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Boston Palestine Film Festival, exhibit ‘From the Streets’ showcase Palestinian perspective

The Boston area has certainly gotten a glimpse of Palestinian life and culture over the last month, with celebrations of Palestinian art through The Boston Palestine Film Festival (BPFF) and the photography exhibit “From These Streets” at the Tufts University Art Gallery.Beginning on Oct. 18, the 10-day film festival featured over 30 films portraying Palestinian life, family and culture. It was hosted by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Cambridge Public Library and Harvard Law School.The films addressed issues surrounding the political occupation of the Palestinian territories and its effects on refugee camps, as well as offered a look at Palestinian culture. According to Assistant Professor of Anthropology Amahl Bishara, providing this alternative viewpoint is particularly important.“We most often see Palestinians represented through the news and through political negotiations or acts of violence,” Bishara said. “But the Boston Palestine Film Festival lets us think about Palestinian society and culture in a more multidimensional way.”Tufts students who made it to the festival were exposed to films that showed Palestine through a more personal perspective. Munir Atalla, a member of Tufts Students for Justice in Palestine, attended the event and enjoyed the opportunity to screen the films.“I’m so happy that the Museum of Fine Arts puts its weight behind such a sometimes controversial event,” Atalla, a junior, said. “It’s been going for eight years, and they keep upping the quality. It’s also that Palestinian filmmaking has developed a lot recently, and we are starting to see more films that are competitive on a global level.”The film festival, a program of the Middle East Charitable and Cultural Society Inc., is one of the larger events that the organization hosts throughout the year, along with discussions, film screenings and workshops throughout the Boston area. The mission of the festival is to showcase the Palestinian narrative and culture through cinema and art.Founded in 2007, the festival has since presented over 300 films, as well as hosted numerous Palestinian artists and filmmakers through concerts and exhibits. This year’s festival was co-sponsored by various community groups, including the Center for Arab American Philanthropy, Jewish Voice for Peace Boston and Grassroots International.One film featured this year was “When I Saw You” (2012) from director Annemarie Jacir, who was recently named one of Filmmaker Magazine’s 25 New Faces of Independent Cinema. “When I Saw You” is set in Jordan during the 1960s and documents a boy’s journey after running away from his refugee camp.The BPFF also showcased “Just A Child” (2012), directed by Mohammad Al-Azza, who grew up in the West Bank in a refugee camp. The documentary short centers on a Palestinian teenager’s life after he is released from an Israeli detention center in the West Bank. Though his release garners a positive response from the community, through his perspective, audience members gain an understanding of the more complex consequences of his return to the community.Bishara, along with students in her Media, the State and the Senses seminar, recently collaborated with Al-Azza to bring the photography exhibit “From These Streets: A Palestinian Refugee Perspective on Community” to the Slater Concourse Gallery, located in the Aidekman Art Center. The exhibit, which will run until Dec. 8, displays Al-Azza’s photos depicting the Palestinian community.The young Palestinian photographer, born and raised in Aida Refugee Camp, Bethlehem, in the Palestinian West Bank, developed his photojournalism skills from a local youth organization called the Lajee Center. He later became the director of the Media Unit in the Lajee Center and continues to teach these skills to Palestinian youth in the area, according to Bishara.“[The Lajee Center] is a community-based organization, and they do a lot of activities for children and youth,” Bishara said. “One of the most thriving, successful programs they have is a media unit that teaches youths about documentary production and photography. And for me as a media scholar, it’s a gift. It’s just a really interesting story for me to think about and tell.”Bishara expressed excitement about bringing the Lajee Center and Tufts together with the exhibit. Various university groups co-sponsored the exhibit, including the Department of Anthropology; the Office of the Dean of Arts and Sciences; the Institute for Global Leadership; the International Relations, Middle Eastern Studies and Peace and Justice Studies programs; the Experimental College and the Slater Family Fund. “I mean, obviously their institutions are on various different scales and have very different resources and different missions as well,” she said. “But there is some overlap there, and I really appreciated this opportunity to bring that together to the exhibit.”The exhibit’s opening on Nov. 6 in Aidekman attracted a large showing of students, who could interact with Al-Azza and ask questions about his work and his experience growing up in a refugee camp.12


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Students rally for higher minimum wage

Tufts Labor Coalition , United for Immigrant Justice (UIJ) and Tufts Democrats organized a rally at Davis Square on Nov. 9 in support of the Raise Up Massachusetts (Raise Up MA) campaign.Raise Up MA aims to raise the minimum wage from $8 to $10.50 per hour and guarantee employees an hour of earned sick ...



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Founding member discusses Boston's first rooftop farm

Founder of Higher Ground Farm John Stoddard (N '09) spoke yesterday in the Lincoln Filene Center Rabb Room about the environmental benefits of rooftop farming in the Environmental Studies Program's weekly Lunch and Learn series.


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Founding member discusses Boston’s first rooftop farm

Founder of Higher Ground Farm John Stoddard (N ’09) spoke yesterday in the Lincoln Filene Center Rabb Room about the environmental benefits of rooftop farming in the Environmental Studies Program’s weekly Lunch and Learn series.




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Leong discusses gentrification of Chinatowns

Associate Professor in the College of Public and Community Service at University of Massachusetts Boston Andrew Leong spoke about gentrification of Chinatowns around the world last night in Braker Hall.



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180 Degrees Consulting adds Tufts to worldwide map of social justice consulting

Only two of the 26 current branches worldwide of 180 Degrees Consulting are in the United States, so the founding of a Tufts branch of the world’s largest student consultancy next semester will serve as yet another landmark in the university’s growth as an elite player in the world of social innovation and consulting.The group’s general interest meeting was held on Oct. 27 in Cabot Auditorium.Senior Christopher Yee-Paulson, who serves as co-president of 180 Degrees Consulting alongside fellow senior AJ Scaramucci, was enthusiastic about the overlap of consulting and active citizenship in the group.“There is a lot of intellectual capital at Tufts, and many students have strong interests in both social impact and consulting,” Yee-Paulson told the Daily in an e-mail. “This is the first type of organization that serves both needs, providing incredible synergies between these two intellectual camps.”This has been an important year for Jumbos interested in pursuing business-related careers, in particular consulting. The School of Arts and Sciences does not offer a business major or minor, besides the Entrepreneurial Leadership minor, so would-be business students often take courses in the Department of Economics.However, many students this semester have been looking for more guidance. The hiring of finance and consulting expert Christopher Di Fronzo (E ’96, EG ’04) at the Career Center this fall is evidence of the desire students have to learn about these fields. The addition of a chapter of 180 Degrees Consulting follows this trend.Since its founding at the University of Sydney in 2007 by then-economics student Nathaniel Ware, 180 Degrees Consulting has become a worldwide organization with city and university branches in locations such as Prague, Tokyo and Stockholm — and now Medford and Somerville. The group has branches in 18 countries.The new branch at Tufts will officially be launched next semester, and according to Scaramucci, who is also the founder of the Tufts branch, this will bring a lot recognition to Tufts given the consultancy’s reputation worldwide.“180 Degrees Consulting is now the largest pro bono student-driven consultancy in the world,” he said.180 Degrees team members offer business advice to non-profit organizations and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) free of charge. At the University of Sydney, for example, student consultants worked with Red Cross Australia to help to cut down costs, allowing the organization to focus funding elsewhere.Scaramucci explained that, while he has garnered experience in sales through his part-time work as a product specialist at Tesla Motors, the predominant factor that inspired him to start the Tufts branch was his study abroad experience at the University of Sydney, where he said he worked in the company’s original branch.“All you do is go out and actively recruit consultants at a university campus,” he said. “You do some inbound marketing, they apply to be student consultants, and the individuals who get accepted then get paired into teams of five. Those teams of five get paired with a team leader, so that’s six total individuals. Finally, they get paired with a non-profit organization or NGO in the local area.”Scaramucci’s team of consultants in Australia, he said, worked with Food Water Shelter, an Australia-based non-profit that works in developing countries to benefit vulnerable women and children by providing functional education, social and health facilities. His team advised the organization to take advantage of the growing popularity of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) through websites such as Khan Academy, so that students in Tanzania would have access to an assortment of courses that they wouldn’t otherwise have.“In short, they were spending a lot of money on teachers and volunteers and textbooks and infrastructure, rather than on computers and Wi-Fi connection,” Scaramucci said. “What this enables for the Tanzanian kids is that they [have] the ability to have access to the Internet.”While the club will enable student consultants to gain invaluable first-hand experience in the business world, like Scaramucci said he has already seen, 180 Degrees Consulting puts volunteerism and activism at the heart of its goals to produce positive socioeconomic change in communities near chapters.Jasmine Slivka, founder of the first 180 Degrees branch in the United States at Indiana University, expressed her excitement about the establishment of more chapters in the country.“With an already strong presence in Australia, Europe, and Asia, we could see immense potential for 180 Degrees Consulting branches at many of the top universities in the United States,” Slivka told the Daily in an email.Slivka, who is also 180 Degrees’ Chief Branch Officer of North America, has been collaborating with the executive board of the Tufts chapter.“We have put together a very strong regional team to oversee the increasing demand for 180 Degrees Consulting branches and are very confident in the success of our new branches launching next semester,” she said.12



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Tisch College appoints alumni to board

Three new members of the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service’s Board of Advisors — Selina Chow (J ’78), Stephen Demirjian (LA ’83) and Diane Hessan (J ’76) — officially began their terms on Oct. 22.


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Annual ceremony honors veterans

Members of the Tufts community recognized Veterans Day yesterday with a special service on the Memorial Steps hosted by Tufts Advocates for ROTC, the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps.



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Tufts redevelops 574 Boston Ave. warehouse

The Tufts-owned warehouse at 574 Boston Avenue is currently undergoing renovations that will result in the creation of a new functional and social space for university members.



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Panelists discuss rise of China

The fall kickoff event for the sixth annual China-U.S. Symposium was held yesterday in the Terrace Room of Paige Hall. Panelists and audience members discussed the rise of China as an international power.


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Professors of English mentor students in classes based on publishing experience

Linda Bamber, an associate professor in the Department of English at Tufts, is turning heads with her latest book, “Taking What I Like.” A collection of short stories drawn from classic literature, six of the eight stories are based on Shakespeare’s works. There’s a twist, however: The stories take place in modern society, making for an inventive, contemporary spin on original texts.




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Student cyclist hit by Joey

A Tufts student sustained minor injuries after being struck by a Joey shuttle around noon on Friday at the intersection of College and Talbot Avenues. According to Tufts University Police Department (TUPD) Sergeant Robert McCarthy, officers received an emergency call at 12:02 p.m. on Friday alerting them that a female student on a bike had been involved in an accident. Both TUPD and the Somerville Police Department responded to the call. One student, who wished to remain anonymous, explained that he had been onboard the Joey at the time the cyclist was struck and called 911 following the collision. “I was looking out the window ... and as we got to the intersection of Talbot Avenue and College Avenue, I saw a girl on her bicycle coming close to the Joey, and she wasn’t wearing a helmet,” he said. “The driver realized, I think, at the last second that [the cyclist] wasn’t stopping, so she slammed on the brake.”Before the Joey could stop, however, the vehicle collided with the cyclist and knocked her to the ground. According to the source, the cyclist hit her head against the windshield.Luckily, the Joey was already moving relatively slowly as it approached the cyclist, according to the witness. After hitting the student, the Joey driver opened the doors, and the witness, along with others, ran out to help the victim. After putting a coat over the cyclist — as it was raining — and discovering that she was conscious, the witness called both Somerville police and TUPD, he said. “We stayed with her until they came, and then I waited until the ambulance took her away,” he said. Although the victim seemed to have only a minor scrape on her hand and tried to stand, the students insisted that she stay on the ground while waiting for medical assistance in case she had a neck injury. According to Director of Public and Environmental Safety Kevin Maguire, the student will be okay. “Her injuries were minor, and we are most thankful for that,” Maguire said. The anonymous source added that the female student returned to campus a few hours after the accident. TUPD officers stated that the accident is currently under investigation by Somerville police. Somerville officers did not respond to interview requests before print time.According to the student witness, reasons for the collision seem unclear. “What I think happened is that [the cyclist] thought that the Joey driver was going to stop and the Joey driver thought [the cyclist] was going to stop, and so she kept going in front of the Joey,” he said.This incident comes in the wake of two motor vehicle accidents involving pedestrians last year, including one student who suffered major injuries when a car struck him at the intersection of Powderhouse Boulevard and Packard Avenue. The student witness said that, despite these other accidents, he is hesitant to conclude that this incident indicates an ongoing threat to student safety, as a number of specific factors may have contributed to the collision. “There were cars parked on the side of the road, so it was difficult to see the turn,” he said. “It was also raining out, so there was low visibility.”Student-TUPD liaison Becky Goldberg, however, said she believes there is an issue of pedestrian safety which students, drivers and university members must work to combat. “It’s a really big problem,” Goldberg, a junior, said. “Even though, yes, we’re on a college campus and people driving through this campus should be wary of the fact that this is a college and people are walking, as students we don’t feel like these are real streets, but they are.” Goldberg, who helped host Safety Awareness Week last year in order to promote pedestrian safety, said she plans to bring the event back this year as well. Through partnering with Medford and Somerville, Tufts has begun a number of projects to improve pedestrian and crosswalk safety that will continue into the future, Maguire said. These projects include repainting crosswalks, replacing crosswalk signage with ones made of highly reflective material, pruning foliage that inhibits crosswalk and sign illumination and fixing broken street lights. The university has also made changes to intersections such as the one between Powderhouse Boulevard and Packard Avenue by adding four-way stop signs and adding a “speed table.”“In order to reduce the number of incidents involving motor vehicles and pedestrians in and around campus, we continue to engage in a concerted effort to improve pedestrian safety using engineering, education and enforcement,” Maguire said.While College Avenue has not been a source of issues in the recent past, Maguire said that the street was identified as a problem area for pedestrian and bike safety in two surveys conducted by the university. As part of a project to improve walker and biker accessibility to the to-be-renovated 574 Boston Ave. warehouse, a traffic engineering firm will also visit College Avenue and other surrounding streets in order to make recommendations about making the area safer.12