The Justice - Feb. 24, 2009

Page 1

ARTS PAGE 21

SPORTS Fencing teams place high at NEC 13

SHANNON VISITS

FORUM PR firm is nothing new 11 THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER

the

OF

BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY SINCE 1949

Justice www.theJusticeOnline.com

Volume LXII, Number 20

Waltham, Mass.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

WEB OF WORDS

ACADEMICS

CARS seeks revenue gains ■ The Committee on

Academic Restructuring submitted proposals aimed at aiding budget issues. By MIRANDA NEUBAUER JUSTICE SENIOR WRITER

A subcommittee of the Committee on Academic Restructuring is proposing a new graduation requirement in the form of semester-long experiential learning programs both on and off campus in order to increase the undergraduate student body, while another subcommittee is proposing a Business major to attract more applicants. In addition, a separate group of faculty is proposing a major in Communications, Media and Society in order to attract more applicants. All proposals are intended to increase revenue from tuition-paying students, faculty members said. Dean of Arts and Sciences Adam Jaffe posted all three proposals on a special Brandeis Web site dedicated to the curricular changes in advance of an open forum that will be held Wednesday in order to gain feedback on the proposals and to make further changes. The Undergraduate

By MICHELLE LIBERMAN JUSTICE STAFF WRITER

Brandeis is involved in the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Massachusetts, an effort to get the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to adopt the Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act to ease endowment restrictions, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Peter French wrote in a Feb. 19 e-mail to the Justice.

RACHEL CORKE/the Justice

teaching center and exhibition gallery.”

STUDENT RESPONSE: David Azer ‘11 poses a question at an open forum.

Board of Trustees resolution, Jan. 26

“Brandeis University’s Board of Trustees today voted unanimously to close the

Rose Art Museum...” University press release, Jan. 26 RACHEL CORKE/the Justice

MUSEUM PROTEST: Students stage a sit-in at the Rose.

“Unfortunately, those statements did not accurately reflect the Board’s decision. ...

The Museum will remain open.” President Jehuda Reinharz’s e-mail, Feb. 5

JULIAN AGIN-LIEBES/the Justice

REINHARZ REMARKS: The president spoke to student media.

See COMMITTEE, 5 ☛

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY BRIAN BLUMENTHAL

Semantics over substance

Univ joins effort to adopt UPMIFA law AICUM schools to lobby for replacement of the current Massachussets legislation.

Rose Art Museum to a

Curriculum Committee will consider the proposals Thursday, several faculty members said. The subcommittee on a possible summer semester and experiential learning is proposing a new graduation requirement, the “Brandeis Semester,” to be completed by 800 to 1,000 students a year either during the summer, fall or spring after a student’s first year. The new program would apply to incoming students entering in the fall of 2010, according to the proposal. Students could fulfill the Brandeis Semester requirement through programs such as an Environmental Field Semester, expanded work in a lab over the summer, a Brandeis Summer Arts Festival, Summer Study Abroad opportunities, an internship away from Brandeis during the fall or spring or intensive summer language study, according to the committee’s proposal. “I would really have appreciated the option of doing the summer research with courses specifically geared toward people interested in scientific research,” Lydia Flier ’11, a student representative on the committee, said. Increasing the student body, by having more students live off campus

ENDOWMENT

■ Brandeis will work with

“The University administration is authorized to take the necessary steps to transition the University’s

Shifting language confuses Rose decision By HANNAH KIRSCH and MIKE PRADA JUSTICE EDITORS

“Brandeis supports enactment of UPMIFA and Brandeis is involved in the AICUM effort,” French wrote. AICUM is coordinating with other private Massachusetts colleges and universities to get UPMIFA enacted by the Massachusetts state legislature. Joe Baerlein, a temporary Brandeis spokesman for the University’s public relations firm Rasky Baerlein Strategic Communications, Inc., told the Justice yesterday that AICUM is a “trade association for all the independent colleges, and they work in concert on public policy and legislative issues on behalf of all their members.” Under the current law, which is

See ENDOWMENT, 5 ☛

It has been nearly one month since the University administration shocked the Brandeis community with an e-mail announcing its decision to close the Rose Art Museum and sell art from its collection. Since the Jan. 26 e-mail announcing the passage of the Board of Trustees’ resolution, the decision has been restated to the point where it may seem as if the administration has backed off its initial intentions. But while the language of the initial decision may have changed, the University’s intentions have remained the same. The Rose will still transition from a public museum to a teaching space for the school, and the

NEWS ANALYSIS

University will still sell the art if necessary in order to help alleviate its financial troubles. The confusion that has permeated the Rose situation lies in the University’s words, not its intended actions. “The new statement from the University president, Jehuda Reinharz, proposes certainly a much milder way of phrasing where we’re headed, but I still think we’re headed in the same direction,” Prof. Eric Hill (THA), the chair of the Committee to Review the Closing of the Rose, told the Justice Feb. 13. The initial Jan. 26 press release stated that the Board of Trustees “voted unanimously to close the Rose Art Museum,” adding that “the University will publicly sell the art collection.” Two weeks later, following extensive publicity in national publications like the Boston Globe and the New York Times, Reinharz seemed to backtrack

from the original decision in a Feb. 5 email to the Brandeis community. The e-mail read: “The Museum will remain open, but in accordance with the Board’s vote, it will be more fully integrated into the University’s central educational mission,” and also stated that “The [initial public statements] gave the misleading impression that we were selling the entire collection immediately, which is not true.” Reinharz blamed himself in part for the misunderstanding, channeling President Barack Obama by writing, “I screwed up.” But Reinharz’s second e-mail did not violate the initial Board of Trustees resolution. The original resolution stated, “The University administration is authorized to take the necessary steps to transition the University’s Rose Art Museum to a

See ANALYSIS, 5 ☛

The insight of Frank

Making history

New CIO hired

■ Representative Barney Frank speaks about the financial crisis.

■ The men’s basketball team broke a UAA shooting record in routing Case Western Reserve University.

■ Alison Svizzero replaces former CIO Deborah Kuenstner.

FEATURES 7

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

INDEX

NEWS 3

SPORTS 16

ARTS

17

EDITORIAL FEATURES

10 7

OPINION POLICE LOG

11 2

SPORTS LETTERS

16 11

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