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(05/18/24 2:31am)
A brief and cozy sit-down with six Daily seniors as they reminisce about how they got started at Tufts' newspaper of record, how it has changed and more. Video by Jake Ren, Trey Lawrence, Tyler Frojmovich / The Tufts DailySpecial thanks: Ty Blitstein, Chloe Courtney Bohl, Carl Svahn, Caroline Vandis, Mike Kourkoulakos, Aaron Klein, Chloe Nacson-Schecter
(05/08/24 1:32am)
Members from Tufts Spirit of the Creative dance team discussed their history with dance, their involvement in the club and how dancing in SOC had changed their lives at Tufts.Video by Francesca Wan, Stephen Burchfield, Jake Ren / The Tufts Daily
(04/22/24 4:01am)
The story of the famous Chinese science fiction novel “The Three-Body Problem” (2006) begins in a military camp in Mongolia during the Cultural Revolution in China. Over the course of the story, the lives of people from that tiny corner of the world and the choices they make become inextricably intertwined with alien invasions, inter-dimensional travel and the fate of galaxies.
(03/29/24 4:03am)
In movies, the process of someone being incarcerated often gets more attention than how they return to society. The entry to prison is often portrayed as a rugged odyssey, while the reentry to society is simply reduced to someone walking out the prison gates to a car with a friend waiting. So what does reentry actually look like? And how has Tufts assisted with that process?
(03/11/24 4:01am)
On the evening of Feb. 29, the Rabb Room in Barnum Hall became a productive dialogue space consisting of Tufts undergraduates, Tufts Prison Initiative graduates, activists and government legislators, all gathered to discuss how to turn policies on paper into real change.
(03/10/24 3:02am)
Members of The Tufts Daily talk about this year in film ahead of the Oscars. They discuss their favorite movies and predict winners, all while ranting about the worst snubs and their juiciest hot takes.
(12/05/23 12:56am)
On a rainless weekend morning above 40 degrees, you can usually find Roland Pearsall, director of institutional research at a small private college in Boston, lugging a cart with chords and amplifiers in one hand and a guitar case in another, about to start his day of street performance. Street performers often feel like a part of the space they’re in, but they all have stories, quirks and lives of their own. We sat down with Roland and asked the questions you’ve (maybe) always had about a street performer.
(12/04/23 5:01am)
Although it is already December, pumpkins from Halloween continue to haunt the Tufts University campus. Remembering how these gourds were dismembered, carved, gorged and skinned to make into pie, perfume, spice and lattes in October, it is nice to see them just sitting around now. They often perch at inaccessibly high parts of buildings, upright and intact, as if giants had carefully placed them there as ritualistic protection so that “Attack On Titan” (2013–23) could conclude on a satisfying note (which was proven successful). Some pumpkins, like the two on Barnum Hall, have been removed, but enough remain for them to be considered a phenomenon. The ones at eye level are surprisingly still with us, likely a result of Tufts’ lack of policy on large, stray orange gourds.
(11/13/23 5:01am)
I was loitering in my dorm one afternoon when I received the following text:
(11/03/23 4:03am)
On a rainless weekend morning above 40 degrees, you can usually find Roland Pearsall lugging a cart with cords and amplifiers in one hand and a guitar case in another. He’d be on his way to Harvard or Davis Square, about to sing his heart out for the next several hours with the voice of someone who had grown up singing on grassy plains.
(11/01/23 4:03am)
On Oct. 6, comedian Joe Pera released his first standup special on YouTube. He opened it with the following words:
(10/30/23 4:01am)
I grew up in China, and ironically, my first taste of the modern American flavor of racism came from a Chinese American. It has a subtle taste, with a pinch of passive aggression and the type of aftertaste that makes you unsure if what you just encountered was racism.
(10/16/23 4:01am)
If you turn right on the basement floor of Houston Hall, you’ll see a signless grey door with a metal plate where the handle is supposed to be. Inside, you won’t find the popular ’70s R&B disco band Earth, Wind & Fire, but rather the stalls where Houston basement residents flush, brush and shower, surrounding you left, right and center.