The Justice, Nov. 25, 2014

Page 1

ARTS Page 19

SPORTS Men’s soccer ends year in Elite Eight 16

MELA 2014

FORUM Religious freedom still deserves respect 11 The Independent Student Newspaper

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of

B r a n d e is U n i v e r sit y S i n c e 1 9 4 9

Justice

Volume LXVII, Number 13

www.thejustice.org

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

FACULTY

SPREADING LIGHT

Policy requires faculty reports GRACE KWON/the Justice

MOURNING A LOSS: Members of the Brandeis community held and lit each other's candles at a vigil on Sunday to commemorate the victims of recent terror attacks in Jerusalem.

Students gather to mourn for victims ■ Hillel and the Jewish

Learning Initiative on Campus held a vigil for the victims of a recent attack. By MARISSA DITKOWSKY JUSTICE EDITOR

Members of both the Brandeis and the greater Boston community were invited to gather for a vigil at Fellows Garden on Sunday night to commemorate the loss of the victims of a terror attack that took place in Jerusalem last week.

During services on Nov. 18, two terrorists entered Jerusalem synagogue Kehilat Bnei Torah armed with a gun, knives and axes. When police arrived at the scene, one of the officers involved was shot in the head, and another was seriously wounded. The attack left five civilians, three of whom were Americans, dead. Twentysix children lost a parent in the incident. The community gathered at 8 p.m. and began to light each other’s candles. Images of the victims lined the bushes of Fellows Garden by the Shapiro Campus Center. Attendees

Waltham, Mass.

were also invited to write letters to the victims’ children. In addition to the vigil, yesterday Students for Accuracy about Israeli and Palestinian Affairs, the Brandeis Israel Public Affairs Committee and Alpha Epsilon Pi’s chapter at Brandeis held a separate day of solidarity for the victims of terror in Jerusalem. The groups encouraged those participating to wear blue, and they handed out flyers with facts about recent terror attacks. They also gathered signatures for a petition stating that participants stand with these victims.

According to SAIPA President Ari Givner '17, who is also a member of BIPAC and AEPi member Ari Givner ’17 in an interview with the Justice, the event was intended to demonstrate solidarity with all of the victims of a number of recent terror attacks in Jerusalem, including stabbings, bystanders hit by cars and the Nov. 18 incident. “It’s something we can all stand for,” he said. Givner noted that a member of Students for Justice in Palestine reached out to him and said that he would be wearing a blue shirt as well.

See VIGIL, 7 ☛

■ Faculty will now be mandated to report incidences of sexual assault or harassment. By MARISSA DITKOWSKY JUSTICE EDITOR

The University has mandated all faculty and staff members to report sexual violence and harassment to Title IX Coordinator Linda Shinomoto, according to Prof. Bernadette Brooten (NEJS) in an email to the Justice. Previously, faculty members were not considered “mandated reporters” under University policy. According to Brooten’s report to the Faculty Senate on Nov. 1, 2013, the University Advisory Council Subcommittee on Sexual Violence was looking to address questions as to whether or not faculty members should be required to report instances of sexual violence. “I am very pleased to be working with the senior administration on

See REPORT, 7 ☛

STUDENT ACTIVISM

B.SASV releases progress report on University policies ■ The report provides

grades for progress in University sexual assault policies and protocol. By HANNAH WULKAN JUSTICE EDITOR

Brandeis Students Against Sexual Violence released a progress report Thursday on the University’s responses to the petition they started which garnered over 2,700 signatures last spring, outlining many persist-

ing problems in sexual assault procedures on campus. The report showed that B.SASV believed that progress was made on several aspects of University practices but that most of the issues raised had either not been addressed adequately or at all. B.SASV presented hard copies of the report to the offices of University President Frederick Lawrence, Senior Vice President of Students and Enrollment Andrew Flagel, Provost Lisa Lynch, Dean of Student Life Jamele Adams and a member of the Board of Trustees. Additionally, they

sent a link to the online report to all of the deans of the University, wrote B.SASV member Ava Blustein ’15 in an email to the Justice. The University responded to the initial petition in June and addressed each point B.SASV raised, outlining how they would respond to them. “We invite all members of the Brandeis community to actively engage with one another on these issues and look forward to your participation as prosocial bystanders, student leaders, and advocates for change on this important social justice issue,” read the response.

For each point raised in the group’s initial petition from April 8, the report included a letter grade ranging from A to F to indicate how well the University has since addressed it. B.SASV also outlined, for each graded point, what needs to be done further to successfully meet their expectations. “If there were some improvements made, we graded according to how many elements within each point were taken into consideration and the impact we feel the changes will have for the community,” Blustein wrote. Flagel wrote in an email to the Jus-

See B.SASV, 7 ☛

To the Netherlands

Charity stripe

Housing lottery

 An innovative English course for spring 2015 simulates the experience of going abroad.

 The men’s basketball team lost the first two games of its season by a combined eight points

 The Department of Community Living sent a survey to students regarding a potential change in policy.

FEATURES 9 For tips or info email editor@thejustice.org

tice, “There has not been time to try and understand the methodology and information behind the recent ‘grading’ effort, but work continues across campus at continuously improving our (sic.) services for survivors as well as prevention efforts.” B.SASV gave grades of F to all points of their petition that they said had not been addressed by the University at all, according to Blustein’s email. These included hiring a permanent on-call crisis response counselor, creating an effective campus-wide campaign to combat rape

Let your voice be heard! Submit letters to the editor online at www.thejustice.org

INDEX

SPORTS 16 ARTS SPORTS

17 16

EDITORIAL FEATURES

10 8

OPINION POLICE LOG

10 2

News 3

COPYRIGHT 2014 FREE AT BRANDEIS.


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