Covering Winter Union Elections

Election day for the four Union positions open during this winter round is just two days away.  Usually, winter elections are limited to just one or two races, but for a variety of reasons, this year will have four open slots, including one with a constituency of the entire ungraduate student body.  The open seats are:

  • Senator for Ridgewood Quad.  Ridgewood was unoccupied last semester, so there was no Senator.
  • Senator for Village Quad.  Not a single person ran in the fall, so the seat has been unoccupied.
  • Justice of the Union Judiciary.  Danielle Shmuely resigned to study abroad this semester.
  • Senator for the Class of 2010.  Paul Balik resigned for personal reasons. (Incidently, Paul’s resignation represents a great loss for the Senate.  His thoughtful, meticulous style  made him a very highly respected voice in debate, and his leadership on the Bikes Task Force is a key reason why Brandeis will have bicycles to lend in March.)

We’re trying a new style of election coverage during this cycle that I hope will help the candidates connect with those in the Innermost Parts community.  Each candidate running for an open position was sent a short questionnaire covering issues of relevance to their elections.  Their answers will be posted as they’re received, and we’ll post a link to them on election day.  Hopefully, voters will be able to use these answers to make more informed choices in these races.  The questions sent to the candidates are:

For Senate candidates:

  1. What new or existing projects would you like to work on in the Senate?
  2. What experience do you have that you think would help you be an effective Senator?
  3. What issues do you find most pressing for your specific constituency?
  4. One of the four pillars upon which Brandeis was founded is the commitment to social justice.  How do you interpret this commitment, and what role does the Student Union Senate have in fulfilling it?
  5. What do you consider the most pressing issues facing Brandeis as a result of the budget deficits, and what role would you play as a Senator in working on them?

For Judiciary candidates:

  1. What experience do you have that you think would help you be an effective Justice?
  2. What would your approach be in judging a case, and how do you think it might be different from the approach others would take?
  3. As a Union government officer, would you involve yourself in Union projects beyond the Judiciary?  If so, what?

Reviewing Our Success So Far

Wow.  Among all the meetings, protests, committees, forums, list servs, blogging, e-mailing, letter writing, and general, all-around activism that we’ve seen from so much of the student body recently, it’s easy to forget that the infamous closed faculty meeting was only one week ago as of yesterday.  So much has happened since then, so much has been achieved, and so much work still lies ahead.

In the latest Justice, Hillel Buechler states that the gathering outside of Olin-Sang on that Thursday “failed to accomplish anything substantial” and that “any hopes or signs of true action …fizzled”.  With all due respect to Hillel (he’s one of my favorite op-ed writers at Brandeis), his eulogy for our demonstration was quite premature.  In the week since the faculty meeting, we’ve seen:

  • President Reinharz present to the students the principles he showed the faculty that will guide his decisions in the budget cut process.
  • The creation of the Brandeis Budget Cut Committee, a group with an active list serv and several successful meetings already under its belt.
  • An open letter from the Student Union President to the faculty and administration calling for greater opportunities for  student involvement in planning for Brandeis’s future.
  • A student-led campaign to preserve the job of a highly respected faculty member.
  • A collaborative wiki created for the entire Brandeis community to share ideas to ease the budget crisis.
  • Several high level administrators attend a Union Senate meeting to share information about Brandeis’s financial picture with the entire student body.
  • An open forum with President Reinharz to discuss Brandeis’s current financial situation.
  • Students invited to sit in on every new committee to discuss potential academic changes, including the steering committee.
  • And, just breaking now, a new Study Abroad Advisory Committee with three student voices (including Innermost Parts’s own Alex Melman!) to reevaluate the controversial changes to the study abroad program.

In short, the past week has resulted in an administration more willing to listen and engage with students than ever before, a faculty who has come out strongly for increased student involvement, and a student body reenergized and full of great ideas for improving our campus.  The lesson I take from this is that activism is not a zero-sum game.  When people decide to speak out, everyone benefits.  It would be disastrous to lose focus on the challenges still ahead, but the entire Brandeis community should be congradulating itself on everything that it has accomplished.  More importantly, we should look at this as a model for how we can weather the strom of budget cuts while gaining something in the process.

ONE MORE DAY to Apply for New Academic Committees

The deadline for applying for the Curriculum and Academic Restructuring Sub-Committees is this Saturday at 5pm, so apply now here or forever hold your peace.  The subcommittees open to undergraduate students are Recruiting and Admissions, creating a possible Business Major, Summer Semester/Summer Away, and Degree Requirements and Advising.  These openings for student voices are the realization of what we’ve been working so hard to achieve and represent a golden opportunity to participate directly in shaping the future of Brandeis academics.

For more information on the application process and the requirements for the committees, check out Jason Gray’s initial e-mail below the fold.

Continue reading “ONE MORE DAY to Apply for New Academic Committees”

My Latest Hoot Article

Not to self-promote too much, but I just want to quickly call attention to my article published in today’s Brandeis Hoot.  I hope it answers any questions anyone may still have about my sudden resignation from the Student Union, something which I have an obligation to explain to the student body that elected me.  If you have any questions/comments about the article or my situation in general, please feel free to contact me at athughes@brandeis.edu.

We now return to our regularly scheduled budget crisis.

New Look for Innermost Parts!

Enter Innermost Parts, 2.0. Its been about a year since we first seriously started writing, and I’ve redesigned the site to make it look prettier and easier on the eyes. 

There were a few things I’d have liked to do, but couldn’t figure out due to my limited coding abilities. These include gravatar support, threaded comments, and a few other things. If you are reading this and know about internets and want to help us out by doing some more advanced site design (we use wordpress), that’d be great.

Leave comments with feedback on the new look, suggestions, etc.

Rose Protest in Globe

brandeis

The Boston Globe has a decent, if short, article covering today’s protest. You can read it here. It’s not too enlightening on any Rose issues, but it’s nice to see that the student efforts are being properly documented in national media.

Remember, you can visit the Innermost Parts article archive to see all of the major articles about the Rose closure. Let us know if there’s anything we’re missing, or any investigation or coverage of the issue you’d like to see.

If anyone has photos or video of the event that we should post, let us know.

The Rose: Education for the Pursuit of Knowledge

This is a piece written by Julia Sferlazzo, a senior here at Brandeis majoring in Studio Arts. Like most of us, she is devastated by the seemingly imminent loss of the Rose. Here are her thoughts. I hope you find them as moving as I do. ~Loki

The Rose Art Museum is not only a core part of Brandeis University, but an important American institution. It houses some of the most important works of our time, many of them directly tied to our history. Amongst other works, the collection houses a portrait by Salvador Dali of Louis Sachar, our founding President’s brother, and a portrait by Andy Warhol of Louis Brandeis. These works are a symbol of our University’s heritage and a reminder of what we are about to lose forever. Each piece was donated with the promise that they would educate our minds and enrich our culture. In closing the museum and selling these works, they will not only leave our campus but the public world, as they move to private collections.

The Museum’s beginning is symbolic of the creation of our university. Both were innovative and daring. Just as the Rose took a chance on lesser-known contemporary artists, Brandeis University opened its doors to all people without regard to gender, race, or religion. It is in this tradition that both have thrived. Continue reading “The Rose: Education for the Pursuit of Knowledge”

Faculty Votes Overwhelmingly to Discuss Rose Decision With Stakeholders!

Unlike last week’s closed door faculty meeting, the authorties have agreed to let campus media in to report on the meeting. Innermostparts.org was granted a seat to report on the proceedings. I will give a full report on the meeting later, but I’d like to give a brief update while the Deans of IBS and Heller report.

The Faculty voted, by a margin of 104-11-12 to accept a resolution proposed by John Plotz and Elizabeth Ferry that would create a committee that includes all the relevent stakeholders to discuss the status of the Rose Art musem. This was a protest by the faculty against the shutting out of the community in the decision making process regarding the closing of the Rose Art. Some of the faculty who spoke in favor of the resolution were just as angry as we were and they made it clear that they wanted to have a say in the process.

It is becoming increasingly clear that the faculty are some of our greatest allies in the fight to have our voices heard.

Full wording of the resolution after the jump.

Continue reading “Faculty Votes Overwhelmingly to Discuss Rose Decision With Stakeholders!”

Sit-In Update

The plan for today’s sit-in is to congregate at the Rose Art Museum at 1pm.  There will be tables with petitions and letter-writing opportunities, as well as paper and pencils for signs or other forms of artistic expression.  A microphone will be set up so that attendees may share their personal reactions and accounts of what the Rose means to them.  There will hopefully be a representative from the administration present to hear what everyone has to say.  I encourage everyone who is able to come out in support of the Rose.  Share your feelings and ideas, and make your voice heard!

Another Chance to Talk to Administrators

If you missed yesterday’s forum with President Reinharz or just didn’t get a chance to ask your question, you’re in luck.  The Graduate Student Association has planned another question and answer session with senior administrators to be held later today.  The meeting is at 5:00pm in the Olin-Sang Auditorium, and every member of the Brandeis community is invited to attend.  Even if you were satisfied with Wednesday’s event, it’s still a good idea to attend and show that we are consistently committed to making sure our voices are heard.

Publicize Your Ideas on BrandeisPlans

Wow, I really picked the wrong time to leave the campus.  Protests, sit-ins, listservs, national controversy, student forums (fora?) — what fun you must all be having!

I’m definitely keeping an eye on everything though, and consider this my long-awaited (yeah, right) return to active posting.  Echoing InfoGirl’s post from Monday, I really want to encourage everyone to check out BrandeisPlans, not just as passive observers but as active participants in the discussion that will, if all goes well, not only lead the University to new heights but also ultimately save the world.

Continue reading “Publicize Your Ideas on BrandeisPlans”

Reflections on Today’s Forum

First and foremost, I send my sincere thanks to Jason Gray for encouraging President Reinharz to hold the forum for undergraduate students. Jason has proven himself to be a very valuable resource by advocating for the needs of the students. Simply put, he continues to impress me. In addition, I must extend a warm thank you to President Reinharz, as well as Peter French and Marty Krauss, for agreeing to hold this forum. Continue reading “Reflections on Today’s Forum”

A Summary of Today’s Forum

For those who didn’t get the memo, today President Jehuda Reinharz, Chief Financial Officer Peter French, and Provost Marty Krauss held an open forum with students in Sherman Function Hall. It wasn’t an ideal situation, the forum was only announced the evening before and it was held during a time when most students have classes. Furthermore, it was held in middle of an ugly storm (at least from the perspective of this California native). Yet despite the challenges in organizing the event, over two hundred students (according to the Student Union) turned out to ask the President some questions. I can say with confidence that this forum was the direct result of student activism, both on the part of the Student Union as well as the Brandeis Budget Cut Committee.

A full audio version of the forum is available on the website of the Brandeis Hoot.

Right away President Reinharz opened the meeting by announcing that this will not be the last forum, that more forums will be held for those unable to attend. He then passed the podium off to Peter French who presented a detailed slideshow (the same one presented to the Faculty and Board of Trustees in December) outlining Brandeis’s budget problems for the next five fiscal years.

The first problem he addressed was the problem of a structural deficit. That is to say,

the needs and aspirations [of the university] exceed assets and annual revenues.

As a result, for the last few decades Brandeis has been relying on large gifts to pay for its operations and it has been dipping into its endowment to pay its bills. This is only a serious problem if the University is pulling more than 5% out of its endowment annually – which for many years they were – because after this point, the endowment would cease to grow. President Reinharz built a reserve fund ( a sort of ‘savings account’ which could be dipped into and potentially fully exhausted in times of financial trouble) worth about $100 million during his tenure at Brandeis, and without it we’d be in even more trouble than we are right now. Despite this, French estimates the reserve fund will be depleted by FY 2010-2011, in order to pay for the deficits of the next two years.

In short, Brandeis has been in a fragile financial situation for quite some time, and the combination of the economy crash and the Madoff scandal put Brandeis into a state of financial crisis. (though Brandeis was not invested in Madoff’s funds directly, as was Tufts, many of our wealthy Jewish donors like Carl Shapiro were scammed out of hundreds of millions).

Continue reading “A Summary of Today’s Forum”

Report on today’s administrative presentation: The Rose

Students I have talked to seem to agree that today’s presentation by Pres. Jehuda Reinharz, COO Peter French, and Provost Marty Krauss was productive.  There was a massive student turnout (the room was packed), and a lot of important questions were answered.  I feel relieved that I’ve finally been given substantial information, but also some resentment that this presentation, which was prepared in December, could not have been shown to the student body earlier.  It seems crazy to hold back explanatory and even comforting information while the student body frets.

Here is a paraphrased summary of what  we were told regarding the closing of the Rose.  More summary to come regarding details on endowment return and other areas of the presentation.

Brandeis lost 25% of its endowment between June 30 and December 31, falling from $712 million to $549 million in market value. Peter French’s projections predict the endowment’s value will reach an all-time low of $468 million in Fiscal Year 2009. After that, the endowment will begin to recover, but until it surpasses its original principal, no withdrawals can be made due to Massachussets law.  Proposed changes in academic structuring and student/faculty ratio will help to close gaps, but not by a lot.  Selling the Rose, as sad as it makes the Board of Trustees, is the only feasible large-scale cutback.

So, what exactly will happen?  There are 7180 works of art in the Rose collection, with an estimated worth at about $350 million before the crash.  It will take months or years to sell the paintings, as we must wait for the art market to recover, as well as examine the terms of donation or purchase for each and every work to see if its sale would be legal. A full sale of the Rose collection is thus nearly impossible and undesirable.  If, by some miracle, the economy recovers and philanthropy picks up, Pres. Reinharz said that there may be no sale at all. Continue reading “Report on today’s administrative presentation: The Rose”

Jasper Johns is Watching!

According to today’s New York Times article (See Nathan’s post below), world-renowned contemporary painter and printmaker Jasper Johns has spoken out about the Rose’s closing.

Johns said on Tuesday, “I find it astonishing. I’ve never heard anything like it.”

jasper-johns-tiro-blanco

Johns is only one of the revolutionary artists cherished at the Rose, including Robert Rauschenberg, Cindy Sherman, Andy Warhol, Joan Miro, and Roy Lichtenstein.

Boston Globe Reports on Struggle for Input

The flurry of attention Brandeis has recieved in the last few days has allowed major newspapers to report on the main issue, the lack of student input in the decision making process here at the University.

The Boston Globe today has an article today entitled “Crisis Raises Questions on Brandeis Campus.”

The article quotes Professor Andreas Teuber, who says, “There was a ripple throughout the entire faculty of feeling hoodwinked.”

The article also quotes Carrie Mills and Alex Melman, editor & writer for innermostparts.org and both leaders in the Brandeis Budget Cuts Coalition. Carrie says, “We were left in the dark. We certainly feel marginalized as a whole. It feels like there’s a brick wall between us and the administration, and nothing is getting through.”

Alex says, “To close the Rose is a terrible loss to the university, and to auction off its collection as a cost-saving measure is tragic.”

Now that major media is covering the issue, now is the time for students to make a stand and demand input on all major financial decisions. We are clearly making progress, but we must continue to fight for our voice.

Why Student Organizing Matters Now

From the beginning of Brandeis students’ activism in the face of the budget crisis, many of us involved have questioned the legitimacy of “making a fuss” during tough times. The administration will inevitably cut integral pieces of academics and campus life, and there are more important problems in which to invest our energy. Can we really have an effect?

4,000 students, faculty, and staff from Southern Nevada schools rallied on Thursday
4,000 students, faculty, and staff from Southern Nevada schools rallied on Thursday

In the words of Hillel Buechler’s unsubstantiated op-ed in the Justice, greater student inclusion in decision-making “isn’t feasible for now; the University has already established a pattern of disregard for our say in making changes, and that pattern has yet to be broken.” These feelings of hesitancy, undoubtedly spreading among campus activists, are contrary to the principles of the very University we are trying to preserve.

How about the Rose Art Museum. Even as we struggle with our own emotional cost-benefit analyses, it is still integral that we express passion for what we value on campus. A college education teaches us to explore our interests, and then to immerse ourselves in what we find fulfilling, preparing us to fight for our ideals after graduation. We are supposed to utilize the confidence we develop in the classroom for positive change. In that vein, I will be attending Thursday’s sit-in (1:00 at the museum!) not because I definitively oppose the closing, but because I want to make sure that the Board of Trustees and administration deeply understands the adverse affects of this decision not only on PR and financial asset holdings, but on student morale. The Board of Trustees is removed from campus values and attitudes, which can turn the student body into a means, rather than an end, to an educational institution. We must do whatever we can to break through financial analysis and make our complaints felt.

Even if we, the students, are viewed as a means to a financial end, we need to remember that we are the most important means. We too often forget that the university depends on our money, our success, and our support. It is irresponsible for us to neglect input. The administration has not only expressed a desire to hear from students but implemented avenues of dialogue (i.e. Jehuda’s 11:00 meeting today in Sherman); it would be a humiliating demonstration of apathy for us not to partake.

Our administration is just as desperate as we are, and a mutually beneficial solution depends on discourse involving both sides! Few administrators/faculty are viewing student organizing as antagonistic, in fact they are relying on it. At a time when we are selling the Rose, our second largest asset after the school’s land itself, no idea is too radical.

So, in a clichéd attempt at a rallying cry, let’s put aside our pessimism and save our own school!

Rose Art on the main page of the NY Times Website

The New York Times website updates frequently, and items get pushed off the main page about as quickly as they’re put on, but right now the lead story is about our beloved Rose museum. Here is a link. Click it.

rose3large

It’s now fairly clear that if we go through with this, we will destroy our reputation in the art world forever. Nobody who seriously cares about art will have anything but sheer contempt for our University. Now, I’m still undecided on the issue, and perhaps sacrificing the respect of the art community is the price we have to pay. But if we think we can pull of such a brash move with no consequences from the outside world, we’re deluding ourselves. Continue reading “Rose Art on the main page of the NY Times Website”

Forum with Jehuda Reinharz Today at 11am!!!

In response to the outcry over the recent decisions made by the administration and the Board of Trustees on issues such as the Rose Art Museum and study abroad, President Reinharz himself has consented to a completely open forum for all students to be held today, Wednesday, January 28th, at 11am in the Hassenfeld Conference Room in Upper Sherman.  This is everyone’s chance to ask Jehuda where the transparency has been and what other drastic cost-cutting measures might be in the works that we don’t know about.  I highly encourage everyone to attend and to be prepared with questions.  If for some reason you cannot attend, feel free to leave a question in the comments space or to post it on bbcc@lists.brandeis.edu, and someone will make sure it’s addressed.  Opportunities like this happen very rarely, so again, please come if you can and show the President that the voices calling for a role in this crisis are unified and growing.

The original press release from Student Union Director of Communications Jamie Ansorge is below the fold.

Continue reading “Forum with Jehuda Reinharz Today at 11am!!!”

Three Cool Events (Not Budget Related)

As the Budget Cut Crisis continues, it is important to remember that life at the University still goes on, and there are other activists causes and events going on that should get our attention.

First up, DFA is hosting a Student Health Organizing Coalition (SHOC) Training on Wednesday evening (January 28) at 9 PM in Pearlman Lounge. SHOC is a Tufts based coalition that is working to reform Student Health insurance plans in the State of Massachusetts. This is a great opportunity to network with activists from other schools and learn how we can change the health care system in this state. For more information: see Facebook.

Next up, the Social Justice Committee of the Student Union is having its first meeting of the semester on Thursday at 10 PM in the Union office. The Committee can work on any number of social justice projects as it pleases. So come to the meeting armed with ideas and a sense of passion.

Finally, on January 31st, this Saturday night, the Student Union is hosting the Combating Hate Fundraising Dinner from 8 to 10 PM. The event is an all you can eat buffet, with entertainment provided by VoiceMale, Starving Artists, Mochila and the Step Team. Food provided by local restaurants. The price? $10. All of the money raised will be donated to the effort to help rebuild a black church in Springfield, MA burned down the night Barack Obama won the election.

Buy your ticket early in Usdan from 12-2 or 6-8 anytime this week!

Rose Closure Blues: Let Your Parents Do the Talking!

Art Attack came up with a pretty snappy idea – give out form letters and stamped, addressed envelopes to students, so their parents can quickly and painlessly indicate their disapproval of the Rose Art’s closing. In the interests of saving some paper and postage, I decided to put the letter up here, so either you or a parent can print and mail/fax it yourself.

Continue reading “Rose Closure Blues: Let Your Parents Do the Talking!”

The War of the Rose: An Allegory of Transparency

The scope and reach of the (so-far announced) budget cuts have riled student opinion, but perhaps none so much as the closure of the Rose Art Museum. This should strike us as perplexing; the need to cut a full tenth of faculty, or vastly simplify our academic structure, would seem to be far more worrying and unacceptable changes. If what we are witnessing is the wholesale reorganization of our campus, imposed on our community with little student or faculty consent, why has the Rose become a flashpoint?

There is no single answer, but there are many contributing factors. Clearly, the marginalization of the arts on campus has long been a problem, and this move is seen by many as an appalling blow. Alumni are up in arms because the closure indicates that the administration has a callous attitude towards donors, viewing them less as partners in an ongoing project and more as non-renewable resources.

But perhaps the reaction can best be understood in the light of ongoing administration opaqueness, a secretiveness almost designed to breed student paranoia and rumor-mongering. It is utterly inexcusable that this decision was announced so suddenly and with so little input – the fact that this even caught museum director by surprise shows a marked disrespect on the part of the administration, even a reckless mentality, one I thought we could have left behind with the Bush administration.

This is not to say that this might not be a good decision, one carefully considered by Jehuda and the trustees. There is every possibility that this quick cash infusion may allow Brandeis to stay afloat through the financial crisis, through the restructuring process and the resulting academic scrambling. I could even be tempted to say that this was an inspired move, a bold decision that will ensure that we have a university in the years to come.

However, I am no position to make such a judgment. The complete lack of openness on the part of the administration means that nobody – none of the students, and precious few faculty and donors – can truly judge the merits of the decision.

The administration deigns to treat us as children. We are given but a poor mirror in which to grasp these shocking, unforeseen changes, and the cloudy images we see do nothing to alleviate our confusion and anger.

Finally: Some Results

Earlier today we were lamenting the lack of results to go with the pledge of student involvement. Well, it appears we have made some headway.

Some quick updates:

There will be a student forum on the budget cuts tomorrow at 11 am, where both CFO Peter French and Pres. Jehuda Reinharz will present and answer questions. Info to come on location, etc.

Students will be appointed to the sub-committees investigating what to do about everything, though the verdict is still out on whether a student will be on the uber-steering committee. It even appears that they will be present in equal numbers with faculty and administrators, a great success and step in the right direction.

Updates and analysis to come.

Great Promises, Empty Results

Last Thursday, I waited patiently outside a secret, closed-door faculty meeting, holding a sign that said “Students Need to Be Part of the Discussion” and surrounded by like-minded folks holding similar signs.

When the faculty streamed out, they seemed very pleased with themselves. I got thumbs up and calls of “you got everything you asked for”.

Well, cool.

Today the Board of Trustees met in an emergency session. After the meeting I got a call from Jacob Bockelmann, the Senior Representative to the Board of Trustees. I was told that students, graduate and undergraduate, were promised seats on every committee dealing with the crisis. I was told that the Board of Trustees had a meeting that closely paralleled the BBCC meeting a few days earlier, with Board members excited about using this opportunity to strengthen Brandeis and to increase, not merely preserve, our commitment to Social Justice.

Students on the Steering Committee! Board members talking about Social Justice. That all sounds great.
But let’s match words and deeds.

There’s a strong rhetoric of transparency here. But at the end of the day the decisions that are reached – selling off the finest Modern Art collection in New England, reneging on financial aid promises (for study abroad) without so much as an apology – don’t conform to the rhetoric.

How things work
How things work

The data:

Decision Decision # Number of Students Consulted
Merit Aid Portability 1 0
Selling off the Rose Art Collection 2 0-2*

*If the Junior and Senior Student Reps to the Board were consulted, they still weren’t given a vote or any sort of formal way of gaging student sentiment on the subject.

I’m tired of being told how in theory we have a lot of transparency at Brandeis and how students have a say here. Hell, faculty don’t even have a say about selling off the Rose Art Museum. Are we being put on to all these committees for tokenism or are we actually respected?

With these arbitrary/autocratic acts are coupled with rhetoric of inclusiveness, it’s hard not to imagine that the powers that be are simply taunting us.

Prof. Saxe’s statement

In our quest to promote productive campus dialogue, Innermost Parts is inviting all faculty to send us their plans and proposals for
a. dealing with the budget crisis
b. innovative ideas that make Brandeis SEXY

Here’s the first:

Statement from Prof. Leonard Saxe (Heller/Hornstein)

Colleagues,

To those who have argued that we should not rush to make academic changes, recall President-elect Obama’s post-election comment that it was necessary to move with “deliberate haste”– with equal emphasis on “deliberate” and “haste.” These are not ordinary times. In only nine weeks this Fall, the stock market lost 40% of its value. The implications for Brandeis are profound: Our endowment is down by nearly 25% and many of our current and prospective students can no longer afford tuition. As faculty, there’s not much we can do to alter macro-economic forces, but we do have the capacity to improve our educational programs and make them more attractive, as well as effective. If the current situation forces us to agree on the outlines of a strategy in a mere six weeks, so be it. The alternative is worse. Continue reading “Prof. Saxe’s statement”

Reaction to the Rose Art Decision

To the Brandeis community,

I and many others are deeply upset and concerned over the recent news regarding the closing of the Rose Art Museum.  Personally, I regard the Rose as a very integral part of my Brandeis education–I doubt I would have chosen to attend Brandeis had the Rose not been a part of the package.  Recently, a group of students, myself included, demonstrated outside of a closed faculty meeting in an effort to gain transparency and inclusion of students in the discussions/ decision-making processes surrounding the budget crisis.  We were led to believe that our efforts were not in vain–many faculty members spoke out in support, and a motion was passed to encourage student imput.  I and other concerned students are deeply dissapointed and dismayed by yet another blatant lack of consideration for the thoughts and opinions of the broader Brandeis community, especially where such an important issue is concerned.  I am not alone in my outrage over the lack of communication and consultation concerning the Board of Trustees’ decision, and in order to convey that, a group of my fellow students and I would like to organize a sit-in in and/or around the Rose at 1pm this coming Thursday, the 29th.  Our hope is that both students and faculty will turn out in support of the Rose, and that the administration will be forced to take notice and openly communicate with the concerned members of the community.  I feel that something must be done to react against what is an imposing and inconsiderate decision on the part of the Board and the administration.  I hope sincerely that you will be in support of our idea, and encourage anyone who is able to attend.  If you have any questions or suggestions, feel free to contact me at rulm@brendeis.edu, or Maarit Ostrow at maostrow@brandeis.edu.

Respectfully,
Rebeccah Ulm

Senate Report: Department of Student Life Deans Explain Budget Deficit Decisions to Students

President Gray plans to invite more administrators next week, “perhaps Peter French”, but details aren’t clear who the Student Senate’s next guest will be. French is Brandeis’ Executive Vice President. For more recent news, check your e-mail and Loki’s post: Rose Art Museum to be shut down and auctioned off.

Students crammed into this week’s Senate meeting as Rick Sawyer, Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Student Life, and Maggie Balch, Associate Dean of Student Life, answered questions. Sawyer and Balch were invited by Student Union President Jason Gray to address student unrest concerning the 5 million dollar deficit in this year’s budget. Though Sawyer and Balch responded to questions about recent controversial decisions including the status of merit scholarship portability and allocation of Village living space, students seemed mostly concerned with continued budget cuts that will inevitably fall under the Department of Student Life’s jurisdiction.

Details behind the cut. Continue reading “Senate Report: Department of Student Life Deans Explain Budget Deficit Decisions to Students”

BREAKING: Rose Art museum to be shut down and auctioned off!

UPDATE: the text of this post seems to have mysteriously disappeared about 10 minutes ago. Here it is again. Since then, President Reinharz sent out a graceful email explaining the situation. It as I was told earlier – the Rose is to be closed, and its collection auctioned off. Reinharz says,

I am satisfied that our commitment is unwavering; that someday we will look back and say that when the quality of education and student services was at stake, we made hard choices so that Brandeis could emerge even stronger.

My thoughts on this are still conflicted. On the one hand, I love the Rose. It made Brandeis unique – which other liberal arts schools have such a prestigious museum on their grounds? On the other, this auction could raise tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars; I don’t know the full value of the collection. Was this a good decision? As I stated earlier, only if there are terms allowing us to “buy back” items at a later date, in sunnier times – such a stipulation could be written into the sale. For some of the more priceless items in our collection, this definitely seems like a logical step. Otherwise… I really don’t know. What other options were on the table? I wonder if we’ll ever find out. By this point, I doubt it.

I’m sure the recent falling-through of the new Arts building donor (about 3 months ago) had something to do with this. In the associated press release, we were told that:

Today’s decision will set in motion a long-term plan to sell the art collection and convert the professional art facility to a teaching, studio, and gallery space for undergraduate and graduate students and faculty.

So this serves two purposes – to raise capital for the University, and serve as the new teaching space for the Fine Arts department. You gotta give it to them – sort of smart. In a tragic kinda way.

Original post below.

Continue reading “BREAKING: Rose Art museum to be shut down and auctioned off!”

BBCC Meeting, Tonight, 9:30 pm, Castle Commons

An important Budget Cut Committee Meeting will be happening tonight at 9:30 in the Castle Commons. Make sure you come!!! Bring your friends! We’ll be talking about a wide variety of budget cut issues, and if you’re at all concerned about these things, this is a vital meeting.

We’ll be receiving a report from the Junior Representative to the Brandeis Board of Trustees, who will tell us about the outcome of today’s Board meeting. We’ll also be presenting a special opportunity, and learning about the activities of our various subgroups.

Again, if budget cuts concern you, be sure to show!

BrandeisPlans

Sahar sent this out to the BCC listserv, but it’s so cool that it deserves a post here too: BrandeisPlans, a wiki for members of the Brandeis community to submit, edit, and debate proposals for Brandeis’s future. What better way to make our voices heard?

For off-campus access:

login – faculty
password : change!

An explaination on the login information: The wiki was originally created as a faculty outlet, but it has expanded to the whole of Brandeis.

The Save Wayne Campaign

So one of Brandeis’s coolest professors is about to become an early victim of the budget cuts.

I took a class with Professor Wayne Marshall last semester (Race, Representation, Reggae and Nation), and loved every minute of it. Professor Marshall is one of the absolute best instructors I’ve had, and it sadly looks like he’s going to get the axe.

Up until now, we’ve seen few concrete examples of the budget cuts in action, but the prospect of losing Prof. Marshall brings immediacy to the budget issue.

Now, we know that Brandeis is going to cut faculty in the years to come (perhaps by as much as 10%). Losses are inevitable. But we need to make it clear to the administration that certain vital professors need to be maintained at all costs. And Wayne Marshall is vital. He’s a key part of both the Music and African-American studies departments, and has greater world-music expertise than anyone else on staff. Without Marshall, the study of non-western music at Brandeis would all but disappear. So academically, he’s vital, and he has impressive output of scholarly works as well (he’s one of the editors of this upcoming book, which is the first authoritative work on reggaeton). Plus he’s a popular local DJ, and you can catch him at The Enormous Room in Cambridge every Monday night.

Brandeis alum Leor Galil puts it this way:

I know that if I were still a student at Brandeis and he were not to return simply because something had to be cut from the budget, I would be confused as to why I was still at the school. If Brandeis prides itself as an institution that challenges its students in a variety of fields, if Wayne were to leave the school it would be a marked departure from that declaration.

If you’d like to know more, talk to me, Leor, Sahar, or anyone who has ever taken one of his classes. Or just email the man himself. wmarshal@brandeis.edu.

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So we want to make sure Prof. Marshall is rehired. He’s currently on a two-year contract which expires at the end of the semester, and is unlikely to be renewed. So we’re starting a school-wide campaign to convince the administration to keep him.

Leor is putting together, in his words, “a full-blown petition in three parts: a one page cover letter, a five-ten page argument for keeping Wayne onboard (with stats for his effect on the AAAS and Music Departments, documenting his contributions to the university, giving student feedback, etc), and the full blown list of signees.”

Please, please do whatever you can. If you know Wayne Marshall, write a testimonial or help put together our argument. If you don’t know him, then please sign the petition. We can’t save Wayne without a concerted student push. This is going to be really difficult, since the university does not want to re-hire faculty it can let go, so we need a massive effort. So email savewayne (at) gmail (dot) com with:

1. Your name

2. Your connection to Brandeis (student, parent, alum, with class year if applicable)

3. Some sort of contact info (so we can, if need be, verify that all the signatures are real)

4. Any comments you have about Prof. Marshall, or why you want the petition to succeed.

And tell your friends to as well. And tell your friends to tell their friends.

In a time of crisis, we as students have to work hard to preserve those parts of our Brandeis experience which we deem essential. The administration can cut professors, but surely not those that the students most enjoy and benefit from.

If you want more info about Wayne, you can find his blog at www.wayneandwax.com. There’s an old article about him in the Boston Globe that can give you some background info. His official Brandeis faculty page is here. Also keep on the lookout for a profile piece in The Justice coming fairly soon.

Again, email savewayne (at) gmail (dot) com and let’s get this petition going. But do more than sign the petition. Talk to Leor (leorgalil (at) gmail (dot) com) or me (nrobins (at) brandeis (dot) edu) to find other ways to get involve. Tell people. Do whatever you can, we need to make this work.

More posts to come on this subject…

Activist Calendar

You’ve probably noticed that here at Innermost Parts we have created the Activist Calendar on the sidebar for your convenience. The newest addition to the site is that you can now email your events to events@innermostparts.org and they will be added to the calendar for you. We will also try out a weekly Activist Events post.

This week’s events include all the weekly/bi-weekly meetings of FMLA, BLC, DFA, SPA, Trisk, and the Sexualities Discussion Group. In addition, check out B’deis Democrats’ Free Rice Competition on Thursday from 8-9pm in Shapiro Multipurpose room.

Don’t forget to email your events to: events@innermostparts.org

UPDATE: Sexualities Discussion Group is now Sex and Sexuality Symposium and is on Tuesdays from 2-3.

Jason Gray’s Letter to the Faculty

Now made available to the public:

To the Faculty and Academic Administrators,

As the Student Government President, I have been given a unique vantage point on the realities of the University’s financial situation.  The budget gap that Brandeis faces is large, and its current and continuing impact on the Student Body and the future of our institution is very real.

I am not writing to advocate for a specific position on any of the proposed changes.  I am instead writing about the deliberative process that is being created to develop these changes.  It is of utmost importance that students are substantively involved as we determine what is structurally necessary to reduce costs and attract more students to Brandeis.

Real, constructive student input in generating ideas, obtaining feedback, and making decisions will lead to better choices for all those who hold a stake in Brandeis’ future.  We know how these changes will impact our academic lives, our social lives, and our college experience.  We know how it would impact Brandeis’ ability to recruit future students. We also know what makes the Brandeis student unique – and what we all need to do to protect what makes this place special.

The students who gathered outside the faculty meeting today spoke what many others believe: Community-involvement in the decision-making process is not only beneficial, it is just.

I would like to propose that students be included in all academic committees that are established to evaluate different proposals, create solutions, and deliberate various ideas.  The appropriate mechanisms already exist to quickly provide qualified student representatives for these different committees. I further hope that we can determine the best way to provide accessible, comprehensive information about all of this to the Student Body at large.

I respect and appreciate the unique expertise of the faculty in dealing with the problems ahead, and I understand the immense impact that any changes may have on your lives and careers.  Also, I know how engaged the faculty has been in ensuring that the best interests of the University and its students are kept in mind during this difficult time.  On behalf of the Student Body, I deeply thank you.

I, and the students of Brandeis, look forward to working with you to make the best of this situation. I hope to discuss soon the best ways to substantively integrate students into the coming process.

Thank you for everything you do.

Yours in Service,

Jason Gray ‘10
Student Union President

The Hoot’s article on the protest

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The Hoot has a front page article on our demonstration yesterday in Olin-Sang.

Go and read it:

http://thehoot.net/articles/4722

By the way, I’m the one in the hat, in case you couldn’t tell.

I think the article is a pretty fair summary of what happened. And I’m very happy with the responses of the faculty to our concerns, even though not many stayed afterwards (they’re busy, so that’s understandable, though disappointing). Overall the faculty seem amenable to including students in the decisionmaking process, and it’s the actions of the administration that we need to be concerned about.

The protest was very, very valuable, though. I think we accomplished a great deal, though there will need to be much more of this kind of thing in the future (and a greater united student force).

The President’s Principles

This document was given to Innermost Parts by President Reinhartz shortly following the faculty meeting and the student demonstration outside. They were given to the faculty to show Brandeis’ commitment to preserve the elements that make this a great institution.

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I have my own thoughts about these which I will post tomorrow. What do you guys think?

Update: Our Mission in Olin-Sang

Why are we here?

Liza here, interviewing some random participants in the protest. Their exact words are below…

Nathan Robinson: “I am here because I am incredibly concerned about the possible implications of the budget cuts. With valuble faculty and resources potentially eliminated from our university, I want ot make sure that students have a say in the decision-making process, and that whatever we end up cutting, we stay true to our ideals as a university founded on social justice.

Guy Rossman: I really believe in the principles of democracy and participation, and that those that are affected by decisions should have a role in forming them.

Chia Jorento: Students should be aware of where their money is going, and we should be a part of the most important decisions that Brandeis makes.

Susan Paykin: I really care what hapens to the curriculum and overall University experience. I want to show my physical support, and that there are alot of studens who want to be more of a part of the dicussion.

Noah Braiterman: I want to show support to the faculty, and also to hear exactly what’s going on. As a student, I am a part of Brandeis’s future, but the finances behind it are as important as my presence here at all.

Supreetha Gubbala: As a senator, I feel I should support this. I even got out of class for this, and told my teacher, “sorry, this is more important than UWS.”

Rachel Sier: As a paying member of this institution, it is my right that I should be consulted with these decisions. However, I am not against the principle of having a faculty meeting about the budget issues. What I am against is the manner in which students who are actively invested in their education were treated. As a Brandeis community it is important that the entire community is consulted.

Cheryl Liebowitz: I decided to come see what was going on. Transparency is really important, and there should definitely be student say in something that is going to affect our future and the value of our education.