The Justice, Aug. 24, 2010

Page 1

ARTS PAGE 19

FORUM Don’t cut class 11

AUTHOR ARRIVES

SPORTS Judges get ready for the seasons 16 THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER

the

OF

BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY SINCE 1949

Justice www.theJusticeOnline.com

Volume LXIII, Number 1

Waltham, Mass.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

PRESIDENT-ELECT COMES TO CAMPUS

DEVELOPMENT

Univ exceeds fundraising goal ■ Brandeis will channel a

sizeable portion of the donations received to student financial aid. By FIONA LOCKYER JUSTICE EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

The University received $72 million in donations during fiscal 2010, the sixth year of the past 10 in which Brandeis secured $70 million or more in philanthropic support, according to an Aug. 11 BrandeisNOW press release. Senior Vice President for Institutional Advancement Nancy Winship explained in an interview with the Justice that the $72 million mainly resulted from fundraising in three areas of the University: the Annual Fund, the endowment and the fund for Capital Projects. These areas are funded by donations to the University by friends of the University, parents and alumni. According to the BrandeisNOW press release, three significant grants were made for research in the sciences that totaled nearly $3 million, alumni from the 11 reunion classes raised nearly $3 million and the newly graduated Class of 2010 made a gift of $12,238, the third-largest senior class gift in school history. According to vice president of development Myles Weisenberg ’78, the large gift from the graduating class was the result of the efforts of the Office of Development, who emphasized the that “the size of the gift is not as important as actually making a gift,” in an effort to encouraging more young graduates to give back. Winship also said that $10.4

ASHER KRELL/the Justice

MEET AND GREET: Lawrence met with Roosevelt Fellows at “Brandeis Beginnings,” the opening ceremony for the Class of 2014.

Lawrence begins transition ■ The president-elect is

preparing to officially assume the role of University president on Jan. 1, 2011. By BRIAN FROMM JUSTICE EDITOR

The Board of Trustees confirmed Dean of the George Washington University Law School Frederick Lawrence to succeed University president Jehuda Reinharz, a transition that will occur Jan. 1, 2011, the University announced in a July 8 press release.

Lawrence has served as the dean of the GWU Law School since 2005, according to the press release. The press release further states that during his tenure, Lawrence brought in the strongest five classes in the law school’s history and led five of the school’s most effective years of fundraising despite the troubled economic situation. He also recruited new faculty members, increased financial aid, expanded facilities and sought new programmatic possibilities for the law school on national and international levels, according to the release. Prior to serving in this position, Lawrence taught at the Boston

University School of Law from 1988 to 2005, where he received the Metcalf Award for Excellence in Teaching, the school’s highest teaching honor, in 1996. In an Aug. 22 interview, Lawrence said he would most likely leave his position at GWU Law School in November, allowing him to focus solely on the transition to his new role as president. The press release referred to Lawrence, the author of Punishing Hate: Bias Crimes Under American Law, as “one of the nation’s leading experts on civil rights and free expression.” In a July 7 interview

See PRESIDENT-ELECT, 7 ☛

million was raised for the Annual Fund. Winship described the annual fund as a resource for “current use financial aid: financial aid that can be used now—this year—to fund students.” The University, which accepts students regardless of their financial need, amassed $46 million of financial aid last year from the Annual Fund and endowment and was consequently able to provide aid to more than 70 percent of enrolled students. “Moving forward, this university will be focusing ... on endowment and current [use funds] rather than Capital [Projects],” Winship explained. Alumni, parents and friends of Brandeis University are the main constituencies for Brandeis fundraising, with friends – non-affiliated supporters of Brandeis —accounting for anywhere from 55—60% of annual fundraising, according to Winship. “Someday, when the alumni are older, we will be able to say that most of our support comes from alumni,” said Winship, explaining that even if many alumni choose to donate, “it’ll be another few decades before alumni have the capacity to give” sizable monetary gifts to their alma mater. However, the 2010 U.S. News and World Best National Universities list ranked Brandeis 24th out of 260 ranked universities in alumni giving, with 30 percent of Brandeis alumni choosing to give back to the University. Winship maintained that although fiscal 2010 “was a very good year, … it was not nearly what the University needed” in

See FUNDRAISING, 7 ☛

ADMINISTRATION

Admin and finance division reorganized after Apfel’s resignation ■ Mark Collins and Fran

Drolette have assumed widened responsibilities. By HARRY SHIPPS JUSTICE SENIOR WRITER

According to a June 14 BrandeisNow press release the Division of Finance and Administration has been reorgan-

ized in the wake of Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Jeffery Apfel’s resignation earlier this summer, with former Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Frances Drolette assuming the newly created role of senior vice president for finance and chief financial officer and former Vice President for Campus Operations Mark Collins filling the new posption of senior vice President for administration.

The press release explains that as a result of the reorganization, there will now be two distinct reporting lines to the president, one from the administrative side and one from the financial side. In a June 15 interview with the Justice, Senior Vice President for Communications Andrew Gully said that the decision to reorganize the Division of Finance and Administration was made, in part, because “it breaks up the responsi-

bility a little bit [... ] it’s an enormous undertaking to be responsible for both of those areas.” Collins and Drolette wrote in a joint e-mail to the Justice that the reorganization is a part of continuing efforts around the University “to consolidate operations” and utilize resources and staff effectively. “The administration and finance functions are naturally linked. We, and the administration and finance staff in each area, have always

worked in unity under the EVP/COO function,” Collins and Drolette wrote in the e-mail. Both Collins and Drolette also identified the continuing instability in the economy as the major challenge facing Brandeis and wrote that the University “must continue to do more with fewer resources.” In the e-mail to the Justice, Collins wrote that his responsibili-

See REORGANIZATION, 7 ☛

Chess champ

Inception “re-view”

Eddy departs

■ Samuel Shankland ’14 talks about leaving professional chess for Brandeis.

■ An in-depth review of the summer’s cerebral action epic.

■ The senior vice president for Students and Enrollment will join the staff at the Rhode Island School of Design.

FEATURES 9

ARTS 22

NEWS 3 For tips or info call Let your voice be heard! Submit letters to the editor online (781) 736-6397 at www.thejusticeonline.com

INDEX

ARTS

17

EDITORIAL FEATURES

12 10

OPINION POLICE LOG

13 2

SPORTS 15 COMMENTARY 13

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