TuftsDaily04.17,14

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THE TUFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXVII, NUMBER 55

Where You Read It First Est. 1980 TUFTSDAILY.COM

THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014

Introducing the candidates

NICK PFOSI / THE TUFTS DAILY

NICK PFOSI / THE TUFTS DAILY

Andrew Núñez is proponent Inclusiveness is component of improved communication of Robert Joseph’s agenda by Sarah Zheng Daily Editorial Board

As a candidate for Tufts Community Union (TCU) president, junior Andrew Núnez brands himself as a proponent of change, hoping to improve communication within the university. Núñez was elected as a senator in the fall of his freshman year, when he joined the Services Committee and the Culture, Ethnicity, Community Affairs (CECA) Committee. He was also appointed to the Equal Education Opportunity Committee (EEOC) and currently serves as the Latino Center Representative. "I think that, as a Latino student on this campus, I've felt strongly how there's pervasive silence on a lot of issues and sometimes a blind eye from both the administration and other students," Núñez said. "The retention rates are significantly lower for students of color versus white students. We're at a lower rate of Latinos

and black students on the campus than we were in the '90s, and that also has to do with the amount of financial aid that we're giving and the fact that we're not need-blind." As part of improving financial aid, Núñez is pushing for the creation of a textbook lending library and hopes to expand options for student employment on campus. In his two years working for Tufts Telefund as a work-study student, Núñez has raised over $300,000. "I'm on track to being the highest student fundraiser at Tufts — only two people have ever raised more than me," he said. "This is an important issue, especially for students who are on financial aid, and for Tufts at large, as well. There is a real need to make sure that there are spaces for students to work." At the end of his freshman year, Núñez was elected as TCU Historian and became

see Núñez, page 2

by Danny Gottfried Daily Editorial Board

Robert Joseph, a junior, is running for Tufts Community Union (TCU) president on a platform of reform and inclusiveness, seeking to refine the campus sexual misconduct policy and increase student access to public transportation. Joseph, who has been a senator since the fall of his freshman year, served as TCU Parliamentarian as a sophomore, handling issues pertaining to the TCU Constitution and bylaws. If elected president, he said he hopes to change the student body's perception of the Senate. "Many people see the TCU Senate as people that give money to all the other groups, or the group [of students] that talks to the administration," Joseph said. "I want to make sure that every student on this campus feels like TCU Senate is the group that you can come to with your issues. We are here to help you achieve

your goals as just one student, or [as] a student group." Ben Kaplan, Joseph’s campaign manager, said Joseph has an uncanny ability to remember peoples' names, faces and birthdays immediately after meeting them. This skill, combined with his outgoing personality, has made Joseph a person who is always listening to members of the campus community, Kaplan said. "It seems like a party trick, but I really just think it's indicative of how much he cares about other people and how much he cares about just being a listener and just being someone who can absorb information about to the people, internalize it and really use it to be helpful," Kaplan, a freshman, said. One of Joseph's top priorities involves making additional reforms to Tufts' sexual misconduct policy, which he has learned more about by attending many see JOSEPH, page 2

Arianna Huffington delivers ninth annual Murrow Forum address by Justin Rheingold Daily Editorial Board

Arianna Huffington, the founder of The Huffington Post (HuffPost), spoke yesterday about the new digital age of journalism at the ninth annual Edward R. Murrow Forum on Issues in Journalism. Huffington, who currently serves as the chair, president and editor-in-chief of the Huffington Post Media Group, sat down for a discussion with Jonathan Tisch (A '76), the chairman of Loews Hotels who endowed the Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service at Tufts. University President Anthony Monaco and Communications and Media Studies

Program Director Julie Dobrow introduced the two speakers. "One of the things that characterized Murrow's approach as a journalist was that, as technology changed, he was there ready to try it, embrace it and see how it could be used to convey both news and opinion," Dobrow said. "In his day, Murrow never shied away from the difficult story nor did he veer away from telling stories in ways that were entertaining ... I also believe that Edward R. Murrow would have embraced our selection of Arianna Huffington as as this year's speaker because she, like he, is a true journalistic innovator." Huffington discussed the founding of the HuffPost and said that she developed

Inside this issue

the website in response to the changing nature of journalism. "I could see back in 2005 that a lot of conversation was moving online and that a lot of the people that I admired, that I read in print, were not going to be online," she said. "They weren't going to start their own blogs, and there wasn't a real platform for them." Arthur Schlesinger was the first person Huffington invited to start a blog, but she explained that there was a major technical gap for older contributors like Schlesinger, who were not up to date on the new media forms. Huffington, however, felt that blogging was a way to provide a platform for a wide variety of voices. "That was my first hope ... that we would elevate what blogging was by explaining

that, at the same time as you have professional editors [and] professional journalists, it's great to have a platform that welcomes voices," she said. " What is great about what we wanted to create from the beginning is that there is no hierarchy. You can have you or the president of France or the president of Tufts [University] next to a homeless teenager who has something interesting to say." While the HuffPost has garnered criticism about its aggregation methods, Huffington explained that this is one of its four primary purposes. "The goal was always to be four things: blogging — which was basically commentary — news that we produce, investigative journalism — which we added two years

Today’s sections

Tufts students engage with Clinton Global Initiative University for its networking and funding opportunities.

‘Heaven Is for Real’ offers a one-dimensional message.

see FEATURES, page 3

see WEEKENDER, page 7

News 1 Features 3 Weekender 5 Editorial | Op-Ed 8

Op-Ed 9 Comics 10 Classifieds 11 Sports Back


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