The Justice, April 13, 2010

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ARTS PAGE 19

FORUM Support student interns 12

‘M. BUTTERFLY’

SPORTS Men’s tennis defeats Bryant University 16 THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER

the

OF

BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY SINCE 1949

Justice www.theJusticeOnline.com

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Volume LXII, Number 23

WELCOMING NEW STUDENTS

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Board approves budget for 2011 ■ The Board of Trustees

also approved the Brandeis 2020 committee’s recommendations. By MIRANDA NEUBAUER JUSTICE SENIOR WRITER

At a March 23 meeting, the Board of Trustees approved a $356 million University operating budget for fiscal 2011 as well as the Brandeis 2020 committee’s recommendations that were accepted by Provost Marty Krauss. The budget for fiscal 2011 includes revenues from an increase of 100 in undergraduate enrollment, the second stage of the University’s plan to grow the student body that began with an additional 100 students in the class of 2013. According to last year’s academic restructuring plan, the University is raising enrollment by 400 students over four years. To close a projected deficit, the trustees voted to take $11.1 million out of the University’s reserves or quasi-endowment, which corresponds to a spending rate of 6.8 percent from the endowment, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Fran Drolette wrote in an e-mail to the Justice. In addition to restoring the University’s retirement contributions starting in July, the budget also includes a 2-percent merit raise increase pool for faculty and staff earning an annual base salary lower than $150,000. According to a March 26 University press release, the University projects that the deficit will drop to $6.3 million in 2012 and $1.8 million in 2013, with a $600,000

surplus in 2014. According to the press release, the budget projects $320,000 in savings from faculty reductions. “The projections in the University’s long-range plan include a reduction in the endowment draw rate each year, until FY 2013-2014, when it is expected to be down to 5%,” Drolette wrote in an e-mail. The budget also projects savings of $200,000 from renegotiated pricing for gas used for energy as well as savings of $90,000 from Library and Technology Services, which includes an initiative to implement hosted applications for e-mail and calendaring services. Also, part of the budget is a 3.9 percent increase in tuition and fees, with tuition set at $38,994, that together with average room and board fee puts the cost of attendance over $50,000 for the first time. The increase in tuition and fees will cover increased costs to the University, including financial aid, Drolette wrote. She explained that due to the Massachusetts adoption of the Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act, the University could avoid going deeper into its reserves and instead continue to fund activities such as financial aid or salaries with endowments that have decreased under their original value, which the prior laws prohibited. Trustees approved the termination of the Master of Arts in Cultural Production, the Master of Fine Arts in Theater and external admission to the master’s program in Anthropology. They also approved

See BOARD, 5 ☛

Waltham, Mass.

ASHER KRELL/the Justice

FUTURE PROSPECTS: Gideon Grossman, a prospective student, interacts with Amy Mandel ’10 on Admitted Students Day.

Univ lowers acceptance rate ■ The University received

7,738 applications for the Class of 2014 in comparison to last year’s total of 6,815. By ALANA ABRAMSON JUSTICE EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

The University received the largest number of applications in its history this year and accepted 33 percent of those applicants for the Class of 2014 in comparison to last year’s acceptance rate of 40 percent. According to a March 25 cam-

puswide e-mail sent by University President Jehuda Reinharz, the overall number of applications increased from last year’s number of 6,815 to 7,738. Senior Vice President for Students and Enrollment Jean Eddy wrote in an e-mail to the Justice that the Office of Admissions had accepted approximately 2,500 applicants and that she expected between 825 and 850 students to enroll in the Class of 2014. The enrollment figures, which were originally presented by Eddy at a March 23 Board of Trustees meeting, show that the number of international student applicants increased from 1,211 to 1,599.

Additionally, the number of “students of color” who applied increased from 1,706 to 2,111, according to Reinharz’s e-mail and Eddy’s presentation. Reinharz’s e-mail also explained that the mean SAT score for the accepted students had increased from 1392 to 1400. “I expect that a third of [admitted students] will … join us in August,” Eddy wrote. She also wrote that 1,500 students had registered for Admitted Students Day. Admitted Students Day took place yesterday in the Gosman Sports and Convocation Center and included

See ADMISSIONS, 5 ☛

ACADEMICS

Five Justice Brandeis Semester summer courses canceled ■ Three of eight Justice

Brandeis Semester summer programs originally offered will be launched this year. By NASHRAH RAHMAN JUSTICE EDITOR

Five of the eight Justice Brandeis Semester programs originally offered for summer 2010 have been canceled due to alack of student enrollment and for administrative reasons, according to Dean of Arts

and Sciences Adam Jaffe. Jaffe said that each JBS summer program originally required the participation of eight students in order to occur but that all programs for which seven students signed up will still take place. The three programs that will run this summer are “Environmental Health and Justice,’’ “Health and Society,” and “Web Services and Mobile Applications.” Jaffe wrote in his email that approximately 30 to 35 students will take part in the three approved programs. Fewer than seven students signed

up for the “Beacon Hill Report,’’ “Collaborative Theater and the Theatrical Essay,” “Ethnographic Fieldwork” and “Inside Criminal Law programs,” according to Jaffe. Consequently, these programs will not run this summer. Another program, “The American Jewish Community,” will not be launched this summer “due to administrative and logical complications,” according to the JBS Web site. In an e-mail to the Justice, Jaffe explained that the curricula for the three courses that were to be offered as parts of the program could not be

worked out. The JBS Web site states, “Brandeis will continue to explore innovative ways to make the resources of the Hornstein Jewish Professional Leadership Program and the Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies available to Brandeis undergraduates.” According to its Web site, a JBS is “an engaging, immersive academic program in which small groups of students explore a thematic topic through inquiry-based courses linked to real-world experiential opportunities.” The Web site also states that a summer JBS program

counts toward one of the seven semesters required for graduation, meaning that summer JBS students can graduate a semester early. The creation of a JBS was proposed by a subcommittee of the Curriculum and Academic Restructuring Steering committee last year. “A couple of [the JBS summer programs] had very few students, and so we made the decision to cancel them soon after the deadline. A couple of the others were closer, so we waited to see if they might drum up a few

See JBS, 5 ☛

SKIN is in

Unique friendships

Student elections

■ Students modeled the latest trends with confident flair.

■ Local senior citizens form friendships with international students in the Heller School.

■ Candidates running for the Student Union Executive Board discuss their platforms.

ARTS 22 For tips or info call Let your voice be heard! Submit letters to the editor online (781) 736-6397 at www.thejusticeonline.com

INDEX

FEATURES 6 ARTS SPORTS

17 22

EDITORIAL FEATURES

10 6

OPINION POLICE LOG

11 2

COMMENTARY

11

NEWS 3 COPYRIGHT 2010 FREE AT BRANDEIS. Call for home delivery.


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