Volume 19 Issue 3
“To acquire wisdom, one must observe” www.brandeishoot.com
September 17, 2021
Brandeis University’s Community Newspaper · Waltham, Mass.
Univ. ranks in U.S. News
Heller Child Opportunity Index used
By Sasha Skarboviychuk
By Sarah Kim
editor
special to the hoot
Brandeis remained ranked 42nd in the U.S. News and World Report Best National University rankings, not dropping for the first time in five years. It tied for 42nd place with Boston University, Case Western Reserve University, Tulane University and University of Wisconsin-Madison in the category of Best National Universities, according to the most recent U.S. News rankings. In the 2021 edition, Brandeis tied for #42 with Boston University, Case Western Reserve University, University of Texas at Austin and University of Wisconsin-Madison, in the category of Best National Universities, according to the rankings. In the 2020 edition, Brandeis tied for #40, while in 2019, Brandeis ranked 35, tied with the Georgia Institute of Technology, according to the list of the previous rankings. In the previous three years, Brandeis ranked 34th. Brandeis’s highest ranking was in 2014, at 32nd place. In this year’s ranking, Brandeis
The Child Opportunity Index (COI), developed by researchers at Brandeis’s Heller School for Social Policy and Management, was applied to Allentown, PA this fall in order to evaluate the causes of gun violence in the area. As COVID-19 restrictions have begun to subside in the past few months, a spike in shootings and homicides have alarmed activists and leaders in the community. “The COI has had impacts far beyond what we initially expected,” said Dolores Acevedo-Garcia, Professor of Human Development and Social Policy at Brandeis and director of the ICYFP, in an email interview. “When opportunity is shared equitably, everyone benefits.” Dr. Abby Letcher, an Allentown family medicine physician, cited the town’s low score on the COI in Allentown newspaper The Morning Call. A low score on the scaled index indicates a lack of institutional support for youth in the area. Letcher discussed how
See RAKINGS, page 2
See HELLER, page 3 PHOTO FROM HOOT ARCHIVES
Univ. resumes study abroad after pause due to COVID-19 By Victoria Morrongiello and Roshni Ray editor
After a year-long intermission of study abroad programs during the pandemic, Brandeis students have resumed travel this year. According to a recent Brandeis-
Now article, 19 students participated in study abroad programs this summer, and more than 50 students are expected to travel this fall to destinations such as Ecuador, Ghana, Mexico, South Korea and throughout Europe. Alisha Cardwell, Director of Study Abroad, describes the goals and logistics of study abroad programs this semester via an email
interview with The Hoot and invites students to explore options for themselves at the “largest study abroad event of the year” on Thursday, September 23rd. “We are excited that there are currently Brandeis students studying abroad again around the world! We are early in the study abroad application cycle for next year, but have already
enjoyed talking to students interested in studying abroad next summer, semester, or academic year,” wrote Cardwell. 19 students were among the first to go abroad since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Summer 2021 programs which were offered, according to a BrandeisNow article. 18 of the 19 students went
abroad through Brandeis study abroad programs. For the Fall 2021 semester, the university has nearly 50 students studying abroad, according to the article. Study abroad experiences have been slightly altered, according to the BrandeisNow article. In order to maintain health and See ABROAD, page 3
The univ. honors the 20th anniversary of 9/11 By Victoria Morrongiello editor
This year marks the 20th anniversary of the attacks on Sep. 11, 2001. In honor of the 20th anniversary, the university held commemorations, an academic panel, an experiential panel and a flag tribute for those lost on Sep. 11, according to the university’s September 11: 20 Years Later page. “9/11 should always be a re-
Inside This Issue:
minder that tomorrow is never promised,” wrote Joshua Feld ’22, one of the student coordinators of the flag tribute. To pay tribute to the lives lost on Sep. 11, the university collaborated with students Feld and Zachary Vollser ’22 to place flags in the grass by the Louis Brandeis statue on campus. The university posted a picture of the flag tribute on their Instagram page, writing that the flags were to “commemorate those lost on September 11,”
News: Student Union with another election Ops: A review of Ben & Jerry’s new flavors. Features: COVID-19 effects healthcare workers Sports: Men’s soccer play tight games to start Editorial: Brandeis is overcrowded
according to the post. American flags were also placed on the Great Lawn to honor the anniversary, according to the university’s page. Feld and Vollser collaborated with the university administration to come up with suggestions for the type of commemoration and the implementation of the flag tribute, wrote Feld in an email interview with The Hoot. The two worked with the Department of Student Affairs to create the display, wrote Feld.
Volleyball Ties
Page 2 Women’s teams tie in Page 12 Brandeis first 8 matches. Page 10 SPORTS: PAGE 6 Page 7 Page 9
Vollser wrote that he wanted to pay tribute to those lost on Sep. 11 for multiple reasons, including wanting to honor the heroism of those lost while trying to help others, to honor the innocent people who were going about their routine either going to work or traveling and to make sure that those who are too young to recall the events of that day remember it as well. Another reason Vollser included was the fact that there are peo-
ple simulating the events of Sep. 11 using video games and then uploading them to the internet. “Many were commenting on how distasteful these videos are, however, their creators would try and silence many of our concerns. It is our duty as young people to fix what is broken and prevent this from ever happening again, and doing an act of kind-
no accessibilty The Brandeis campus is just not accessible. OPINIONS: PAGE 11
See 9/11, page 4