The Justice, September 17, 2019

Page 1

the

Justice www.thejustice.org

The Independent Student Newspaper Volume LXXII, Number 3

of

B r a n d e is U n i v e r sit y S i n c e 1 9 4 9

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Waltham, Mass.

COMMUNITY

STUDENT UNION FALL ELECTION RESULTS

Campus activists prepare for upcoming climate strike ■ Several Brandeis

students, faculty and organizations are planning to participate in Friday's climate strike. By ARI ALBERTSON JUSTICE CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Brandeis students will join millions of other activists in walking out of classrooms and workplaces on Friday as part of the Global Climate Strike, an international call for climate justice. Attendees will include members of Brandeis Climate Justice, a coalition dedicated to pressuring the University administration to divest from fossil fuel stocks, as well as promoting climate education and activism, including direct action like the strike. The strike is part of a growing movement for “a rapid energy revolution,” according to Global Climate Strike’s website, and will take place on Sept. 20, three days before the United Nations emergency climate summit in New York, followed by a second strike on Sept. 27. In a Sept. 13 interview with the Justice, BCJ member Jessica Kin-

Photo Illustration by NOAH ZEITLIN/the Justice

sley ’20 defined climate justice as “tackling the systemic causes of climate change in a just and sustainable way” that is mindful of the indigenous and marginalized communities who “bear the largest burden in the climate crisis despite contributing the least to climate change.” According to a report released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a scientific body of the United Nations, disadvantaged groups are disproportionately affected by climate change, and that limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius “could reduce the number of people both exposed to climate-related risks and susceptible to poverty by up to several hundred million by 2050.” In more than three thousand counties, however, temperatures have already increased by 2 degrees Celsius, including seventy-one counties in the United States, according to an analysis by the Washington Post. As with most direct action, getting attention and disrupting business as usual are some of the most immediate goals. The expected media attention surrounding the strike could help raise awareness for divestment “as a method of in-

See CLIMATE MARCH, 7 ☛

SKEWED VOTER TURNOUT: The Class of 2023 had the highest participation in the election, while the Class of 2022 had the lowest.

Student Union election results bring in 17 new members ■ Of this election's 30

candidates, 17 prevailed. Their plans for their tenures in office follow. By EMILY BLUMENTHAL and JACKIE TOKAYER JUSTICE EDITOR AND JUSTICE CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Seventeen Student Union positions were filled on the Senate and Allocations Board in the first round of Union elections this academic year, which took place this Wednesday. Five hundred seven people voted in the election, with 290 votes, or 57.2 percent, coming from the firstyear class. The class of 2022 had the lowest turnout, with just 12.03% of the class participating. Janice Huang and Skye Liu were elected as senators of the class of 2023. As newcomers to both the Union and the University, the newly-elected senators emphasized their abilities to convey the concerns of the first-year class to the Senate and to fight for their constituents, according to their candidate biographies.

Most of the newly elected senators declared that their top priorities would include improvements in facilities and strengthening community among their constituents. The senator for North Quad, Krupa Sourirajan ’23, said she would address water pressure and shelving space in showers, and will add more social spaces in the quad with the addition of hammocks, according to her candidate biography. East Quad Senator Priyata Bhatta ’22 said she will focus on the frequent bug infestations in the residence halls, and Ziv and Ridgewood Quad Senator Sagar Punjabi ’21 will look into the lighting in Ziv common rooms and the number of laundry machines in the quads, per their candidate biographies. Like Sourirajan and the Class of 2023 Senators, Senator for OffCampus Students Alison Leibowitz ’20 said she will address the issue of community — specifically the loneliness often faced by off-campus students. "I want to help people like me who wish that there was more connection," she told the Justice in a Sept. 9 interview. Myra Kraft Transitional Year Program Senator Erik Lambrecht ’23 said he plans to bridge the gap

BRIEF University announces new curriculum requirements for future students Students entering the University starting in Fall 2019 will be required to take courses in line with the Brandeis Core, the University’s newly designed educational curriculum. The Brandeis Core was designed to showcase the University’s “academic rigor, robust debate, diversity and justice,” according to the Brandeis Core Website. Under the new curriculum, students will engage in dialogues surrounding social justice, diversity, equity and inclusion in the United States as well as Difference and Justice in the World, which replaces the non-Western requirement, allowing them to explore themes of social consciousness, inclusivity and cultural competence in an academic setting, according to the Brandeis Core website. In addition, the new Core requirements are aimed to equip students with a critical yet receptive mindset through both coursework and Critical Conversations surrounding the topics, encouraging students to approach truth

between Transitional Year Program students and the greater student body. He will strive to make sure TYP students’ “voices are heard amongst the rest of the Brandeis community,” he said in his candidate biography. Joyce Huang ’22 ran uncontested for the Racial Minority senator seat. She said she plans to initiate an online anonymous confession box in which students are able to submit their concerns about campus race dynamics, create events catered towards students from cultures outside of the predominant ones that already have clubs and representation on campus, and make Asian clubs more inclusive toward students of south and southeastern Asian descent, per her candidate biography. Emma Fiesinger ’23 and Jordy Pineiro ’23 were elected as the twosemester representatives to the A-Board. Both stressed the centrality of integrity and transparency on the part of the board in dealing with club funding. Pineiro’s first plan of action, he wrote in an email to the Justice, is the establishment of a grant encouraging clubs to do crossover events.

—Nancy Zhai

See STUDENT UNION, 7 ☛

Sachar Woods

'IT Chapter Two'

'Pollinator Bioblitz' connects students to nature

 The Justice explores the Sachar Woods, an idyllic greenspace on the Brandeis campus.

 The spooky clown returns in a successful sequel film.

By SAMANTHA GOLDMAN

By ALEX BENDER

By TALIA ZITNER NOAH ZEITLIN/the Justice

critically through the lens of identity inquiries, cultural perceptions and differences between facts and evidence. In addition to training individuals to engage in Critical Conversations and to solidify their understanding of diversity, inclusion and cultural awareness, the new curriculum also outlined essential skills for students to look after their own mental health. Courses such as “Navigating Health and Safety” teach students strategies to prevent hazardous situations and offer them training with the Brandeis Counseling Center and the Prevention, Advocacy & Resource Center, according to its description from the curriculum website. Similarly, the “Mind and Body Balance and Life Skills” modules will teach students to stay healthy and utilize opportunities and challenges to “develop long-term goals, and practical, professional and life skills,” according to the website.

NEWS 5

Will Universal Basic Income end poverty? By ANGELA SELF

FORUM 12

NFL season heats up

FEATURES 9

Image Courtesy of CREATIVE COMMONS

For tips or info email editor@thejustice.org

Make your voice heard! Submit letters to the editor to letters@thejustice.org

ARTS 19

By JONATHAN SOCHACZEVSKI

COPYRIGHT 2019 FREE AT BRANDEIS.

SPORTS 16


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