ARTS Page 19
FORUM Promote civil dialogue 12
BTC PREVIEW
SPORTS Athletics launches “We the Jury” 13 The Independent Student Newspaper
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Justice
Volume LXVII, Number 3
www.thejustice.org
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
STUDENT LIFE
CARRY THAT WEIGHT
University under investigation ■ The Department of
Education's Office of Civil Rights is investigating potential Title IX violations. By MARISSA DITKOWSKY JUSTICE EDITOR
Brandeis has been added to a list of over 75 colleges and universities that are currently under federal investigation by the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights for potential violations of Title IX rights. The Office of Civil Rights will be investigating the alleged mishandling of a case on behalf of an accused student—who was found guilty of sexual misconduct after a Special Examiner’s Process took place—after the student filed a complaint against the University for non-compliance with Title IX. According to Executive Director of Integrated Media Bill Schaller in an email to the Justice, the University has been informed of the ensuing investigation. The accused student
Waltham, Mass.
said in an interview with the Justice that he was officially notified that the University was under investigation for potential Title IX violations on Sept. 2. However, he would not comment further, “as not to impede on the investigation.” The University’s handling of the particular case that prompted the complaint to the Department of Education—a case whose handling was chronicled in a June 24 Justice article, and was later picked up by the national media in the Washington Post and the Boston Globe—drew criticism from both the accused student and the alleged victim. The accusing student had initially drawn attention to the case on Facebook, where he posted over summer break about the University’s decision to find the student he accused guilty of sexual misconduct yet only gave that student a disciplinary warning and mandated that he complete an educational program designed by Sexual Assault and Prevention Specialist Sheila McMahon. The accused student was inter-
See TITLE IX, 7 ☛
ADMINISTRATION
Tax forms reveal key admin salaries ■ University President
Frederick Lawrence's salary was reported at $952,133 in fiscal year 2012. By MARISSA DITKOWSKY JUSTICE EDITOR
Brandeis’ fiscal year 2012 Form 990, a tax form that nonprofit organizations must fill out and release to those who request to view it, showed growth in the University’s investment income and endowment, as well as an increase in University President Frederick Lawrence’s salary by almost $200,000. Lawrence’s total salary during fiscal year 2013, which ran from July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013, was
For tips or info email editor@thejustice.org
$952,133, according to the Form 990. His salary during fiscal year 2012 was $758,735. This was the first fiscal year and Form 990 to display Senior Vice President for Students and Enrollment Andrew Flagel’s salary, which was $251,567. Of all key administrators, Senior Vice President of Institutional Advancement Nancy Winship’s total reported salary was the highest at $1,264,876—as compared to her earnings in fiscal year 2011, at $473,540. At a March faculty meeting, it was revealed that Winship would receive a $428,485 base salary, $383,552 severance payment to be paid after one year of service as senior adviser and $383,552 in senior adviser compensation to be
See 990, 7 ☛
MORGAN BRILL/the Justice
MATTRESS PERFORMANCE: Concerned students used the Justice Louis D. Brandeis statue to protest against sexual assault.
Group concerned about University handling of sexual assault cases ■ Students displayed
solidarity with Columbia University senior and survivor Emma Sulkowicz. By MARISSA DITKOWSKY JUSTICE EDITOR
This past Saturday, students who passed the statue of Justice Louis D. Brandeis on campus were able to see the judge “carrying” a mattress, hung with signs that said “We Support Emma” and “We support all survivors.”
The protest art was the result of a group of anonymous Brandeis students coming out in support of Columbia University senior Emma Sulkowicz who claims to have been raped in her dorm room on the first day of her sophomore year. As a part of her visual arts senior thesis—a performance art piece titled “Mattress Performance” or “Carry That Weight”—she will carry a mattress around campus for as long as her alleged rapist attends Columbia. The group of Brandeis students put the signs and mattress up the night of Sept. 5. According to the group, by the
end of the day, the signs were taken down. Executive Director for Integrated Media Bill Schaller did not respond to requests for comment on the University’s policy for when objects are placed on the Justice Brandeis statue, or why these signs were removed by press time. According to a Sept. 3 Huffington Post article, two other women came forward and said that they were assaulted by the same student that Sulkowicz accused. However, the accused student was not found responsible for sexual assault by Columbia and still attends the school.
See PROTEST, 7 ☛
World’s oldest wine
Battling for position
Union elections
A professor discovered an ancient wine cellar among remains of a Canaanite Palace.
The men’s soccer team cruised to a 4-1 victory at home on Saturday.
Elections for Student Union Senate and other positions will take place on Thursday.
FEATURES 9
SPORTS 16
Let your voice be heard! Submit letters to the editor online at www.thejustice.org
INDEX
ARTS SPORTS
17 16
EDITORIAL FEATURES
10 8
OPINION POLICE LOG
10 2
READER COMMENTARY
News 3 11
COPYRIGHT 2014 FREE AT BRANDEIS. Email managing@thejustice.org for home delivery.