is the case for a lot of people who were a part of the Bubs and… other groups that just aren’t really for people of color [and] marginalized identities to thrive at Tufts. I’ve noticed that a lot of those people have either stuck to it and stayed in those groups, even though it’s not really healthy for them, or they have left and have struggled to find their musical, creative, cultural niche at Tufts outside of that group,” Percy said. For other a cappella singers of color, experiences within predominantly white student groups have not been uniform. Amalgamates historian Alex Strong, a sophomore who identifies as mixed-race, commented on an in-group tension she called “double-takes.” “Obviously, everyone’s experience is different, but in a group of white people, my experience could be very different. So I think it’s that ‘very’ that adds to the ‘double-take’ sometimes,” Strong said. “For me [the topic of race] is something prevalent in my mind, just in terms of social interactions, because I’ll walk into a room and it’s the first thing someone will notice about me.” Former Beelzebubs historian Aji Sjamsu, who as an Asian-American was once the only person of color in the Bubs, commented on microaggressions he encountered during his past tenure as a member of the group. Sjamsu, a junior, said, “I was very rooted in my identity and people were inter-
ested and… inquisitive. I did notice in my freshman year that I became in tune with microaggressions, and at times you’d feel that people were ignorant. But ultimately it came from a place of curiosity.” Although each a cappella group and its constituent members deal with issues of race and identity differently, these diverse experiences are symptomatic of long-standing political issues and tensions at Tufts’ core. Recent efforts to alleviate these tensions through intentional conversation have been fruitful in many ways. For Strong, transparent dialogue is key to an ever-changing group dynamic. After gaining five new members this past fall, the Amalgamates have worked to focus on honest, direct conversation. “It’s definitely something for the ‘Mates specifically, that we’re trying to make more central to who we are this year… It’s a combination of how we feel like being placed in the world around us right now and just the nature of how things change within a group,” Strong explained. Strong elaborated on how helpful these discussions, which began last semester, are for the group dynamic. “At the end of last year … everyone who was going to be in the current group … had a discussion about how the ‘Mates were for us the past year, and how we wanted to start the year,” Strong said. “I thought that was such a productive discussion, so unlike anything I’d ever been a part of … with the Mates or even at Tufts … it was a space where people felt comfortable addressing what they wanted to address … I personally felt like I was taken seriously in a space that I valued so much.” But Strong, who remains the only person of color in the Amalgamates, acknowledged some of the difficulties in approaching see WEEKENDER, page 5
Arts & Living
Friday, November 3, 2017 | Arts & Living | THE TUFTS DAILY
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'I would have to change too much of myself to conform to this culture' WEEKENDER
continued from page 4 issues of race in the group. “I had to work myself up to [discussing race and identity]… as the conversation wore on, I got more comfortable … being transparent in saying, ‘Hi, a cappella isn’t super diverse, but I think that’s something we should all be conscious of,'” Strong added. For members of other a cappella groups, like Jackson Jills Music Director Mallika Purandare, who is Indian-American, difficult conversations about race and identity have also helped create a more supportive community. Like the Amalgamates, the Jills began this internal reflection recently, dating back to when current co-president Ming Lewis published a letter to the group in spring 2016. Purandare, a sophomore, expressed enthusiasm regarding the productivity of these still ongoing discussions. “We had a night where we … talked about where we were born, what household we grew up in, things about our parents, how important our family is, if religion played a big role in your life,” Pundare said. “I felt like I learned a lot. It’s kind of hard to get to know where people come from … it’s hard to reach in.” In the Jills, these conversations brought about concrete changes in policy and group dynamic. Purandare explained a “mark-up” system, inspired by changes implemented by a recently graduated member of a cappella group sQ!, Elise Lee (LA ’17). “We had a conversation in the spring last year about different kinds of micro-aggressions … just being cognizant that people come from different backgrounds,” Pundare said. “We started using the system of marking comments. So suppose someone says
something that I perceive as a microaggression or makes me feel uncomfortable about my race I will talk to them afterwards and just say, ‘Hey, I want to mark that comment.’ Then we’ll pick a time to talk about it and just go over it.” Despite sustained dialogue and concrete policy change, a cappella groups without identity-based orientations still face existential issues over topics of race and identity. Sjamsu acknowledged that racial representation matters immensely to a group’s stage presence and campus persona. When he and fellow Bub Nikhil Srinivasan, a sophomore and copy editor at the Daily, both left the group after the previous spring, he discussed with Bubs members the issues the group would face in its racial composition. “The first thing that I talked about with [members of the Bubs]… [was that] if you want to be a place for people of color, [people of color will] have to see it with their own eyes,” Sjamsu said. “Talking with the group before I left, knowing [Srinivasan] would be gone and I would be gone, it was going to be an all-white group. And people will think what they think.” The issue of representation has a strong effect on the communities a cappella groups try to reach, particularly new members. Sjamsu elaborated on this existential issue currently faced by the Bubs. “People definitely had this on their minds [in our weekly meetings] and we fleshed it out at length,” he said. “One of the toughest questions to answer, and I personally didn’t really have an answer to this question, [was]: If you have a space that’s geared for people of color — the analogous group would be S-Factor on campus, and if that seems to vibe with you as an auditionee, why would you even try to do the Bubs?”
For a cappella groups without identity-based orientations, representation on stage will always be a continued struggle. However, some a cappella performers of color have stated that their joining was partly inspired by existing representation in their groups. Purandare echoed some of these sentiments when she saw representation that affirmed her place in the Jills. “[When] I saw the Jills perform the spring of my senior year in high school, there was a girl who is a year older than me… she’s Indian, and when I saw her perform in the spring … it made me really comfortable to see someone I identified with in that group, and I can’t really stress how important that was … Seeing how much she was accepted into that group, at least visually, it made me feel that I could do that too,” Sjamsu said. Strong shared a similar story, recalling the impressions she had as a first-year student watching a cappella groups perform at the O-Show. “Even just seeing one person of color there [shows] that ‘there’s a person of color, I could also be a person of color in that setting.’” she said. “It’s kind of a subconscious thought that ‘this is okay for me to do.’” For Purandare, efforts to ensure the Jills reach more people during the auditions process doesn’t just come from a more diverse stage presence but also means an active openness during recruitment. “Making sure that our advertising reaches the Asian American Center, the Africana Center, these specific groups of people, we want to show that, yes, you can also audition,” Purandare said. “You don’t have to come find us. We’ll come find you… In order for people to feel comfortable auditioning, we have to be open.” This shift toward a more thoughtful auditioning process and transparent dialogue to
When: Tuesday, November 7 6:00pm ────
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address issues of race and identity seems to have had a positive effect on a capella groups without identity-based orientations. This kind of active push for more diverse representation also has huge implications for an undergraduate student-body that is reportedly 56 percent white, 12 percent Asian, seven percent Hispanic and four percent black. For Percy, these shifts don’t only address issues within the a cappella community but are in response to long-standing, broad sociopolitical symptoms of Tufts University and the space it inhabits. “These discussions have been ongoing for a while, I know that even when I was in the [Bubs], people would kind of joke about how white the Bubs were and are, or how white the Jills were and are… I also think that naturally attitudes and opinions toward different groups change over time,” Percy said. “Maybe by the nature of our political climate. Who’s to attribute it to one thing? But I know diversity and inclusion is more a popular subject point to discuss because people know Tufts is so homogeneous. But people know there are class divisions, people know that there are ethnic cultural divisions at Tufts.” Strong spoke with optimism on the recent concerted efforts of fellow a cappella community members. “I think generally a cappella is going in the same direction of transparency in those kinds of conversations…[Though I don’t want to assume] I think we’re all going as one giant thing…I think it speaks to who’s in a cappella right now: some great people, making moves,” Strong said. Percy echoed some of Strong’s thoughts on this shift toward intentionality and inclusivity. “In my opinion, it’s about time,” he said. “It’s a good thing, it’s a good shift, but it’s about time.”
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THE TUFTS DAILY | Comics | Friday, November 3, 2017
tuftsdaily.com
Comics
LATE NIGHT AT THE DAILY Cathy: “Do you want to know when I poo?”
Comics
SUDOKU
GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS
NON SEQUITUR BY WILEY MILLER
Difficulty Level: Catching up on your work after a week in Hong Kong.
LINDA C. BLACK ASTROLOGY
Thursday’s Solution
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7. Avoid provoking upsets. A turning point arises in a partnership with this Full Moon. It could get spicy. Compromise and collaborate for shared commitments. CRYPTIC CROSSWORD BY SONATA
The Tiny Guide to Solving Cryptic Crosswords; Part 4: Hiding in Plain Sight Time for hidden word clues, where the answer is hidden in the clue itself —as such, look for “hiding” or “bridging” words. Not the most common of techniques, but fun to find! Examples from Previous Puzzles: D3) Neroutically hiding money (4): nEUROtically -> EURO D5) Bare leg: antiquity hides class (7) : barE LEG ANTiquity -> ELEGANT Next time: Back-tracking! 1
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Across 1 Don't repeat terms translated for a large shopping outlet (10,5) 9 Like a cat's iron rule (6) 10 End of the month broiler explosion is shocking (8) 11 Tire as session shows considered once more (8) 14 Upstart joins ancient egyptian game server for news (6) 17 Readies foundation material to decieve island meetand-greet? (8,5) 20 Modest nun pirouettes capriciously (13) 23 Voyage in southeast band (6) 25 Sees term changed for fall or spring at Tufts (8) 28 Pound and force all to hit the shore (8) 29 Flower bit test out of statements (6) 30 Employing a large well-organised fantasy adventure (4-7,4) Down 2 Fey circling middlemen after ten (6) 3 Foreign goodbye for a latin god (5) 4 Put 'em back in the melody (5)
5 Those strange moral practices (5) 6 Wild otter runs round old city in distress (7) 7 Commonplace kind of square ceremony (5) 8 Reallocate without a regulation by vote (9) 12 Because the north is covered in snow and ice (5) 13 Be useful and present (5) 15 Former partner in North America joined group (5) 16 Advisor enumerates a story to his listening audience (9) 17 Skip a far-fetched story? (5) 18 One's right, as spelt out on the spine of a book (5) 19 Canadian animal's bovine noise over stone ends (5) 21 Something afoot, follow around one that's skittish (7) 22 Again consider how to make amends (6) 24 Short for an independent venture in a cube (5) 25 Savory-sounding, like a cracker (5) 26 He takes in signifigant other shortly for building with stone (5) 27 Some careless language! (5)
Sports
Friday, November 3, 2017 | Sports | THE TUFTS DAILY
Sports Hall of Fame to commemorate past Jumbo legends HALL OF FAME
continued from page 1 “I think what happens is, like everything else, you get something that’s really good and you’re seeing all the benefits of it, and then you want to continue to make it better and better… I mean, if the biggest problem is that we have to find a place to honor these people and put them up, we’re going to make that happen. It’s just a question of where and how to do it the best way.” Morris stated that until the physical hall — which will be funded by private fundraising — is erected, the hall will be accessible online. “We will have a virtual Hall of Fame on our website to honor our inductees,” Morris stated. “Although we have not identified a final location yet, we plan to devote a physical space to the Hall of Fame in the future.” Casey also recognized that the most important issue in the creation of something as commemorative and symbolic as the Athletics Hall of Fame is the general mes-
sage, not the minutiae. This clarity of insight came to him during his involvement in creating a Hall of Fame for the New England Intercollegiate Baseball Association (NEIBA). “I think that got delayed so long because people were deciding between a ring and a watch,” Casey said. “I’m going, like, ‘Yeah, but, you know, people just want to be recognized.’” While putting the project into motion and dealing with the administrative side of things might have been a bit more tedious, Casey claimed that he does not expect the decision making process for the nominations to be difficult or controversial. “I know we’ve spent a lot of time on the the guidelines for nominating people and the guidelines for the process of how long you had to be out and the categories, so that sort of takes care of that,” Casey said. “I don’t see how we’re going to be wrong, no matter who we put in for the first few [classes] anyways. It’s long overdue.” Both Morris and Casey described one major purpose of the Hall of Fame as honoring excel-
lent coaches, players and administrators. “[We want] to honor the many outstanding Jumbos… [who have] distinguished themselves in the field of intercollegiate athletics, brought honor and acclaim to our university, and contributed to the success and advancement of intercollegiate athletics at Tufts,” Morris said. Casey named track star Vera Stenhouse (A ’91) as an example of someone who deserves more recognition than she currently receives. Stenhouse is already a member of the Div. III Track & Field Athlete Hall of Fame. She was inducted in 2012. However, her feats as a Jumbo — including eight individual NCAA Div. III national championships — are not as widely remembered and appreciated by current Tufts students. “She was the only women’s track athlete that qualified in 1991, and she finished fourth as a team,” Casey recounted. “No one even knows that. I mean, that’s an unbelievable story… [that] you want to make sure gets passed down.”
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The other purpose of the hall is to unite and bring pride to the school community as a whole. For Casey, it not only seeks to honor those involved in sports at Tufts; it is a means of celebrating school spirit on a greater level. In that way, inducting an acclaimed honoree to the Athletics Hall of Fame is akin to other honors on campus. “It’s no different than the sense of pride when you find out that a chemistry professor gets a huge distinguished reward,” he said. “Everyone feels good because it’s a Tufts person … It’s just one community.” Casey also highlighted the parallels between the hall’s unifying intent and the similar capacity of athletics itself to bring people together. “It’s no different than going to a game,” he said. “People come to a game, they feel good, [and] they watch the game. They’re excited. And it’s ‘Tufts won,’ not anyone else, not those three guys or those four women won. It’s ‘Tufts won.’ That’s what we’re sort of looking at, too.”
Now out of NESCAC race, Jumbos set to take on Mules at Colby by Bradley Schussel Sports Editor
The season is winding down for Tufts football (4–3), with only two games remaining on the schedule. Tufts takes to the road on Saturday to take on the winless Colby Mules (0–7). The Mules are currently tied for last in the NESCAC, while the Jumbos rank sixth, just outside of the top half of the league. Tufts most recently faced Amherst, led by sophomore quarterback Ollie Eberth. The Mammoths prevailed over the Jumbos 31–26, improving to 6–1 on the season and knocking the Jumbos out of contention for the NESCAC championship. The Jumbos trailed the Mammoths for most of the game, even facing a 21–7 deficit late in the second quarter. Tufts’ defense was strong in the second half, and two of the team’s top linebackers — sophomore Greg Holt and senior quad-captain Steve DiCienzo — each had 11 tackles in the game. The defensive unit held Amherst to only three points in the second half on a field goal in the third quarter. The Jumbos rallied in the fourth quarter on the heels of junior quarterback Ryan McDonald, and managed to get the ball back down by five with 1:11 remaining in the game. Then came the crusher. On the first play of their potential game-winning drive, McDonald was intercepted by Amherst sophomore defensive back John Ballard. The Jumbo comeback came up just short, and the Mammoths held on to win the game. The Mammoth pass rush was strong in this game, as McDonald was consistently forced to scramble around the backfield to avoid the pressure. Amherst’s defense
totalled three sacks, five tackles for a loss and two QB hurries in the game. Despite the loss, the offensive line hasn’t made any significant adjustments since the game against Amherst. “We pride ourselves on our consistency,” senior offensive lineman Liam Thau said of the offensive line unit. “We have a good group out there and I think we’ve been playing pretty well. So I don’t think we look to change anything. We just look to stay consistent [and] keep doing what we’re doing.” A scary moment in the Amherst game was the injury to Tufts junior linebacker Markus Edmunds in the third quarter. Play was stopped for a considerable amount of time, as the junior had to be taken off the field on a stretcher. Tufts coach Jay Civetti gave a brief update on Edmunds, a few days after visiting the player in the hospital. “He’s recovering well,” Civetti said. “He’s happy about the prognosis, but he’s got a long road ahead.” Tufts will now focus its attention on its upcoming game against Colby. The Colby attack relies heavily on the pass, as the team has thrown 265 times this season, the third most in the league. In contrast, the Mules have only run the ball 214 times, with the fewest rushing attempts of any NESCAC squad. Colby has had a rough going this season, to say the least. On top of being winless, the Mules have allowed 33 points per game, while only scoring a league-worst 10.7 per game. They’ve allowed 412 yards per game to their opponents, while averaging a leagueworst 219.4 yards per game themselves. Civetti noted that it may be tempting for most teams to count out an 0–7 team, but
ANGELIE XIONG / THE TUFTS DAILY
Junior quarterback Ryan McDonald throws a stiff arm during the game against Amherst on Oct. 28. not for Tufts, citing the team’s unique history. “We’re a bit uncommon,” Civetti said of his football program, of which he has been the coach since 2010. “We had a 31-game losing streak, and we went three straight years having not won a game. We have a unique perspective on where Colby’s at. It’s senior day for them, they’re at home and I’m pretty sure they’re not going to roll over and just give it to us.” Thau echoed his coach’s sentiment, adding that his senior class joined the team when it was at its worst. “[The seniors of the team] came into a program that was a little different than it is now,” Thau said. “It’s a different mindset now. We’ve come a long way.” To its credit, Colby has shown some fight in its last two games. On the road against
Tufts prepares for showdown with Hamilton WOMEN'S SOCCER
continued from back in the regular season, the Jumbos won 2–0 at the Continentals, with Grubman and Zahrah getting on the s c o re sheet. Hamilton had upset No. 3 Middlebury 1–0. Tufts will have to be at its best to find a way past senior goalkeeper Emily Dumont, who has let in just eight goals in 16 games this season. Dumont is second in the BEN KIM / THE TUFTS DAILY
NESCAC with 69 saves, topping the conference with a .896 save percentage. Ranalli warned that the team should take nothing for granted. “We had a good result the first time, but a lot of things can change in half a season,” Ranalli said. “We’re expecting to see a different Hamilton than we did, and they got a good result against a very good team against Middlebury, and no way are we taking them lightly or looking past Saturday.” Whiting added that Hamilton had come off a double-overtime draw the last time the two teams met, but circumstances would be different this time around. “I wouldn’t be surprised if they changed their system — they played with two in the midfield the last time we played, but I have a feeling that may change because we play with three in
the midfield,” Whiting said. “I think that they’ve got a couple of good forwards that are really athletic and are starting to come on, so I think that’s something that we have to be really aware of.” Whiting also brushed off the inexperience of her team in terms of semifinal matches. “There’s more weight … but in reality, it’s the same game. We go out and do what we do day in, day out,” Whiting said. “Yeah there’s a little bit more import on the game, but if we treat it like we do any other game, prepare the same and we have the same routine, we come out with confidence I think that we’re feeling good that we’ve achieved enough this season to help us believe in ourselves.” Williams plays defending champions Amherst, seeded seventh, in the other semifinal.
Hamilton (2–5) on Oct. 21, Colby lost 27–24. The Mules led by four but allowed the Continentals to score a touchdown early in the fourth quarter. Hamilton took a three point lead and held it for the remaining 10 minutes. Colby saw an identical score against Bates (1–6) at home on Saturday, losing 27–24. A blocked punt and a 28-yard return in the fourth quarter by junior running back Jake Schwern gave the Mules the ball on the Bobcats’ three yard line, and the Mules were able to punch the ball in, bringing them within three. Schwern showcased his skills on special teams but also leads the team in rushing this season with 331 yards. Colby got the ball back once more, with 1:21 left in the game, but couldn’t convert on fourth down on their own 49 yard line. The Mules lost the close game by three, and remain winless on the season at 0–7. Colby is tied only with Bowdoin (0–7) at the bottom of the NESCAC. Next up for the Mules is a date with the Jumbos at home. The Jumbos come in as the favorite to win, despite being knocked out of contention for the NESCAC championship last week. Civetti commented on the team’s mentality, and accepting the fact that they won’t be in the race for the championship going forward. “There’s a bit of a ‘gulp’ in it,” Civetti said. “Just kind of accepting that reality. But it doesn’t change our mentality, we’re still gonna finish as strong as possible. That’s why we talk about the championship culture, rather than just the championship.” Thau is confident in his team’s ability to avoid its second straight loss. “We don’t lose two games in a row anymore,” the lineman said. “Tufts football doesn’t lose two games in a row anymore.” Colby and Tufts will kick off their game in Waterville, Maine at 1:00 p.m. on Saturday.
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Sports
Friday, November 3, 2017
Field hockey upset by Bowdoin, postseason status in jeopardy
EVAN SAYLES FOR TUFTS UNIVERSITY
Senior midfielder/forward Mary Kate Patton passes the ball in the homecoming game against the Middlebury Panthers on Oct. 7. by Caleb Symons Sports Editor
A week that began with much optimism ended in dismay for the Tufts field hockey team, which hosted Bowdoin twice in the span of four days due to a scheduling coincidence. On Oct. 25, the Jumbos closed out the regular season by clinching second place in the NESCAC standings with a 3–0 win over the visitors from Maine. The two teams then met again in the first round of the NESCAC tournament on Saturday, as the seventh-seeded Polar Bears stole a shocking come-from-behind 2–1 victory. “It was an emotional roller-coaster this week,” junior goalkeeper Emily Polinski said. “We knew playing Bowdoin the second time within such a short period would be tough. [Both teams] tried to make adjustments, and they came out on top … as a result of a few plays.” The Jumbos hosted a first-round game in the NESCAC tournament for the third consecutive year, courtesy of their second-place finish in the conference’s regular season standings. The game featured a reprise of the
regular season finale, with then-No. 4 Tufts taking on a Bowdoin side that it had defeated 3–0 earlier that week. “We watched a lot of film over the two days [in between the games],” Tufts coach Tina Mattera said. “My assistants worked on putting together good practices that would help the girls make some modifications and changes going into the game on Saturday.” Tufts senior midfielder/forward Mary Kate Patton opened the scoring in the 27th minute following a controversial goalmouth scrum, in which it appeared that senior forward Mary Travers had scored. However, the referee instead ruled for a penalty stroke, which Patton, a co-captain, calmly slotted past Bowdoin first-year goalkeeper Maddie Ferrucci. The Polar Bears responded five minutes after halftime to even the score at one. After junior defender Elizabeth Bennewitz’s initial shot was blocked, the ball bounced straight back to her, and she flung a shot through traffic that Polinski had no chance of stopping. After Tufts failed to capitalize on six corners in a ten-minute span, Bowdoin marched down the field and scored what proved to be
the game-winning goal. Sophomore forward Emma Stevens, the Polar Bears’ second-leading scorer, gathered a pass from fellow sophomore forward Kara Finnerty and quickly rolled a shot into the bottom left corner of the net at the 52:56 mark. The Jumbos were unable to mount a sustained attack in the remaining 17 minutes, as the defense failed to connect with the attack on several long balls. With the pace and tone of the game becoming increasingly frantic, Tufts earned two corners in the last minute of play, but a final shot from distance went wide, giving Bowdoin a dramatic victory. “Defensively, Bowdoin was much more prepared to play us than [it was] the first night,” Polinski said. “It’s always tough playing a team the second time, no matter what the seeding is.” On Oct. 25, Tufts capped the regular season by blanking Bowdoin in a 3–0 victory at Ounjian Field. While the win had no effect on the NESCAC standings — the Jumbos had already locked up the league’s second-best record — it did have potential bearing on seeding in the NCAA tournament. “We had already secured the second spot, but we knew that for NCAA purposes, we needed to win every game,” Mattera said. The hosts had their foot on the gas pedal immediately, winning a corner in the opening seconds. Shortly thereafter, Tufts junior forward Hanaa Malik sent an airborne cross through the box, which junior forward Gigi Tutoni knocked into the net for her sixth goal of the season. Tufts doubled its lead with three minutes remaining in the first half, as junior midfielder Claire Trilling blasted a long-range effort past Ferrucci. “Our forwards don’t tend to get a lot of credit because of [our] low goals-against average,” Polinski said. “Our offense does a great job in the game, working hard to make sure … the ball’s going in the goal, and at practice, making sure the defense is prepared to play whichever opponent we face.” Senior midfielder Celia Lewis rounded out the scoring in the 43rd minute, following a period of sustained pressure by the Jumbos. The Houston, Texas native corralled a loose
rebound and slid it past Ferrucci for her fourth tally of the season. It was the seventh time this season that Tufts had three different goal-scorers in the same game. “Our junior and senior classes are super talented, and they also have experience,” Mattera said. “A lot of them have been starters for multiple years, so they know what it takes [in] big games. The nice thing is, I feel like we don’t have a star player. If you look at scoring across the whole team, it’s very balanced compared to other schools.” Bowdoin controlled play for the remainder of the game, outshooting Tufts 16–4 in the second half. The Jumbos’ back line held strong, though, as Polinski recorded eight saves and junior defender Issy Del Priore made two goal-line stops. With the win, the Jumbos secured a regular season record of 11–4 (8–1 NESCAC). While Tufts appeared to emerge with a comfortable victory, the match was more evenly matched than the scoreline suggested, setting the stage for Saturday’s nail-biter. The Jumbos benefited from a few fortuitous bounces and missed calls, on both offense and defense, in the 3–0 win. “We completely dominated on Saturday, and we lost, and they had more shots and corners on Wednesday, and they lost,” Mattera said. The Jumbos must now wait out the remainder of the NESCAC tournament, which concludes Sunday, to see if they’ll receive an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. Ranked third in their region (behind NESCAC rivals, Middlebury and Williams) and with five losses on their record, the defending national runners-up know that a tournament berth is a long shot. “It will shake out to what happens this weekend,” Mattera said. “If Middlebury wins the conference and Williams comes in second, I think that will benefit us. There are only four at-large bids … and everybody who got an at-large bid last year only had four losses. I’m hoping that the committee takes into account how strong the NESCAC is, and that we had a really successful season last year.”
WOMEN'S SOCCER
Tufts moves onto NESCAC semifinals for first time since 2013 by Yuan Jun Chee Sports Editor
Tufts won its NESCAC quarterfinal matchup against Trinity 1–0 this past Saturday, banishing memories of its disappointing defeat at this same stage last year against the same opponent once and for all. The match started out tentatively, with both sides conceding corners early on. Tufts slowly grew into the game, with the two firstyear forwards Sophie Lloyd and Elizabeth Reed leading the front line with a high-pressure game that often unsettled Trinity. The Jumbos’ maturity in the first ever playoff game was attributed to some good advice they received prior to the game. “Before the game, several seniors came up to Liz Reed and I and said, ‘take all the pressure off yourself or how you’ve done in the season and about the past, just play this game how you’ve been playing, do what you normally do and have fun,’” Lloyd said. “It was really great to have the seniors come talk to us like that, so we just went into the game like we would any other game.” The visitors’ best opportunity came in the 14th minute. The Bantams’ junior forward Shannon Kennedy split the Jumbos’ defense with a well-timed through ball, but sophomore midfielder Sarah Maloney expertly recovered to get a block in to keep the match scoreless. In the 31st minute,
Trinity first-year midfielder Cami Beath then dribbled her way through the Tufts defense, only for her shot to go just over the bar. This was a wake-up call for the Jumbos, as they produced their best chance of the game in the 36th minute. Sophomore forward Paige Vigliotta made a turn and was through on the left flank. She crossed the ball into the middle of the box which was laid off by senior forward Margaret Zahrah to classmate and strike partner Mariah Harvey-Brown. However, Harvey-Brown slipped at the crucial moment and her shot went over the bar. Tufts upped the tempo in the second half, outshooting Trinity 10–2 after the break. The first real opportunity of the second half fell to Reed, who dragged her shot just past the post in the 61st minute. This was followed by a flurry of shots by junior midfielder Sarah Grubman and sophomore midfielder Jenna Troccoli, both of whom were unable to find the back of the net. Junior midfielder and co-captain Emma Ranalli explained that this was simply a case of Tufts needing to settle into their rhythm, given the high stakes of the occasion. “It was just a comfort thing, we’re a pretty young team in the sense that we have a lot of young players getting time,” Ranalli said. “Even for us upperclassmen, it’s still nerve-wracking playing in the NESCAC tournament game — it could be our last game —
there are all those nerves in it, so it just took us a couple of minutes to work those out and just kind of settle in and know that we can play soccer know that we can compete against any one and settle in our game.” The Bantams altered their tactics slightly in the middle of the second half, opting on many occasions to play the ball high to test reigning NESCAC Player of the Week junior goalkeeper Emily Bowers. However, Bowers proved her worth to the team by often handling those shots with ease. Bowers then turned provider in the 70th for the game’s winning goal. Launching the ball forward, the Trinity defense misjudged the flight of Bowers’ drop-kick. The ball fell kindly for Lloyd, who caught Trinity senior goalkeeper Julia Pitino out of position as Lloyd flicked the ball into the far corner of the net. This was Lloyd’s eighth goal of the season, placing her second in the NESCAC in terms of goals scored. “Bowers just has amazing kicks, so I’m always looking out for it, if it’s going to bounce over the defender or if they’re going to misjudge it,” Lloyd said. “Right when I saw Liz on the defender, I thought that she might get a flick on it and I just started running. Honestly, nothing was going through my mind, which is like the best … When I’m just focused, I score.” Tufts was given a chance to double its lead late in the second half. On 85 minutes, Harvey-Brown was tripped just
outside the box. Ranalli stepped up to take the free kick, but it was comfortably caught by Pitino. The Jumbos were thus made to fight to the last minute to defend their lead. In the 89th minute, an uncleared ball fell to Beath, but her shot was blocked by Vigliotta as the Jumbos progressed to the NESCAC Semifinals for the first time since 2013. According to coach Martha Whiting, such committed defending is what got Tufts to where it is today. Whiting highlighted that it was very important for the team to be able to defend from front to back if it was to have a good championship season. “They’re tough, Mo [Maloney], [junior defenders] Jamie [Corley], Taylor [Koscho], Bowers — they’re tough girls and they would sacrifice their bodies and do what they need to do to get on the defensive side of the ball,” Whiting said. “They know each other so well now, having played together for 16 games and they’re peaking at the right time … sometimes defenders don’t get a lot of credit because they do their job quietly, there’s no real great stats being a defender, but they’re kind the unsung heroes of the whole team right now.” Tufts, seeded fourth in the tournament, will play sixth-seeded Hamilton on Saturday for a place in the NESCAC Championship match hosted by Williams College. Earlier see WOMEN'S SOCCER, page 7