Dr. Andrew Wakefield tonight

Wikipedia describes Andrew Wakefieldas “a British former surgeon and medical researcher known for his fraudulent claims of a causative connection between the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine, autism and autistic enterocolitis. The latter controversial term was created by Wakefield to describe an unproven form of inflammatory bowel disease.”

Michael Willrich, esteemed Brandeis professor in the History Department, wrote Pox: An American History this past summer, on the subject of the pervasive fear of vaccines throughout American history. In an article in the New York Times printed in January 2011, he commented on Wakefield’s study:

“The evidence against the original article and its author, a British medical researcher named Andrew Wakefield, is damning. Among other things, he is said to have received payment for his research from a lawyer involved in a suit against a vaccine manufacturer; in response, Britain’s General Medical Council struck him from the medical register last May. As the journal’s editor put it, the assertion that the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine caused autism “was based not on bad science but on a deliberate fraud.””

Dr. Wakefield stands amidst a heap of controversy because of his incendiary report linking autism to vaccinations. And guess what? He’s coming to Brandeis. Tonight. In the Rapaporte Treasure Hall (in Goldfarb Library) from 7:30 to 9.

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Copyright Law

As college students, we’re lectured a lot about plagiarism. But, do most people even know basic facts about copyright law and tradmarks? I know I didn’t.
So Max Price and I looked up copyright law at the U.S. Copyright Office and these are the hilarious highlights which we transcribed here for you, worthy readers:

How do I protect my recipe?
A mere listing of ingredients is not protected under copyright law. However, where a recipe or formula is accompanied by substantial literary expression in the form of an explanation or directions, or when there is a collection of recipes as in a cookbook, there may be a basis for copyright protection. Note that if you have secret ingredients to a recipe that you do not wish to be revealed, you should not submit your recipe for registration, because applications and deposit copies are public records. See FL 122, Recipes.

Can I register a diary I found in my grandmother’s attic?
You can register copyright in the diary only if you own the rights to the work, for example, by will or by inheritance. Copyright is the right of the author of the work or the author’s heirs or assignees, not of the one who only owns or possesses the physical work itself. See Circular 1, Copyright Basics, section “Who Can Claim Copyright.”

How do I protect my sighting of Elvis?
Copyright law does not protect sightings. However, copyright law will protect your photo (or other depiction) of your sighting of Elvis. File your claim to copyright online by means of the electronic Copyright Office (eCO). Pay the fee online and attach a copy of your photo. Or, go to the Copyright Office website, fill in Form CO, print it, and mail it together with your photo and fee. For more information on registration a copyright, see SL-35. No one can lawfully use your photo of your sighting, although someone else may file his own photo of his sighting. Copyright law protects the original photograph, not the subject of the photograph.

Can I get a star named after me and claim copyright to it?
No. There is a lot of misunderstanding about this. Names are not protected by copyright. Publishers of publications such as a star registry may register a claim to copyright in the text of the volume [or book] containing the names the registry has assigned to stars, and perhaps the compilation of data; but such a registration would not extend protection to any of the individual star names appearing therein. Copyright registration of such a volume of star names does not confer any official or governmental status on any of the star names included in the volume. For further information on copyright protection and names, see Circular 34, Copyright Protection Not Available for Names, Titles, or Short Phrases

Overheard at Brandeis: Innaugural Post in Weekly series

Hey,

So as my earlier posts this week have demonstrated, I’m into series now.
Ever walking around campus and overheard people saying the dumbest shit? Or the most intellectual garbage? Or something that profoundly and sincerely changes your life?

Well now you have something to do with it. Please send it in to tips@innermostparts.org! And if it’s good enough, we’ll repost it!

One I’ve been storing up for a while:

(Walking past the hill atop which the Brandeis statue stands)
Person 1: It’s not a rock, there are trees growing out of it.

Thanks for reading the innaugural post, now start sending them!

Message from Fred Lawrence

Dear members of the Brandeis community,

I want to share my thanks and deep appreciation with you — 50,000 strong around the world — for all the support and encouragement I received throughout Inauguration Week. It was fantastic and truly inspiring. Some 1,500 students, faculty, staff, trustees, friends, supporters and dignitaries attended the ceremony on campus and hundreds more watched live over the internet. We ended the week at the Inaugural Ball, where another 1,500 people filled the Shapiro Gym for a night of great fun.

I invite you to view coverage of the event on BrandeisNOW. It includes a wonderful slideshow of photos taken at the many events during Inauguration Week as well as a video of my remarks. Stay tuned later in the week, when we will have some additional video highlights. It was a great week for Brandeis — please share it with your friends, fellow alums and prospective students.

Best wishes,

Fred Lawrence

Comical Excerpts from University E-mails

Much like Jay Leno does with newspapers, I will now be collecting excerpts from all University e-mails and re-posting them here for the likes of all of you.

First post in the series, thanks to Hiatt

Women for Hire Chicago Career Expo
Wed., Apr. 6, 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. (Navy Pier, 600 East Grand Avenue, Chicago, IL)
Get candid advice from professionals, gain feedback on your resume, and learn tips/tricks on how to ace a challenging job search.
RSVP: Hiatt NACElink > Events > Info Sessions

Jewish Organizing Initiative

Here at Brandeis, we have many activists 🙂
Community organizing a a great skill to have in the real world and on campus. Jewish Organizing Initiative is hosting a great opportunity for students to learn a unique skill: story telling.

I know the emphasis is Jewish, but the application is universal, and sounds interesting!

Jewish Organizing Initiative (JOI) Information Session & Community Organizing Training
Wednesday, April 6, 2011 6:00 – 7:30pm
Hiatt Career Center, Usdan Student Center
Brandeis University, Waltham, MA
* Reserved: Conference room

Storytelling: An Organizing Skill

Join current Jewish Organizing Initiative (JOI) fellows, recruiters, and Brandeis alumni during their visit to campus. You will practice storytelling, an important organizing skill, and understand how organizing is an important tool for implementing social change. Participants in the session will also learn more about the year-long fellowship, which places participants in Social Justice- oriented organizing jobs. JOI recruits young Jewish adults from all over the world for a year of leadership training that includes: working for social and economic justice, Jewish learning, training in grassroots community organizing skills, and Jewish community building.
The fellowship year involves work in social justice community or labor organizations, generally in low-income community organizations, (sometimes in the Jewish community) and bi-weekly learning and reflection about organizing for justice, Judaism and community building. Learn more about JOI at www.jewishorganizing.org.

MLK Week

Hello!
Every year, MLK and Friends organize a week full of events to commemorate the assassination of the great Martin Luther King. Next Monday is the kick off event with a Peace Vigil! I strongly encourage everyone to attend one or more of the events to celebrate the memory of MLK.

MONDAY, APRIL 4th: Peace Vigil
A moment of silence in memory of the anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Peace Circle near the Usdan Student Center
NOON- 1:00pm

TUESDAY, APRIL 5th: Eternally Yours…
Art Exhibit
A tribute to Coretta Scott, the Queen of late MLK Jr. & the other courageous women who fought alongside him
Shapiro Campus Center, Art Gallery, NOON to 5:00pm

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6th: The King & I
Panel & Discussion
The fight for justice told from the perspective of women who have made King’s dream, their reality
Gosman Athletic Center, Napoli Trophy Room, 6:00PM to 7:30PM
**Panelists include Ms. Monique Gnanaratnam & Ms. Erika Smith

THURSDAY, APRIL 7th: The Peacemakers
Interfaith Celebration
Personal testimonies of women whose first step toward tolerance, built the staircase for an interfaith community
Ridgewood A Commons, 7:00PM to 8:00PM
**Words from Kaamila Mohamed, Amanda Dryer, Neda Eid, & Susy Rosenfield

SWIMMING!

Dear Brandeis,

I feel privileged and honored to have joined so many of you at President Lawrence’s inauguration this afternoon. I know I took away a great sense of pride in Brandeis University and in my fellow students.

To add to the joyous celebration today, I was thrilled to open my e-mail and see the message from Daniel about reinstating the swimming pool on campus! The plan is to begin work on the pool this spring, to be ready for 2012. If you want to join the Brandeis swimming team, you better start practicing!

Check out the full e-mail below:

To the Student Body,

I am happy to announce that the Board of Trustees approved a renovation plan for the Linsey Pool facility on today (March 31). The project includes new mechanical and electrical infrastructure, repairs to the pool and pool deck, a new entry, updates to the lobby, and new locker rooms.

The Student Union heard your concerns about the pool, and we, in addition to other members of the community, pushed for a change.

Renovation on the pool will begin later this spring, with expected target completion in early 2012. Varsity swimming and diving will be reinstated for the 2012-2013 academic year.

For more details: http://www.brandeis.edu/now/2011/march/pool.html

Yours in service,

Student Union

Study Abroad Gets in on Today’s Excitement Too

What else is happening today?

Study Abroad is telling students going abroad in the 2011-12 school year that if they don’t submit all of their application materials by noon then they will suffer the consequences.

Excerpted from J. Scott Van Der Meid’s (Director of Study Abroad) e-mail sent out yesterday:

If you did not apply in enough time to get a decision by noon tomorrow, you have a serious problem on your hands since our office has been very clear through our forms and numerous emails that you needed to apply by at least March 1st to get a decision.

What are students to do if they haven’t heard back yet, you ask?

Allyson and I will be the only ones in the office tomorrow to assist with any issues you may have. Please come by and speak with us in person from 9-noon tomorrow. We WILL NOT accept any emails around delays of forms. You must come in person and we strongly suggest you don’t wait until 11:59 to see us.

Looks like I’ll be one of the many waiting outside the crowded Office of Study Abroad tomorrow to try to explain why my program hasn’t gotten back to me yet.

While I understand the need to report your study abroad status and Brandeis’ wish to estimate how many students are doing what next year, and so how many new students they can provide for, I don’t appreciate the harsh tone of this e-mail and the seeming insensitivity to students whose programs are not accommodating to Brandeis’ early deadline. If study abroad deadlines (both internal and external) and application information were made clearer from the start then this would be a non-issue. However, it wasn’t, and so study abroad becomes a hassle and source of confusion for many.

The topping on the cake?

Please note that there are many offices around campus who need to know for sure who is confirmed for study abroad and so our strict deadline is a result of being a team player at Brandeis

What day is today?

Inauguration Day!

Time Thursday, March 31, 2 to 3:30 p.m.
Location Gosman Sports and Convocation Center
Description The installation of Frederick M. Lawrence as the eighth president of Brandeis University. Reception immediately follows.

It’s going to be really exciting and official. Everyone should come (remember to pack your tickets) and dress up! If you can’t make it, livestream it. Perhaps we’ll even have some cool media to put up on this site at the end of the day.

Activist Movie of the Month- Crips and Bloods: Made in America

Wow. I just saw an amazing documentary that made me feel so ridiculously uncomfortable, antsy and hopeless throughout that I almost cried (and I don’t cry at movies).

Its title? Crips and Bloods: Made in America.

What it’s about? It tells the story of the formation of the Crips and the Bloods, two of the most infamous gangs in the United States. Both gangs are exclusively African American and located in Los Angeles. The movies traces the gangs’ history from its roots in slavery to the efforts being made to fight gang violence today.

Where’d I see it? Student Peace Alliance and Students Organized Against Racism co-sponsored the screening of the movie in Golding tonight and had a pretty decent turnout. Normally I don’t stay for talkbacks but I did this time and was very pleasantly surprised; rather than focusing on our own victimization stories or berating the sad state of America, a lot of the discussion was productive and solution-based. Although we’re mostly disillusioned college students, we were able to talk about the possibilities and hope the movie left us with.

What I’m taking away from it: The idea that one of the best ways to approach gang violence is to empower the communities in which it is occuring; instead of just dealing with the reprecussions (ie stronger law enforcement, counseling for PTSD), we can help people recognize the harms of gangs and give them the resources to make changes within their communities themselves.

Wanna get involved?: I am one of the Waltham Group Kids Connection coordinators and volunteers go to Teen Night every few Friday nights at the Waltham Y. The primary purpose of Teen Night is to keep teens off the streets (there is a rising number of gangs in Waltham) by giving them other arenas where they can feel connected, motivated and comfortable. However, often at the Y volunteers&staff end up supervising more than interacting with the teens. If anyone would like to brainstorm ideas as to how to connect WITH teens (who aren’t always the most responsive) and be role models while still being peers, it would be much appreciated.

This is just one small way in which we can help. For more information about the movie and ways to get involved check out the official movie site, http://cripsandbloodsmovie.com, and consider reading Gangleader for a Day, an amazing book about Chicago gangs from a sociology grad student’s perspective.

Organized Crime – Crips And Bloods: Black American Gangs In Los Angeles. This site is also helpful for background information on the bloods and the crips.

Fundraising & Grant Writing Workshop Series – April 5th and 7th

Interested in pursuing a job in the non-profit field, but unsure of what the different opportunities are?

The Office of Experiential and Community-Engaged Learning and the Department of Corporate and Foundation Relations have teamed up to offer two workshops next week focused on successful fundraising and grant writing, two of the most viable non-profit jobs on the market today.

These workshops were specifically designed to fit the interests of the Brandeis social justice focused undergraduate, and depending on student feedback and participation there is a strong possibility that a longer workshop series will be offered in the fall semester. So make sure to RSVP for one (or both!) sessions through Hiatt NACElink https://brandeisu-csm.symplicity.com/students.

Fundraising 101 | Tuesday, April 5th 5-6:30pm | Shapiro Campus Center Room 313
• Terminology and acronyms
• How to get started
• Where to look for grants
• Deciding where to apply
• Reviewing RFP’s (Requests for Proposals)

Successful Grant Writing | Thursday, April 7th 5-6:30pm | Shapiro Campus Center Room 313
• Overview of grant writing
• Writing a letter of inquiry
• Crafting a convincing proposal
• Group analysis/writing exercise

Young Rabbinic Leadership Tell Stories of Palestinian Solidarity- April 5

Young Rabbinic Leadership Tell Stories of Palestinian Solidarity
Tuesday, April 5, 6:00 PM
Mandel Center G03
Hosted by Jewish Voice for Peace

Do Judaism and Zionism necessarily align? Rabbi Joseph Berman and rabbinical students Alana Alpert and Ari Lev Fornari will share the connection between spirituality and activism in their own lives. Come learn how young Jews can work for justice in Israel and Palestine through Jewish traditions and values.

RSVP on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=163931960328034

If I am not for myself, who will be?
If I am only for myself, what am I?
If not now, when?

-Hillel the Elder, Avot 2:4

shuttle.brandeis.edu

Where’s the Shuttle? Live tracking now offered on Brandeis Shuttle Routes
Do you take the Brandeis Crystal Shuttles? Do you want to see where the shuttle is? Have a cell phone or a computer handy? Then Blirp-It!

Go to shuttle.brandeis.edu!

Brandeis is unveiling a new tracking service, called Blirp-It, that displays the location of Brandeis Crystal Shuttles. In real time, riders can find out where the Brandeis Crystal Shuttles are located on a route and how long it will be before arrival at a stop. Brandeis Crystal Shuttles include the Daytime Crystal Campus Shuttle, the Daytime Crystal Waltham Shuttle, and the weekend Boston/Cambridge Crystal Shuttle.

Blirp-It stands for Bus Line Information Program, and is a company based in Burlington, Vermont. The company currently serves other Universities, including the University of Vermont, Wesleyan University, and Bentley University.

There are many ways for Brandeis Community members to utilize Blirp-It. To access live tracking online- visit shuttle.brandeis.edu. When the shuttles are in operation, the online service provides a map of the route, a list of the stops, and a tracking system with exact location of the shuttles.
Simple text messaging can also provide shuttle information. Users can text DOTCOM (368266) with the words “Blirpit Brandeis” to see which shuttles are active. Replying to the text message with the name of the shuttle and the system will text back the list of major stops on the route, and the approximate time of arrival based on the history of the route.

“Tracking software is beneficial to the community,” said Director of Public Safety Edward Callahan, “It provides greater safety efficiency and convenience.” The bus tracking project was a collaboration between Public Safety, the Campus Sustainability Initiative, and the Department of University Services, with input from the Undergraduate Student Union.

Under the direction of the Director of Public Safety, the Escort Safety Service operates van services and contract bus services to provide safe and efficient transportation to the greater campus community. Live tracking is an important way to “increase customer service to students” remarked Dianne Qualter, Director of University Services.

Making public transportation more convenient and decreasing campus automobile use helps reduce the campus environmental impact, and is an important component of the Brandeis University Climate Action Plan. Sustainability Coordinator, Janna Cohen-Rosenthal ’03 explained the connection, “Sustainability is not just about giving things up. It’s also about making daily life, such as commuting, better and easier,” she said. 

Head Coordinator of Operations for the Department of Public Safety’s Escort Safety Service and Executive Senator for the Student Union, Abraham Berin ’11, has been working on the tracking software. “The tracking software is only as successful as the amount of people that use it.” said Berin. “With easy to use features, we are looking forward to many students benefiting from the program.”

Othello

Hold Thy Peace and the Brandeis Pluralism Alliance invite you to attend the tragedy of Othello! Brandeis University’s student-led Shakespeare group has re-imagined the classic play, making Othello the only human in a community of cyborgs. This new setting is inspired by steampunk, a science fiction genre based on Victorian visions of utopia.

The first show is in the Shapiro Campus Center Theater on Friday, March 31 at 7:00pm, followed by a talk-back with the actors and directors. We will discuss issues that surface when race, theatre, and science fiction collide.

Additional performances are on Friday, April 1 and Saturday, April 2 at 8:00 PM, followed by a Sunday, April 3 matinee at 2:00 PM.

Aramark Contributing to Brandeis Japan Earthquake Relief Efforts

Wow. So apparently the Student Union, Dining Services and the administration collaborated, and did something which benefits all of us. That’s awesome. Who would’ve thunk it?

So tomorrow is the Grand Opening of the Village POD (C-Store), at 7 am! And apparently 10% of sales “up to a cap” (what is the cap? why is a secret?) from everything purchased there tomorrow will go towards Brandeis Japan Earthquake Relief Efforts!

That’s awesome. Yay giving us an incentive to buy more! I like when capitalism works this way, because it helps people and makes you feel empowered as a consumer. We should all go out and buy, buy, buy.

For full text of e-mail from Daniel A. read below.

To the Student Body:

The Grand Opening for the Village POD is tomorrow (March 28)!

The Student Union, Dining Services, and the administration worked together to ensure the completion of this project.

Moreover, Aramark has committed to donate 10% of sales (up to a cap) from the first day to the Brandeis Japan Earthquake Relief Efforts. The POD will open at 7 AM. Make sure to check it out.

Enjoy it!

Daniel Acheampong, Student Union President
Mark Collins, Senior Vice President for Administration
Aaron Bennos, Dining Services

THE FIGHT FOR AN EDUCATION: Thursday, March 31, 6:30 PM

Jewish Voice for Peace presents: The Fight for an Education
When: Thursday, March 31, 6:30 PM
Where: Pearlman Lounge
Contact: jewishvoiceforpeace@brandeis.edu

Mira Dabit and Amer Shurrab, young activists from the West Bank, will share the challenges facing students who live under Israel’s military occupation, and their inspiring struggle to put an end to it by holding companies like TIAA-CREF accountable for investing in Occupation.

The fight for equality and accessibility in education is cen…tral to every struggle for a just and democratic society. That struggle continues today in Israel/Palestine, where Palestinian students and teachers trying to access education face unlawful detention, armed harassment, curfews, checkpoints, closed schools, dorm raids, apartheid wall, apartheid roads, illegal arrest, and bombed schools and universities.

So why is TIAA-CREF – the world’s premiere retirement fund for educators – invested in companies that create these barriers? Why is the retirement fund that claims to be “financial services for the greater good” profiting from the Israeli Occupation? Come meet Mira and Amer to find out!

PS: Only one more day to sign the petition for inclusion in Hillel…we are almost at our goal of 1000 signatures from current Brandeis students! Visit www.includejvp.org

Crips and Bloods

“Crips and Bloods: Made in America” Documentary Screening
When: Tuesday, March 29 at 7:30
Where: Golding Auditorium

How much do you know about the violence happening every day in our own country? And more importantly, what can be done about it? On Tuesday, March 29 at 7:30 Student Peace Alliance (SPA) will be screening “Crips and Bloods: Made in America” directed by Stacy Peralta. Combining unprecedented access into the worlds of active gangs, this 2008 documentary offers a compelling narrative which chronicles the decades-long cycle of destruction and despair that defines modern gang culture. Refreshments will be served and members of SPA and SOAR (Students Organized Against Racism) will facilitate discussion after the screening.

JVP’s Petition

Hello Innermost Parts!

As some of you may know, JVP is putting a campaign together to become accepted into Hillel’s umbrella group. Innermost Parts is not taking a stance on this debate. Please become informed before signing JVP’s petition.

Hillel’s national guidelines supports Israel, as is in their mission statement. Hillel recognizes JVP as a Jewish organization, welcomes their commentary to discussion, and respects them as a fellow organization at Brandeis. Hillel board member Erica said in an earlier post on Innermost Parts that she is “happy that Brandeis students have diverse venues to explore perspectives, ask questions, and develop thoughtful stances on the Middle East. Hillel’s decision does not change this important reality.”

She reflects that:

Hillel Board’s decision does not reflect our personal politics- it was procedural. Our vote, in line with national Hillel, simply means that Jewish Voice for Peace, as an organization, does not have a place in the organization Hillel at Brandeis. By turning down JVP we are not turning our back on JVP members. We are not attempting to exclude voices or stifle individual opinions and identities. It is my hope that those who are a part of JVP, or advocate its views, will continue to attend Hillel events and participate actively in our community. You are always welcome here. I look forward to continuing conversations at your events, and at our events.

Personally, as an activist, I have to wonder why JVP even wants to become associated with Hillel when their mission statements are so inherently different and they wish to accomplish different goals.

I have tried to arrange a meeting with a member of JVP who has not gotten back to me. I asked her, with no response, what JVP’s goals were and the reaction they were looking for from Hillel. What is JVP trying to accomplish with this campaign? In my personal opinion, this petition will not further JVP’s goals as an organization. For a group trying to bring “peace” they are certainly dividing the Jewish community at Brandeis.

Sign the Petition! ACT NOW to Open the Conversation: Tell Hillel to Accept Jewish Voice for Peace.

Sign the Petition! www.includejvp.org

Brandeis University Hillel has voted to exclude the campus chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace from becoming a member group. JVP advocates for a just resolution between Israelis and Palestinians, and is the only Jewish group on campus denied inclusion. Hillel based their decision on partisan political considerations: namely, JVP’s support for consumer boycott of illegal Israeli settlements goods. Hillel claims to be the pluralistic center of Jewish student life, yet this decision imposes an ideological litmus test for participation in campus Jewish life.

It is critical for the future of Israel that Jewish communal institutions foster the expression of different visions of how to implement peace with the Palestinians. Otherwise, an emerging movement of young Jews will be forced to choose between their values and a narrow, political interpretation of Judaism. If Hillel wishes to remain the true umbrella organization for the whole Jewish community, they must open the conversation about Israel.

Hold Hillel to its mission and tell them to include Jewish Voice for Peace:

Sign our Petition at www.includejvp.org

Thank you,

Brandeis Jewish Voice for Peace
jewishvoiceforpeace@brandeis.edu

About JVP:
Jewish Voice for Peace is the only national Jewish organization that provides a voice for Jews and allies who believe that peace in the Middle East will be achieved through justice and full equality for both Palestinians and Israelis. With 27 chapters, a Rabbinical Council, 100,000 online supporters and an advisory board composed of many of the leading Jewish thinkers and artists of our time, Jewish Voice for Peace is the country’s fastest growing grassroots group dedicated to promoting a US foreign policy that respects the rights of both Israelis and Palestinians to peace and self-determination. www.jvp.org

Community Art Forum

The lovely Cathy Messier wrote up a review of the Community Arts Forum! Enjoy!

On Thursday, March 3, members of the three schools of creative arts met for the Community Arts Forum in the Laurie Theater – the first event of its kind at Brandeis. The purpose of this forum was to establish shared goals and needs of the arts at Brandeis with each other and share them with the the administration, including our new president, Fred Lawrence. This is community of people who often only heard of needs of their own department and the forum provided a chance for the three schools to unite and establish a sense of solidarity with each other, in light of the recent budget cuts and other financial difficulties we all have had to face.

The event started with statements from the three chairs of the departments and the head of the Rose Arts Museum. All four statements were eloquently presented, displaying a love for their department while not hiding the sadness and disappointment surrounding the recent struggles faced. Scott Edmiston then asked the audience to voice any thoughts they were having, to which both students and faculty responded. Attendees were then divided into discussion groups, led by UDR’s, to establish the strengths, goals, and needs of the arts departments. Many of these discussions expressed a need for greater cohesion between both arts and non-arts communities, and within the different arts departments themselves. Another need expressed by several groups was regarding the lack of space for classes, and the lack of diversity when it came to course options.

After these discussions took place, Lawrence arrived and was interviewed by Julie Judson ’11. The interview questions varied immensely – some were asked to get to know him as an appreciator of arts, while others were on touchier issues, such as the Rose Arts Museum controversy. After the interview, members of the community were allowed to ask the president – or each other – questions, which also varied. Students and faculty presented ideas for how to build bridges between the arts/arts and arts/non-arts communities, such as holding arts events in Science and Math buildings. A student also expressed how valuable classes were when they brought people from different departments in and found a way to integrate seemingly different non-arts material into an arts class.

I would say the Arts Forum was a success, but that it is important to acknowledge it as a first step, rather than a culmination. Many people who attended this forum said they enjoyed connecting with people they normally do not interact with, and that the conversations that took place should have been happening already outside of our own departments. These discussions should continue happening afterwords, perhaps in a more structured way (since the needs and goals were so varied and numerous that they naturally almost seemed scattered).

The Lottery

Panic has seized the campus. Students are desperately seeking one another out, trying to make deals in order to determine their fates. What is the cause of this commotion?

The lottery.

Almost everyone agrees that the housing system at Brandeis is terrible. I would like to explore what I think is wrong with it, possible models we could implement from other schools in order to fix it and then open the floor up for feedback or other suggestions which would help the housing process run more smoothly. Of course if there were more dorms, more dorms with kitchens, and nicer dorms people would be much more positive about their housing options, but I’d rather focus on changes that can be implemented at little to no cost and do not take that much time; changes to the system.

1. Your lottery number is completely random
You could get a crappy number potentially all 3 years during which you have the ability to select your room at Brandeis. True, this randomization does not give people with higher GPA’s better lottery numbers say, as they do at the University of Mary Washington and Rowan University, which is a policy change I would not support, but it allows for some students to consistently receive bad numbers while others receive good ones.

Solution: Some schools have implemented systems in which if you get above a certain number one year then you are guaranteed to get below that number the following year. For instance, if you receive a “bad” number as a sophomore, you would get a “better” number as a junior, although irregularities such as studying abroad or availability would of course affect this system. Although this would make the process less “fair” i.e. less randomized, it would make it more fair in terms of everyone suffering equally, by receiving a mixed bag of the good and the bad numbers.

2. Your appointment time is randomly assigned, and you must go in person
Many students have class or other responsibilities they cannot get out of, preventing them from attending their appointment times. Instead, they must appoint proxies to advocate on their behalf, although choosing a room for someone else is very impractical and difficult. This applies to students who study abroad in the spring as well. In addition, because students use more time then they are allotted, there is usually a delay, during which students must wait outside until they are called in, making the appointments very inconvenient and unhelpful. Not to mention the added stress of having to go in person.

Solution: Tufts, Harvard University, Boston College and the University of California, Berkeley all use StarRez, an online site which facilitates student housing. Tufts switched over to StarRez this past fall. As TuftsDaily reported, one major benefit is that “students under the new lottery system will be able to access a customized view of available rooms based on their class year, the type of room they are looking for or the building they wish to live in.” StarRez worked with Tufts in order to craft a system which would work well with their housing opportunities for students, taking into account restrictions based on class year and limited housing. The Director of Tufts’ Office of Residential Life and Learning, Yolanda King, said of StarRez “They are well known in terms of other housing departments at other schools.” Another change that could be implemented even without the online system is the public posting of what dorms are still available on an hourly basis so that students know what their options are when they show up for their appointments. Taking the secrecy and unpredictability out of the process would definitely relieve stress for many participants.

3. The Department of Community Living website is confusing
This is something the Department of Community Living could definitely fix if given the proper student input and in possession of good technological skills. The language and wording of many of the policies are confusing, such as the range of options for students studying abroad in the fall and spring, and the website contains empty links or redirects you to incorrect locations.

Solution: Some school’s websites, such as George Washington University’s, contain itemized lists of housing with diagrams attached depicting what each individual room looks like and its dimensions. I have friends who mixed up the height and width of their Castle double when selecting their room assignment and were quite surprised when they first set foot in their room the following semester, which leads me to believe that pictures truly do help.

What other problems and possible solutions do YOU see?

Dating Violence Bill: Will you take action?

I got this e-mail from the Love is Not Abuse campaign, which works to prevent dating violence in teens. This is an important cause and one that hits close to home. As an intern at the MA Second Step, an organization which helps survivors of domestic abuse, I recognize the prevalence of dating violence, especially on college campuses. I think that this initiative is a great place to start in the fight against domestic violence. Read below and see what you think.

Below is a message from Bill & Michele Mitchell, our dedicated State Action Leaders for Maryland. They are parents to Kristin Mitchell, who graduated from Saint Joseph’s University and 3 weeks later lost her life to dating violence on June 3, 2005. The Mitchells have since worked tirelessly with Delegate Jill Carter, a National Foundation of Women Legislators (NFWL) representative, to pass a 2009 bill encouraging that lessons on teen dating abuse be implemented in schools. Currently, they are working to pass a stronger, more comprehensive law in the state of Maryland and they need your help with House Bill 386 – the Kristin Marie Mitchell Law!

What we’re asking will take a few minutes, but it could also save the life of someone you know. We need your support to help pass a Maryland law that would do a better job of putting teen dating violence education into classrooms.

This law would:
1. Adopt a program in the public schools to educate students about dating violence
2. Include education on services provided to victims of dating violence
3. Name this law “The Kristin Marie Mitchell Law”
4. Declare the first week of February as Tween / Teen Dating Violence Education and Awareness Week in Maryland

We need you to
1. WRITE INDIVIDUAL EMAILS to a list of delegates (below). You would be sending a total of 23 emails
2. The point of your email is you are: “In support of HB386, the Tween and Teen Dating Violence Education Law”
3. This would require you to write to EACH INDIVIDUAL delegate…
Copy and paste email addresses into EACH email…
Start each with the appropriate delegates name (taken from their emails)

Sample:
Dear Delegate (add delegate’s NAME),

I am in support of HB386, the Tween and Teen Dating Violence Education Law. I would like for you to vote in favor of this Bill.

I want Maryland schools to have the best available teaching for our young women and young men. This law will enable better ways of getting this life-saving information to our tweens and teens so they are knowledgeable about dating abuse, dating violence, and the resources available for help.

I personally know the Mitchell family and am aware that their daughter, Kristin, was completely unprepared to recognize the warning signs that caused her to lose her life due to dating violence. Please help by voting in favor of HB386, the Tween and Teen Dating Violence Education Law.

Respectfully,

(YOUR NAME)

Here is the list of delegates…
sheila.hixson.annapolis@house.state.md.us
samuel.rosenberg@house.state.md.us
kathy.afzali@house.state.md.us
kumar.barve@house.state.md.us
joseph.boteler@house.state.md.us
talmadge.branch@house.state.md.us
jon.cardin@house.state.md.us
mark.fisher@house.state.md.us
bill.frick@house.state.md.us
ron.george@house.state.md.us
glen.glass@house.state.md.us
carolyn.howard@house.state.md.us
jolene.ivey@house.state.md.us
anne.kaiser@house.state.md.us
eric.luedtke@house.state.md.us
aruna.miller@house.state.md.us
leroy.myers@house.state.md.us
justin.ross@house.state.md.us
andrew.serafini@house.state.md.us
melvin.stukes@house.state.md.us
michael.summers@house.state.md.us
frank.turner@house.state.md.us
jay.walker@house.state.md.us

I know it asks a lot, but if you have a moment, make some e-mails, or pass it along to a friend?

Student Union Takes It Downstairs to the People

So, as announced in the Student Union e-mail earlier this week, the Student Union set up a table downstairs in the Atrium today to interact with students- directly! And what were students encouraged to talk about? Housing! (I’ll be posting my own reflections on housing tomorrow)

Senators, website designers and a secretary or two were there for students to talk with, a video camera was present to document their concerns and laptops were available for them to fill out complaint forms online.

The Student Union will be conducting a Feedback Assessment on University Housing tomorrow (Tuesday, March 15), with regards to the selection process and availability options on campus.

This Assessment is completely voluntary, and Union Representatives will have a table set-up in the Shapiro Campus Center Atrium from 4pm to 8pm. Please feel free to stop by and let us know your thoughts and concerns with Housing.

We will have an option for your opinion to be videotaped and sent to the Administration. We will also have laptops out for you to record your thoughts and concerns. If you are unable to pass by, but still want your voice heard – utilize the Complaint Section of our Student Union Site: http://brandeisstudentunion.org/complaints!

The material will all be forwarded to the administration, in the most grassroots-y project the Student Union has put on in a while. I think this is a wonderful thing and was really happy to see representatives taking the time to man the booth and answer students’ and others’ questions. Nice job, StudUn! Keep up the good work!

The next question is, of course, whether or not this will lead to any Housing policy reform (which is greatly needed), and if the Student Union will make similar efforts to hear the voice of its constituents on other topics (say…dining?). Hope they do!

Check Your Mailboxes: Today’s the Day

So our ally the Justice League has been doing a lot of promotion the past few weeks, and it’s all led up to this moment.

The big reveal: Justice League Fix It Campaign: Official Ballot.

You will all be receiving ballots in your student mailboxes today right about now, and there will be loudly obnoxious boxes conveniently located nearby for you to deposit them in. There’s an online picture of the ballot above, and we will be working on sending out a poll which you can fill out online as well. This is my interpretation of the three issues the ballot asks you to vote on:

1. Point-dollar parity. In short, it varies for each meal plan, but Aramark charges Brandeis students on average $1.40 per point you buy on your meal plan. That means that besides the inflated prices of food here, you are literally paying more than you would were you to pay with cash, when using a meal plan. And we are REQUIRED to buy meal plans for most on-campus housing. So, what we are asking for here is for a more fair and equal exchange between a dollar and a point.

2. Transparency in our dining services providers. Each year Aramark’s contract with the school is renewed automatically, meaning that Aramark has little incentive to change the quality or variety of food they offer us, or change their meal plans. Rather than advocating for the removal of Aramark, what we would like is for Brandeis to consider other food providers’ offers so that Aramark has a reason to try to be the best it can, and we can choose which company would be the best fit for our school. The first step to negotiating better terms is to at least consider the competition.

3. Many of our university committees have little to no student representation. The past few have had Student Union representatives, but sometimes these students do not have voting power within the committees, and they are always vastly outnumbered by administrators, faculty and trustees. We would like more student representation, by requiring that each committee has at least two student representatives, each of whom have voting power within the committee. In addition, rather than having the administrators choose which students should serve on committees, why not have students decide who we want to represent us (as we do in most other manners)?

So, what do you think? The plan is to collect as many ballots as we can over the next 1-2 weeks, tally the results and then hand deliver them to President Lawrence. So, if you want your voice heard, fill out a ballot and turn it in! Even better, if you want to get involved, sign up here for the Justice League’s official listserv and tell us why you care.

More updates will follow. For more information check out the facebook page.

Japan

Good Morning Brandeis,

As many of you heard, Japan was hit by a 8.9 magnitude earthquake and tsunami.
This is the most devastating earthquake that has ever hit Japan and one of the largest in the past 100 years.

I have spoken to many of my friends in Japan via facebook, and while there is a lot of damage in the northern part of the country, Tokyo is relatively unharmed. Most of my friends have lost electricity and have no heat or utilities, but they are all alive. Many are still feeling aftershocks which are shaking their homes and buildings, but have experienced little damage.

There is a relief fund sponsored by Global Giving for emergency relief. Please give to help those in need!

A Hillel Board Member’s Perspective

As I am sure most people know by now, this week the Brandeis Chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) applied to be a member group of Hillel at Brandeis. After careful and thoughtful deliberation we are not able to recognize JVP at this time.

Here is my take on this:

Unlike many people, when I chose to attend Brandeis I was excited for dynamic, and sometimes overwhelming, dialogue regarding the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. I have always been passionate about studying the Middle East, but had no outlet to thoughtfully discuss my opinions with my peers. Although such dialogue is not always easy, I am happy that Brandeis students have diverse venues to explore perspectives, ask questions, and develop thoughtful stances on the Middle East.

Hillel’s decision does not change this important reality.
I became active in Hillel because I love and firmly believe in pluralistic Judaism. I took a leadership position in Hillel because I personally support everything the organization stands for, including our commitment to Israel as a Jewish and Democratic State. My greatest desire is to see vibrant and independent Israeli and Palestinian states peacefully thriving.

Hillel Board’s decision does not reflect our personal politics- it was procedural.
Our vote, in line with national Hillel, simply means that Jewish Voice for Peace, as an organization, does not have a place in the organization Hillel at Brandeis. By turning down JVP we are not turning our back on JVP members. We are not attempting to exclude voices or stifle individual opinions and identities. It is my hope that those who are a part of JVP, or advocate its views, will continue to attend Hillel events and participate actively in our community. You are always welcome here. I look forward to continuing conversations at your events, and at our events. In the future, we may find venues for future collaboration as well.

Although the current debate on campus may be challenging, I think it is important and a positive reflection of our campus culture. Over the last few days, I have participated in intense conversations, built relationships, and asked important questions. I am proud that we are behaving respectfully, honestly and learning from one another. Regardless of your opinion on the outcome, I hope you view this as a learning experience, testament to our character, and can remember the process – not just the result.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Hillel at Brandeis’ official statement:
At this time Hillel at Brandeis is unable to recognize the Brandeis Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) as a member group. JVP promotes boycotts against the State of Israel and its positions are not consistent with Hillel’s position on Israel as defined by the International Hillel guidelines; “Hillel is pro-Israel; steadfastly committed to the support of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state with secure and recognized borders as a member of the family of nations”.

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

The letter we sent to JVP:

Thank you so much for coming to meet with Hillel board last night. Unfortunately, we will not be able to accept Jewish Voice for Peace as a member group of Hillel at Brandeis.

We as a board stand strong in support and agreement with the International Hillel organization, with which we are affiliated. While you noted that Judaism is an ever moving movement, as an organization, Hillel aims to support Israel to the best of our abilities. Our policy, consistent with our international guidelines, states that “Hillel is pro-Israel; steadfastly committed to the support of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state with secure and recognized borders as a member of the family of nations”. While, based on your presentation, we understand that JVP at Brandeis considers itself a pro Israel club, based on positions and programming JVP has sponsored, we do not believe that JVP can be included under Hillel’s umbrella.

One example, as we discussed last night, is that JVP supports a boycott of settlement goods. Hillel’s position is to oppose groups that “support boycott of, divestment from, or sanctions against the State of Israel”. While we see it as the right of JVP to support such a boycott, we as an organization do not. While last night you mentioned that you do not feel bound by any of National JVPs political statements, we, as an affiliate of International Hillel, feel we are in accord with its policies and positions. While your relationship with the national JVP may not mirror our own, we do consider your association with the national JVP to reflect an orientation regarding Israel which is not consistent with Hillel’s guidelines.

You noted that Hillel should be a home to all Jewish students and not a litmus test for Zionism. While we understand this point of view, and we hope to be a home to all Jewish students at Brandeis, we do not think that politics is the only way to define home. We are a home in many ways, but politically we stand behind Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. That being said, we at Hillel, “welcome a diversity of student perspectives on Israel and strive to create an inclusive, pluralistic community where students can discuss in a civil manner matters of interest and/or concern about Israel and the Jewish people […] and we encourage students’ inquiry as they explore their relationship with Israel”.

We understand that Hillel, as a pro-Israel organization, may not serve the needs of all Brandeis students. We support the rights of students to organize groups to meet their needs for expression and believe that Brandeis needs to be an open environment for varieties of political viewpoints and expression. So, while we cannot include JVP under Hillel’s umbrella, we fully support your rights to speak openly about your positions and concerns with respect to Israel and we will defend those rights despite our differences in outlook.

Thank you again,
Andrea Wexler and the 2010-2011 Hillel student executive board

Here is the press release from JVP

Brandeis Hillel Excludes Jewish Peace Group

The Latest Failure of the American Jewish Establishment

WALTHAM, MA — The Brandeis University Hillel has formally voted to exclude a Jewish peace group on campus.

On March 8, 2011, Brandeis University Hillel rejected the campus chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) from becoming a Hillel member group. In line with controversial guidelines recently issued by National Hillel, the decision was based on JVP’s support for targetted boycotts of goods produced in Israeli settlements.

In response to the decision, Brandeis senior and JVP activist Jon Sussman stated “Brandeis students have lost an opportunity to learn from one another. Jewish students must demand the national Hillel organization change its condescending guidelines which marginalize progressive Jewish opinion on campus.”

Hillel is the center of Jewish life on-campus , and its constitution affirms “the necessity of a pluralistic Jewish community on campus, with partisanship to none.” Regardless of this affirmation, Hillel’s new guidelines exclude Jewish groups on the basis of political opinions.

These guidelines are representative of a trend in the Jewish community to prevent open dialogue on Israel. The Israeli Knesset, for example, is currently hearing legislation to criminalize support of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement. “Jewish Voice for Peace opposes any ideological litmus test to participate in organized Jewish life,” Sussman said.

Brandeis sophomore and JVP activist Morgan Conley added that Hillel’s ban confuses the settlements with the state of Israel. Israel’s settlements in the West Bank are illegal under international law. “We were rejected on the grounds that boycotting settlement goods is the same thing as boycotting Israel. The reality, however, is that the settlements are not in Israel – they are in the Occupied Palestinian territories. By blurring the line between the state of Israel and the occupied territories, Hillel is unfortunately appearing to support a Jewish state at the expense of a democratic one.” Conley remarked.

Support for targeted boycott is an increasingly mainstream position within the Jewish community, shared by national organizations such as Meretz USA. Leading Jewish artists including Stephen Sondheim, Tony Kushner, Frank Gehry and Amos Oz have defended several of Israel’s best-known actors who are boycotting performances in the settlement of Ariel.

“Hillel needs to give groups like Jewish Voice for Peace a place at the Jewish communal table,” Sussman insisted. “If not, Hillel will alienate a generation of young Jews committed to our values of peace, justice and self-determination.”

ABOUT JEWISH VOICE FOR PEACE

Jewish Voice for Peace is the only national Jewish organization that provides a voice for Jews and allies who believe that peace in the Middle East will be achieved through justice and full equality for both Palestinians and Israelis. With 27 chapters, a Rabbinical Council, 100,000 online supporters and an advisory board composed of many of the leading Jewish thinkers and artists of our time, Jewish Voice for Peace is the country’s fastest growing grassroots group dedicated to promoting a US foreign policy that respects the rights of both Israelis and Palestinians to peace and self-determination. www.jvp.org

Hillel Board rejects JVP

Jewish Voice for Peace is a recognized, but not chartered group on campus. Last Monday they applied to formally join the umbrella of all Jewish groups on campus – Hillel. The Hillel student board, in consultation with the adults in charge, voted to reject them.

This is gaining some national press:
New Voices

Mondoweiss

Magnes Zionist blog

You can read their application and rejection letters here.

This might turn into a bigger story, it might not.

I gotta write an essay for class. More info soon? What is your take on the whole deal?

Dear Green Activists on Campus

You might want to apply to this good award:

12th Annual Brower Youth Awards
Overview & Eligibility

What: The Brower Youth Awards is an annual national award recognizing six young people for outstanding activism and achievements on a project or campaign with positive environmental and social impact. The Brower Youth Awards gives its recipients access to other resources and opportunities to further the recipients’ environmental leadership work including a cash prize and a trip to San Francisco.

Who: Young activist leaders ages 13 to 22 (as of July 1, 2011) living in North America.

When: Completed applications must be submitted online by May 16, 2011 9:00 p.m. Pacific time.

Good luck!

History of International Women’s Day

From the EDM, Education for Development, website, a brief history of the roots of International Women’s Day!

One hundred years ago, the women of the world were burdened with oppression. And one hundred years ago, they found the value of talking to each other, organizing themselves, and fighting for their rights. Then, a National Women’s Day was born in the United States, a first step towards women realizing their potential as powerful citizens of their nations and of the world. The day was February 28 1909. The now defunct Socialist Party of America was in celebration. The context, a time of turbulence and change, of ideological battles and injustice.

It would only take another year, at the International Socialist Women’s Conference in Copenhagen, when Clara Zetkin, leader of the Women’s Office of the Socialist Democratic Party of Germany, proposed the idea of an International Women’s Day. Zetkin asserted the need for a day that could be commemorated worldwide when women can collectively insist on their needs and demands.

Over 100 women from 17 countries would unanimously agree to establish an International Women’s Day (IWD) for the rest of the world. Then, it would begin to be celebrated on the third Sunday of February every year, until it is moved to March 8 in 1913. The decision to celebrate an International Women’s Day was an obvious response to the growing inequality women were experiencing in politics and the workplace – in all of their lives – across the globe. It would also serve as a celebration of the women’s movements’ fight for suffrage.

International Women’s Day

It’s the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day and a bunch of events are happening around campus!

Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance Sponsors Feminist Coming Out Day

Tuesday March 8th from 7-8 in the Women’s Rresource Center, 3rd floor of the SCC.
What does it mean to be a feminist?
FEMINISM is the logical response to sexism; it exists because sexism exists. FEMINISM is “the radical notion that women are people.”-National Organization for Women’s website, http://www.now.org/history/debate.html
We’re feminists. We’re proud of it. And we’re coming out of the closet to show it.
As part of a national effort to encourage people to embrace their feminist roots we are throwing a feminist coming out day celebration and you’re all invited.
More info on the national campaign: http://feministcomingoutday.com/
Please look around campus for our fliers, and share any feminist quotes or definitions you have!

Russian Club sponsors Student Talent Show!

Tuesday, March 8 · 6:30pm – 9:30pm
Rapaporte Treasure Hall, Goldfarb Library
RUSSIAN CULTURE WEEK!!
Come join us as we celebrate with Russia and women everywhere on March 8th, International Women’s Day. International Women’s Day is a global holiday celebrating the economic, political, and social achievements of women past, present, and future. In Russia, International Women’s Day is a national holiday where women, married, single, with children, or without receive flowers and appreciation from the men in their lives.
In celebration of the event, the Brandeis Russian Club and friends will be featuring its many talents in a student run talent show. Come watch as we sing, dance, and celebrate women everywhere.
FESTIVE RUSSIAN FOOD AND DESERTS WILL BE SERVED AND FLOWERS WILL BE GIVEN OUT TO EVERY WOMAN IN ATTENDANCE!!
FREE AND OPEN TO PUBLIC!!
Contact Name: Lev Gorfinkel, Contact Email: levig321@aol.com

Tomorrow: Positive Foundations and Girl Effect International Women’s Day Dinner

Join Positive Foundations and Girl Effect for a semi-formal dinner party to celebrate the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day on March 9 from 8-11 PM in Sherman Function Hall. There will be off-campus food from all your favorite restaurants in Waltham!!! International Women’s Day is a special day to celebrate the political and economic achievements of women, as well as to shed light on the challenges that women all over the world are currently facing. Speaker Scott Seibold, a prominent advocate for health in East Africa from The Global Poverty Project, will present an inspiring multimedia presentation called “1.4 Billion Reasons” to educate us all about the causes of poverty, the challenges that women in developing countries face, and the simple changes we can all make to help. All proceeds will go toward Dr. Hawa Abdi’s hospital and refugee camp in Somalia. You’ll be helping to provide lifesaving medical and nutritional treatment for women and children, and support literacy and leadership training at the camp’s Women’s Education Center. Tickets are $5 and will be sold in Shapiro and Usdan all week from February 28th until March 8th. Contact Aditya Sanyal: sanyal10@brandeis.edu

United Auto Workers (UAW)

Here is a fantastic job offer from Sarah Bayer!

Many of you have no doubt been following coverage of the crisis in
Wisconsin. As Paul Adler wrote here recently, the labor movement is at
a critical point in its history. With workers under attack in
statehouses and corporate boardrooms across the country, the United
Auto Workers union is getting ready to launch new organizing
campaigns, and is looking for researchers to support these efforts.
We’ll be recruiting at Brandeis this Thursday, March 10, at the job
fair in Hassenfeld.

I became a researcher at the UAW last fall and can personally speak to
what a great opportunity this is. I work on a team with other
researchers as well as staff from other departments to gain a better
understanding of particular companies and the auto industry as a
whole. The work fits a number of backgrounds, whether you majored in
English (like me) or econ.

The official job description is below. Feel free to email me with any
questions: sarahbayer314@gmail.com.

I look forward to seeing you on campus on Thursday!

The United Auto Workers (UAW) union is seeking a full-time researcher
to work on national organizing campaigns within the Strategic Research
department in Detroit, Michigan.

Campaign researchers are part of a team that includes organizers,
communications specialists and political advocates. A researcher
contributes to the team by understanding companies and industries in
which they operate; helping to develop a public message that
encourages broad support for workers’ fight to organize a union; and
using legal, regulatory and legislative strategies to help build power
for working people.

Ideal applicants will have:
• Strong commitment to social and economic justice, especially
in labor issues
• Strong analytical, writing and communication skills
• Strong attention to detail and prior research experience in
academic, community, journalistic or political settings
• Good computer skills, including experience with databases and
spreadsheets
• Proficiency in another language (a plus, but not required)
• Willingness to travel and work long and irregular hours

Competitive pay and benefits. Women and people of color are strongly
encouraged to apply.

WBC Protests Protected Under First Amendment, Supreme Court Rules

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court ruled 8 to 1 that protesting at funerals is protected under the First Amendment. The case made its way to the SC after Albert Snyder sued the Westboro Baptists Church (WBC) for defamation, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, as a result of their picketing at his son’s, Corporal Matthew Snyder, funeral in March 2006. The WBC is known to oppose Catholics, people who serve in the military, Americans in general and many more groups. A federal jury found the WBC liable for invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress, awarding Snyder’s family a total of $10,900,000 in 2007.

However, the WBC appealed the case to the Supreme Court and was granted cert. As Wikipedia reports,

“Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, joined by 42 other Senators, filed an amicus brief in support of Snyder with the Supreme Court, and shortly after Kansas Attorney General Stephen Six filed a separate brief supporting Snyder. This brief was joined by the Attorneys General of 47 other states and the District of Columbia, with Maine and Virginia being the two abstaining states.”

In an unpopular decision, the Supreme Court found in favor of the WBC, overturning the money awarded to them by the federal jury and protecting their right to protest at future funerals. As the New York Times reported,Chief Justice John G. Roberts wrote for the majority,

“Speech is powerful. It can stir people to action, move them to tears of both joy and sorrow, and — as it did here — inflict great pain.” But under the First Amendment, he went on, “we cannot react to that pain by punishing the speaker.” Instead, the national commitment to free speech, he said, requires protection of “even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate.” […]All of that means, the chief justice wrote, that the protesters’ speech “cannot be restricted simply because it is upsetting or arouses contempt.”

Arts Forum

So the first ever Brandeis Arts Forum took place today from 3-5 pm.

I know many of us over here at Innermost were unable to attend but I’ve heard that about 70 people DID attend, including several administrators and of course President Lawrence.

We are in communication with the Office of the Arts and will be posting information as it filters through to us, but do any of our loyal readers who were able to attend want to post feedback, summaries, or their opinion of the concept behind the event itself?

I think it’s a great initiative on behalf of the Office of the Arts, the arts community, and everyone involved with making it happen. I’m also happy that President Lawrence attended, an indication that he is able and willing to hear student input.

Melody Barnes at Brandeis!

Who: Melody Barnes, Domestic Policy Adviser to the President
What: Speaking at Brandeis
When: March 23rd
Where: Levin Ballroom
Time: 7pm

Please join us for the Eli J. Segal Citizen Leadership Lecture at Brandeis University on Wednesday, March 23 at 7 p.m. in Levin Ballroom, where Melody Barnes, Domestic Policy Adviser to President Obama, will speak about civic leadership and public service before answering questions from the audience. Ms. Barnes has spent her career in public service, from her time as Chief Counsel to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy to her work in the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Seating is limited, so please RSVP by March 16 to Segal.Brandeis.edu.

This lecture is part of the Eli J. Segal Citizen Leadership Program, a foundation created in honor of the late Eli J. Segal. Segal, a graduate of Brandeis in 1964, served as a top aide to President Clinton during his campaign and in his administration, where he dedicated his life to programs like AmeriCorps and the Welfare to Work Partnership.

Libyan Heros

Hey Brandeis! Do you want to protect heros? Defend brave men who saved the lives of hundreds of Libyans?

The cruel Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi ordered two air force pilots to drop bombs on their own countrymen protesting Gaddafi’s reign! It is a case of kill or be killed!

The pilots rose to the challenge and crashed their planes into Malta, a nearby island. They saved the lives of an unknown number of protestors!
However, Malta’s Refugee Commissioner Mario Guido Friggieri and President George Abela may not grant the heros asylum. Chang.org is hosting a petition.

Sign it here!

Here is an excerpt from the press release from Change.org:

If the pilots are sent back to Libya, they will likely be executed. That outcome would also prevent military pilots and ship captains who receive similar orders from trying to save their own lives and the lives of their fellow Libyans.

A grassroots Libyan group called ENOUGH! has started a petition on Change.org to pressure the Maltese government to grant asylum to these two pilots, which will mean saving their lives and possibly preventing future attacks on civilians.

Tell Malta’s government to grant asylum to the Libyan pilots who risked their own lives to save the lives of strangers!

We believe we can win this campaign and save the lives of these two pilots –– and perhaps many other Libyans if this helps to encourage more pilots and ship captains to refuse to attack civilians. If we succeed, we’ll work to spread the word in Libya that no one needs to die when soldiers are ordered to kill civilians.

Malta’s economy is heavily dependent on tourism, so public international opinion will mean more to its government than it does to most countries. But winning will take a massive outcry — and with Gaddafi’s violent attacks increasing in a desperate attempt to maintain power, every hour matters.
Please sign the petition now
Thank you for taking action,

– Weldon and the Change.org team

Smoking Typewriters

Hello Brandeis! I hope you all had a fabulous break, with time to rest and recuperate.

I encourage everyone to come to a great event this Thursday!

Smoking Typewriters

March 3, 2011

Pearlman Lounge

6-7pm

Meet historian John McMillian on Thursday, March 3, at 6p.m. in Pearlman Lounge. McMillian will give a reading from “Smoking Typewriters,” followed by Q&A. Books will be available for purchase and signing.

How did the New Left uprising of the 1960s happen? What caused millions of young people–many of them affluent and college educated–to suddenly decide that American society needed to be completely overhauled? (And what exactly was the Great Banana Hoax?)

In Smoking Typewriters, historian John McMillian shows that one answer to these questions can be found in the emergence of a dynamic underground press in the 1960s. Many of those who produced these often subversive pamphlets, booklets, and newspapers became targets of harassment from local and federal authorities.

Underground newspapers captured the zeitgeist of the ’60s, speaking directly to their readers. They reflected and magnified the spirit of cultural and political protest. And without the underground press, would we have today’s zines, blogs, and citizen journalists?

“Much of what we associate with the late 1960s youthquake — its size, intensity, and contrapuntal expression of furious anger and joyful bliss — might not have been possible without the advent of new printing technologies that put the cost of newspaper production within reach of most activists.” – John McMillian, “Smoking Typewriters”

“Seen with fresh eyes by a talented young scholar, Smoking Typewriters tells an important–and entertaining–story about modern American culture and its endless upheavals.” –Richard Parker, Paul W. Williams Professor of Criminal Justice, Harvard University.

John McMillian is an assistant professor of history at Georgia State University in Atlanta, Georgia, where he specializes in studying 20th century social movements and the Vietnam War Era.

LGBTQA Developments

An update of LGBTQA rights legislation in America, thanks in part to Trisk’s Political Outreach listserv

Maryland: The State Senate approved a same sex-marriage bill, which will likely soon be signed into law by the governor. According to the Huffington Post, the Senate’s only openly-gay member, Democrat Richard Madaleno, said during the debate “This bill is quite simple, it has two parts to it: It reiterates that no religious denomination will ever be required to recognize, perform or celebrate any marriage that is against its beliefs. At the same time, it provides full equality under the law for thousands of same-gender couples in our state, couples like Mark and myself.”

Montana: State Rep Kris Hansen’s bill to invalidate any local anti-discrimination ordinance that protects a class not included in the state’s anti-discrimination bill (read: LGBTs) has passed the House, sending it to the Senate. If passed, an initiative approved in Missoula that added “actual or perceived” sexual orientation and gender identity to protected classes in employment and housing would be struck down.

Hawaii: Gov. Neil Abercrombie signed the civil unions bill into law!

Kentucky: a bill providing more protections to gay bullying victims is headed to the full House for a vote.

On the federal level, the Huffington Post reported that “In a major policy reversal, the Obama administration said Wednesday it will no longer defend the constitutionality of a federal law banning recognition of same-sex marriage.” That means that the Defense Against Marriage Act will no longer have the backing of the federal government, since the government is basically saying marriage should be decided on a state by state basis (the way it always has been).

There is a lot changing every day in the national fight for LGBTQA rights. It;s exciting. Check here for more, and stay up to date!

Why Those Who Care For Justice, Must Care About Unions

This is a guest post from Paul Adler. Paul graduated Brandeis in ’04 and is now a PhD student at Georgetown studying history. He’s a really smart and friendly guy.

First of all, thank you to Sahar for inviting me to comment here, a real honor.

The above is a photo from the March on Washington on August 28, 1963 – the event which brought us that great American oration, Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream Speech.” Images such as this have become iconic representations not only of the civil rights movement, but of the American story of progress. Yet, if you look carefully at the signs, you will notice a crucial aspect to this story that does not appear in popular remembrances. Notice how a number of them start with “UAW Says” or “IUE Says”? Those are union signs, held most likely by union members. It was organized labor that paid for many of the key logistics for that day, including the United Auto Workers’ donation of $19,000 for the sound system. The microphones that gave the world a dream, came union made.

Organized labor, even in the much weakened form it appears in today, is a vast institution with millions of members. Labor is a complex institution, one which must both represent its members and all the baggage they bring from living in a society plagued with inequities of all sorts, while also fighting to transform that world. Unions can be overly bureaucratic, unresponsive to their members, concerned with parochial deals for their members over the common good and many other institutional vices. Furthermore, labor has seen its fair share of corruption and unions have helped to continue racial and gender disparities.

Yet, for all its many faults, I am hard pressed to think of an institution that has done more to uplift more types of people in the U.S., both socially and economically, than unions. Labor has been a force seeking to remake American society by wiping out inequalities. Union struggles helped build support for so many of the social programs we take for granted, from unemployment insurance to Medicare. The battles waged by unions made jobs (such as working in a factory), which had previously been dangerous, underpaid, and lacking respect in society into the foundations of economically secure families and a society in which, at the height of union power, inequality began to shrink. To be less abstract, as the slogan goes, unions gave us the weekend.

The example of the March on Washington points to something else. Labor, at its best, has been a force for social good far beyond wages and benefits. On the more progressive and often radical end of labor, union members and leaders have seen their struggle as one for liberation from all manner of social injustices. Unions played a major role not just in the March in 1963, but throughout the civil rights struggle providing finance and bodies. This included work by black trade unionists, such as A. Philip Randolph, a great civil rights hero (the March on Washington was his idea), and also a giant among labor organizers. Labor provided an important home for women’s struggles by empowering female workers through strikes and other activities and by providing an institutional base for the feminist movement in the decades between the gaining of suffrage and the 1960s movement. Before the emergence of the environmental movement in the U.S. in the late 1960s, unions weighed in to help pass legislation such as the Clean Air Act. Union radicals, such as those in the IWW, have contributed vitally to political democracy as well. In fact, one of the most First Amendment cases in U.S. history, Whitney vs. California, concerned Anita Whitney, a member of the radical Industrial Workers of the World, who was arrested under a state law for making pro-labor speeches. While her conviction was upheld, Justice Louis Brandeis’ concurring opinion articulated a defense of free speech that has become a standard-bearer in these debates.

Today, organized labor is facing an existential threat in the U.S., as conservative move from chipping away at its power to attempting to eliminate unions entirely. I believe this is a fight that all those who care about justice must embrace. They may not be perfect, but without them, in so many ways, we will be a poorer society and nation.