Renovations Increase Opportunities for Students in Substance-Free Housing A gift from alumnus Hank Azaria improves community spaces at the newly named Simpson House
Welcoming the Undergraduate Class of 2027 The members of the most ethnically and racially diverse class to enroll at Tufts come from more than 1,100 high schools
Keeping Banned Books on the Shelves Former Tufts roommates Allison Lee and Stacy Lieberman team up to defend access to controversial titles and information
Noella Akuzwe’s Playful Engineering Back in Rwanda this summer, the rising junior helped young students flex their STEM skills through fun, visionary projects
Writing Books for Young Readers that Celebrate Famous Black Americans Shasta Clinch chronicles the lives of leaders like Kamala Harris, Jordan Peele, and Amanda Gorman
The Myth of “Beneficial” Slavery in Ancient Times In the ancient Near East and classical Greece and Rome, slavery was pervasive, discriminatory, and cruel, says an expert
Why Are There Religions? Associate Professor of Religion Jennifer Eyl explains the underlying aspects of what drives human spiritual beliefs, and how that works in the world
Low-dimensional structures, learning, and algorithms in the space of measures A Tufts research team recently received National Science Foundation funding to leverage structures in large, high-dimensional data
Urban Doom Loop: What It Is and How Cities Can Stop It An urban planner argues that the downward spiral that some U.S. cities face is not inevitable, but requires active efforts to avoid