ARTS PAGE 16
SPORTS Preparing for the year 12
RABBITS ROCK
FORUM Students: Rethink your politics 9 THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER
the
OF
BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY SINCE 1949
Justice www.theJusticeOnline.com
Volume LXIII, Number 2
Waltham, Mass.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
LAWRENCE MEETS STUDENT BODY
ACADEMICS
Liberal Arts Posse set to resume
OBITUARY
Heller prof passes away ■ Prof. Lorraine Klerman
(Heller), a renowned researcher in public health, died Aug. 26 of cancer.
■ After a one-year
suspension, recruitment for the scholarship program will take place in Atlanta.
By NASHRAH RAHMAN JUSTICE EDITOR
Acheampong ’11 introduced Lawrence prior to his address. President for Student Affairs and Dean of Student Life Rick Sawyer, Associate Deans of Student Life Maggie Balch and Jamele Adams, Director of Student Development and Conduct Erika Lamarre, and Senior Director of Community Living Jeremy Leiferman were also present at the event, among others. Lawrence additionally praised the atmosphere of the student body in his address claiming that he found it differentiated the University from other institutions. “Listening to you [students on the student advisory committee] describe your experiences here and just seeing the vitality and the energy of the students there, and it’s only been confirmed over and over again by the experiences I’ve had the last week and a half on campus. You guys think this is college, this isnt college. this is
Prof. Lorraine Vogel Klerman (Heller), director of the Institute Child, Youth and Family Policy at the Heller School for Social and Policy Management, passed away last Thursday at the age of 81 “due to complications of cancer,” according to an undated news release posted on the Heller School’s website. Klerman was a “pioneering health services researcher with a particular interest in health delivery systems for economically deprived women and children,” as stated in the news release. This April Klerman received the Heller School for Social Policy and Management Mentoring Award. According to the news release, Klerman has mentored many students in public health who went on to become prominent figures in the medical field. Dean of the Heller School Lisa M. Lynch said in the news release that “[Klerman] was a dedicated and selfless mentor to scores of Heller students over the years. Setting high standards for her students and collegues alike, she enriched all of us and her loss will be hard to accept.” Lynch was not available for further comment by press time. Prof. Stuart Altman (Heller) said in a phone interview with the Justice that Klerman “combined the best of our professors,” explaining that she fused high expectations with compassion. “She was strict when she needed to be so to make sure that our students attained the highest standards and worked hard—she was no pushover when it came to getting approval for work—but she also had a tremendous compassion-
See LAWRENCE, 4 ☛
See KLERMAN, 4 ☛
By ALANA ABRAMSON JUSTICE EDITOR
The Liberal Arts Posse program will return to Brandeis in the fall of 2011, University President Jehuda Reinharz announced in an Aug. 25 campuswide e-mail. The Liberal Arts Posse program was suspended at Brandeis in fall 2009 due to budgetary constraints, according to a Sept. 15, 2009 Justice article. Reinharz’s email explains that the program was able to return “due to the generosity of several donors who have stepped forward to reinstate this valuable program, which enriches campus life.” In an interview with the Justice, Reinharz said that he could not reveal the names of the two major donors who provided for the return of the program, explaining that one wished to remain anonymous and the other was out of the country and could not be reached for permission to reveal the identity. He said, however, that the donors decided to renew the program because they understood its importance in relation to the University’s values. “They were really taken by the description [of the Posse program] and understood very well why this is so important for us,” said Reinharz. Reinharz said that he had been in discussion with the donors since the beginning of last semester. “It took me a few months to find the right people. These kinds of
See POSSE, 4 ☛
ROBYN SPECTOR/the Justice
STUDENT INTERACTION: Frederick Lawrence met and spoke with students in the South Campus Commons on Monday.
Lawrence addresses community ■ Students had the
opportunity to interact with the president-elect since he was confirmed in July. By HARRY SHIPPS JUSTICE SENIOR WRITER
President-elect Frederick Lawrence spoke to students and other Brandeis community members Monday night at an event held in the South Campus Commons. The event was the first time those students who arrived on campus after the beginning of first-year orientation were able to meet the president-elect. Lawrence, who was confirmed by the Board of Trustees July 8, will officially take over as president on Jan. 1, 2011. He currently serves as dean of the George Washington University Law School. “The opportunity to actually meet the students even before I officially start is a chance to hear
some of the things that they’re thinking, but also I don’t want to be someone who is new to [students] as of Jan. 1,” Lawrence said in an interview with the Justice after the event. Lawrence gave a brief address but spent most of his time at the event speaking directly to students one-on-one and in small groups. In his address to those in attendance, Lawrence said “It is an extraordinary honor for me to be the next president of Brandeis. I can’t tell you, really, what it means to me to be joining this community. … There is literally no other job in higher education that could pull together all the threads of my personal and professional life the way that this opportunity does.” Lawrence also said in his address that he was attracted to Brandeis because of both its roots in social justice and its position as a research university that is, “at its core, a small liberal arts college.” Student Union President Daniel
Summer of conflict
Hitting the courts
Profs. win fellowship
■ Brandeis students discuss being stuck in the middle of war in Osh, Kyrgyzstan.
■ The men’s and women’s tennis teams are eager to start the year guided by Coach Ben Lamanna.
■ Two professors will work on individual projects at Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute.
FEATURES 9 For tips or info call Let your voice be heard! Submit letters to the editor online (781) 736-6397 at www.thejusticeonline.com
INDEX
SPORTS 12 EDITORIAL FEATURES
8 6
OPINION POLICE LOG
8 2
SPORTS ARTS
11 13
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