Supported by Scholarships, Students Witness History in the Making
07/21/2016
By Katharine Webster
Five students are interning at the Republican and Democratic nominating conventions this month, thanks to the university鈥檚 partnership with
The university also sent students to the conventions in 2008 and 2012, says Francis Talty, assistant dean of the College of Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. But this year鈥檚 conventions, with large factions in both parties unhappy with their presumptive nominees, are the most contentious in recent memory.
鈥淔or students who are interested in the political experience, this is Woodstock,鈥 says Talty, who manages the Washington Center partnership. 鈥淚t鈥檚 total immersion in national politics. It鈥檚 also star-studded.鈥
The Washington Center is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that offers study abroad-type experiences, mostly in the nation鈥檚 capital, teaching college students about politics and developing their leadership skills through seminars and internships with government agencies, nonprofits and corporations.
Tyler Farley, an Honors College junior from Taunton double-majoring in political science and economics, is interning for CNN at the GOP convention in Cleveland. He and the other students are also taking seminars from professors and political experts for credit.
鈥淵ou get to witness history firsthand 鈥 that, and make some good contacts. I see it as a good opportunity to meet really important people in the Republican Party, plus other students from across the country who are as passionate as I am about politics,鈥 says Farley, who aims for a political career like that of UMass President Marty Meehan, who served 14 years in Congress.
Farley, a true political junkie, took Meehan鈥檚 class on Congress, co-taught by adjunct faculty member Patricia Talty, his freshman year. This past spring, Farley also took Asst. Prof. Morgan Marietta鈥檚 鈥淓lectoral Politics鈥 class, offered once every four years in the lead-up to the presidential election.
Marietta and his students took advantage of Lowell鈥檚 proximity to New Hampshire and its first-in-the-nation presidential primaries to attend candidate events, including a 鈥渢own hall鈥 in Salem, N.H., held by Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. Farley also volunteered for Rubio鈥檚 campaign.
David Todisco, a rising sophomore political science major, also took full advantage of New Hampshire鈥檚 political scene. He had just graduated from high school in Medford and was interning for the West Medford state representative when he attended a Hillary Clinton rally in Dover, N.H., wearing a T-shirt for the college he would attend in the fall of 2015: the University of New Hampshire. He was hanging around after the main event when the candidate spotted him and came over to chat.
鈥淪he asked, 鈥榊ou go to UNH? How鈥檇 you like to work on the campaign?鈥欌 Todisco says. 鈥淎nd how do you say no to Hillary Clinton?鈥
Canvassing for Clinton wasn鈥檛 easy: Most UNH students preferred Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont. But Todisco, who transferred to 51视频 in the spring, says it was great experience and helped him land a summer internship with Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who was being vetted as a possible Clinton running mate.
Todisco also met Chuck Todd and his team from NBC鈥檚 鈥淢eet the Press鈥 at a campaign event 鈥 and leveraged that connection to land an NBC internship during the Democratic convention in Philadelphia.
鈥淢y dream job would be working for NBC,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 love production and I did a lot of theater and newspaper stuff in high school. But I also love politics, so bringing those two together and working for a show like 鈥楳eet the Press鈥 would be really cool.鈥
Three other students are going to the Democratic convention, too: Adeja Crearer, Sarah Chapman and Marcus Peterson. Talty will serve as a faculty leader at the Democratic convention; in that role, he alternates party conventions every four years.
Crearer 鈥17, an English major from Piscataway, N.J., with a journalism concentration and minors in political science and digital media, will be interning with Agence France-Presse TV, reporting stories on deadline.
鈥淚t will be interesting to see how the Democratic convention plays out,鈥 says Crearer. 鈥淚t should be a show for sure.鈥
None of it would have been possible without generous scholarships from the office of FAHSS Dean Luis Falc贸n, all three students say.
鈥淚 really appreciate the dean鈥檚 support,鈥 Farley says.