January 27, 2016

Page 1

Is this the year? Iñárritu’s beautiful, harsh ‘The Revenant’ may get DiCaprio his Oscar see ARTS AND LIVING / PAGE 10

Tufts community gathers to honor Martin Luther King Jr.

Tufts defense proves dominant against Conn. College and Emmanuel, extending winning streak to 11 games see SPORTS / BACK PAGE

SEE PHOTO / PAGE 8

THE

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

VOLUME LXXI, NUMBER 3

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

tuftsdaily.com

New Perkins Loans provisions increase borrowing costs for students by Catherine Perloff Assistant News Editor

Changes made to the Federal Perkins Loan Program with the passing of an act through Congress last year on Dec. 17, will raise borrowing costs for students in the Class of 2020. The loan program, which would have expired on Sept. 30 last year, was extended through fiscal year 2016 with the passing of the Higher Education Extension Act of 2015. In addition to the program’s extension, new stipulations were made that mandate borrowers to first exhaust Federal Direct Loans before taking out a Perkins Loan, a type of federal higher education loan. Perkins Loans, which are awarded to students with exceptional need at Tufts, offer benefits for students such as a fixed interest rate and a nine-month post-graduation grace period before students are expected to begin repayment, according to the Tufts Financial Aid Office’s website. As subsidized loans, Perkins Loans do not not accrue interest while students are in college. According to Director of Financial Aid Patricia Reilly, the act will not likely affect current Perkins Loans recipients, who make up 25 percent of the financial-aid receiving population of undergraduates at Tufts. However, new students receiving loans in the Class of 2020 will have to borrow up to the limits of a Federal Direct Subsidized Loan and a Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loan before taking out a Perkins Loan. “The Unsubsidized Loan is a much inferior loan, especially for freshmen, because the interest accrues when they’re in school,” Reilly said. “If you give an Unsubsidized Loan to a freshman, they are going to accrue four years of interest.”

by Isha Fahad News Editor

er killed 32 people, according to April 13 CNN article. “We think it is critically important to be prepared to respond and to save lives when deadly force is being used against members of our community,” Romprey told the Daily in an email. According to Deputy Director of Public Relations Patrick Collins, TUPD works regularly with state and municipal law enforcement agencies to best utilize

Members of the Tufts community participated in the second annual Martin Luther King, Jr. (MLK) Day of Service, volunteering at four different locations in the surrounding area this past Saturday. The MLK Day of Service, hosted by the University Chaplaincy, brought volunteers from Tufts to serve at the American Red Cross Boston Food Pantry, the Cambridge Zen Center, the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter and the Mystic Learning Center, according to the University Chaplaincy website. “The goals for the MLK Day of Service were to provide an opportunity for Tufts students, staff and faculty to build relationships with local community organizations, provide needed assistance for these organizations and the people they support and to learn about systemic issues that impact our community and the Greater Boston area,” Zachary Cole, the University Chaplaincy’s program and outreach specialist, told the Daily in an email. According to Cole, the Day of Service was planned by a committee of students and staff from student organizations and departments across the university. “For the University Chaplaincy, the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday is an opportunity to work collaboratively with other staff and students, reflect on the life and teachings of Dr. King and educate on spiritual and ethical issues in our society and the world,” Cole said. Volunteers were asked to sign up for one of six shifts led by trained facilitators, according to Cole. Shift leaders included staff from the Africana Center and the University Chaplaincy, as well as student members of the Interfaith Student Council, the CAFE (Conversation, Action, Faith and Education) Pre-Orientation Program and the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service. Before and after each shift, group members were given the chance to reflect and discuss their experiences, he said. Sophomore Adam Zoll, who helped pack bags of food at the American Red Cross Boston Food Pantry in Roxbury, MA said that there were seven Tufts volunteers on his shift. “As our group debriefed after volunteering, we all decided that the most rewarding part of the experience was seeing how apprecia-

see PATROL RIFLES, page 3

see MLK, page 2

PETRINA CHAN / THE TUFTS DAILY

Reilly explained that before the changes to the loan program were enacted, the Tufts Financial Aid Office typically awarded eligible first-year students a Federal Direct Subsidized Loan, followed by a Perkins Loan, and would only award an Unsubsidized Loan if there was still a gap in meeting the student’s full demonstrated need. “It appears that we only need to take Subsidized Loans into account when making loans to continuing students, which aligns with our current policy,” Reilly told the Daily in an email. “The regulations are a bit ambiguous on this point. We will await further clarification from the U.S. Department of Education before beginning to make awards to continuing students for the 2016-2017 academic year.” Reilly also said the Department of Education is very responsive and the ambiguity would most likely be resolved before her office begins awarding loans in May. She explained that the Financial Aid

Office has not decided how it will finance students who would have normally relied on Perkins Loans. Reilly said that her office is currently talking with the Budget Center to discuss various potential solutions, including issuing more Tufts Loans, a needbased, institutional subsidized loan, and increasing the amount of grant money for students in need. She said the university may attempt not to regularly award Perkins Loans to first-years in light of the program changes. “My guess is that we won’t be giving many Perkins Loans to [first years] because the only way we can do that is if we first give them an Unsubsidized Loan and we don’t think that’s a very good idea,” Reilly said. Reilly said that her office will know more about how it will handle a decrease in Perkins Loans in the spring when accepted students receive their financial aid packages. see LOANS , page 2

Northeastern joins Tufts, other area colleges in arming campus police by Joe Walsh

Assistant News Editor

Northeastern University became the fifth Boston-area university to allow its campus police officers to work with semiautomatic rifles last December, following a similar policy that has been in place at Tufts since 2008. According to Deputy Director of Public Safety Leon Romprey, all sworn Tufts University Police Department (TUPD) officers have been trained to use semiauto-

Please recycle this newspaper

Partly Sunny 42 / 24

/thetuftsdaily

Second annual Day of Service held in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day

matic rifles, also known as patrol rifles, to be deployed when needed. He explained that necessary situations for their use include those where deadly force is being used with the intent to injure or kill. TUPD officers have never had to deploy patrol rifles in response to a real situation before, he said. The decision to arm TUPD officers with patrol rifles was made in 2008 in response to the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, Romprey said. During the Virginia Tech incident, a single shoot-

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NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................5 OPINION..................................... 7

ARTS & LIVING.....................10 COMICS..................................... 14 SPORTS............................ BACK


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