ARTS Page 21
FORUM GOP must support gay marriage 12
MFA HALLOWEEN
SPORTS Fencing opens season at “The Big One” 16 The Independent Student Newspaper
the
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 10
www.thejustice.org
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Waltham, Mass.
ADMINISTRATION
MAKING A STATEMENT
Gray aids in new hire for manager ■ The University has formed a committee to help search for a manager of on-campus sustainability programs. By RACHEL SHARER JUSTICE EDITORIAL ASSISTANT
provements to policy and resources are extremely important, we also need to come together as a community to stand with survivors,” wrote Ava Blustein ’16, a member of BSASV who helped organize the day of action at the University, in an email to the Justice. Blustein was one of about 50 members of the Brandeis community who participated in Wednesday’s march from the Rabb steps to Bernstein-Marcus Administration Center, carrying dorm mattresses, pillows and signs. Along
The University will soon start a search process to hire a new manager of sustainability programs on campus, Vice President of Operations James Gray announced last week. Gray will soon begin the search for this manager, although he did not specify an exact date when the process will commence. Gray will work with the assistance of a special committee, wrote Executive Director for Integrated Media Bill Schaller in an email to the Justice. The committee is comprised of several members of the Brandeis community, including Prof. Laura Goldin (ENVS), Director of Community Living Tim Touchette, Bill Bushey and Mary Sharriagn from the facilities department, and two students, Anna Bessendorf ’15 and Sophie Freije ’17. The Brandeis Sustainability Fund will not play a role in hiring someone to fill this position, but the new manager will, according to Gray, “work closely with the BSF board.” The committee will help Gray
See BSASV, 7 ☛
See MANAGER, 7 ☛
RACHEL HUGHES/the Justice
LIFTING THE WEIGHT: Students carried mattresses from the Rabb steps to Bernstein-Marcus Administration Center as a part of national day of action “Carry the Weight Together.”
Students march on day of action ■ Brandeis Students Against
Sexual Violence organized a march in support of Columbia student Emma Sulkowicz. By RACHEL HUGHES JUSTICE EDITOR
As part of a national day of action, a crowd of students marched through campus carrying mattresses and pillows over their heads on Wednesday. The demonstration aimed to support an ongoing
performance art piece created by Columbia University senior Emma Sulkowicz. Sulkowicz quickly gained national attention after she began the project, which she titled “Carry That Weight,” to protest the school’s allowing another student, whom she accused of sexually assaulting her, to remain on campus. She will continue the piece “until the man she accuses of attacking her is no longer on campus, whether he leaves or is expelled or graduates, as she also will next spring,” according to a Sept. 21 New York Times article.
A coalition of college students and activists—comprised of members of activism organizations No Red Tape, Columbia’s Carrying the Weight Together, Hollaback! and Rhize, according to their website— organized a national day of action in support of Sulkowicz’s project. To bring this coalition’s project to campus, Brandeis Students Against Sexual Violence organized a campus march for the national day of action. “I think it was an important event for the Brandeis community because it reminds us that while im-
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
New representatives to the Board address plans ■ Junior and Senior
By MARISSA DITKOWSKY
Representatives to the Board, Grady Ward ’16 and Mohamed Sidique ’15, discussed their first Board of Trustees meeting last week.
JUSTICE EDITOR
The Board of Trustees discussed some of the more prominent issues on campus, including sexual assault, tuition, dining services and diversity on campus at its first meeting of the year.
According to Junior Representative to the Board of Trustees Grady Ward in an interview with the Justice, although he was involved in two phone call meetings over the summer, this was his first time personally meeting members of the Board. This meeting was Senior Representative to the Board of
Trustees Mohamed Sidique’s first meeting too, as he was elected to take over the position in September. Ward and Sidique said that they were both able discuss multiple oncampus issues with the Board of Trustees last week. Ward discussed the way tuition increases impacts student percep-
See TRUSTEES, 7 ☛
Innovation in learning
Jump step
Election debate
Prof. Dan Perlman (BIOL), who directs the new Center for Teaching and Learning, hopes to initiate interdisciplinary discussion.
The women’s volleyball team defeated Eastern Connecticut State University on Saturday.
The Brandeis Academic Debate and Speech Society held an event on referendum Question 3.
FEATURES 9
For tips or info email editor@thejustice.org
tion of the University and “the way that, over time, the students have been kind of soured by consistent increases that don’t seem to be treated by the administration with the appropriate degree of severity or thought.” He said that initiated a conversation among senior
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INDEX
SPORTS 15 ARTS SPORTS
17 16
EDITORIAL FEATURES
10 8
OPINION POLICE LOG
10 2
News 3
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