the
Justice www.thejustice.org
The Independent Student Newspaper Volume LXXI, Number 22
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, April 2, 2019
RELAY FOR LIFE
Waltham, Mass.
STUDENT UNION
Senate passes club consultant proposal ■ The Senate added a new
article to the bylaws requiring clubs to have a faculty or staff consultant. By ELIANA PADWA AND CHAIEL SCHAFFEL JUSTICE EDITOR AND JUSTICE STAFF WRITER
THU LE/the Justice
The Brandeis community gathered in Gosman Sports and Convocation Center on Saturday for Brandeis' Relay for Life, part of the American Cancer Society's largest fundraising and awareness-raising event.
STUDENT LIFE
Union to launch student life website in fall 2019 ■ Presence is a website that
will consolidate information about campus life for students. By ECE ESIKARA JUSTICE STAFF WRITER
Presence, an online platform that consolidates information about student life, activities and communications, will be launched by the Student Union and the Department of Student Activities in fall 2019. Presence will involve aspects of student and campus life — other than academics — including campus clubs, the Student Union, Conference and Event Services, the Department of Community Service and the Department of Student Activities. It will facilitate communication between the students and staff. Hannah Brown ’19, the Student Union president, said in an interview with the Justice that with Presence, clubs will no longer need listservs. “Clubs will be able to have their own portals for communication, for organizing,” she explained. “It also means that everything would be streamlined, like hosting events, renting spaces, forms and all of that.” Brown explained that when students involved in a club request funding for an event that club will host, the departments the funding is being requested from will be notified through Presence, and the system will move the students through the process step by step. Aaron Finkel ’19, the Union vice president, explained in the same joint interview, “What Presence is in my
view is a system where it provides a personalized student life experience.” He explained that every student will get a Presence student portal and that every club will have a page. “You can subscribe to the clubs that you're a part of and it will appear on … your wall on Presence, and you'll get all the updates from those clubs,” he explained. Brown went on to explain that with Presence, students will be able to add club or University events that they are interested in attending on their Google calendar. She also added there is a chance that students will be able to add community service hours through Presence rather than logging them in the Sage. Brown also said that applications for recognition of clubs and hosting campus events will be on the Presence website. Through this, she added, the Student Union will be better connected with the clubs. “Right now, all of these resources are all over the place,” Brown said. “If you want to reserve a room, you have to Google it to figure out which one you want to do and you have to email someone.” Finkel added, “The Student Union will primarily use Presence as a way of communicating with the student body. It allows us to do the elections, announcements and everything through that. And gone are the pesky email lists that everybody hates … so it'll just become a normal part of student life just as big as LATTE.” Brown explained that students will be able to have an official Brandeis document that has their extracurricular experience on it, like an extracurricular resume, because everything will be recorded on Presence. “You
could even write different events and skills and put those on your resume,” Brown said. “So for example, you've been [to] bystander training, [if] you've had CPR training, you have a document that certifies that you did do it.” Finkel added, “It's like an automatic co-curricular transcript in a way.” They also highlighted that it would be different from listservs because only active members will receive notifications. Brown and Finkel said Presence is an outside company that is used by many institutions, both public and private. After Brandeis pays for the one-time investment fee, the company will take care of the maintenance of the website, Brown said. Finkel added, “Because it's such a new program, we'll have a lot of input in … how it evolves and how it's developed. Just alone in our video conference that we had, we just came up with a bunch of ideas for them and they were like, ‘Oh, let me write this down and we'll work on this.’” They further explained that the University will incorporate Presence over the summer and it will be available starting in the fall to students. Although it will not be working at its full operational capacity right away, it will be developed over time. The one-time investment fee of $17,000 will be split between the Union and the Department of Student Activities, the latter of which will also take on the yearly maintenance fee of $12,000. They also said students’ data will be secured in Presence because it will be connected through the Office of University Registrar. No one will be able to access student data other than the Registrar.
The Union Senate voted unanimously on Sunday to pass a bylaw requiring each secured club to have a “club consultant”: a University faculty or staff member in an advisory role. The bylaw was formally presented by Senator-At-Large Noah Nguyen ’21 and Vice President Aaron Finkel ’19 at the March 24 Senate meeting. Before then, the amendment had been met with opposition from several clubs and had gone through multiple revisions in response to those concerns. After being passed, the bylaw became section 13 of article VIII of the Union Bylaws.
Section 13
The bylaw begins by justifying the need for clubs to have faculty advisors. In a series of “whereas” clauses, it states that most peer universities employ a similar system, and claims that club leaders have “suffered from
a lack of institutional knowledge and more guided experience” and that the Brandeis community “reports a lack of connection” between students and faculty. Per section 13, many members of the Brandeis community, including club leaders, have requested a faculty club advising system. The bylaw justifies its focus on secured clubs — clubs with benchmark funding written into the Union Constitution — by asserting that these clubs occupy the most physical space or receive the most Union funding of any student clubs, have the largest membership and enter into more contracts than other clubs. Section 13 requires all secured clubs to “register a club consultant” with the Department of Student Activities and the Club Support Committee. The bylaw states that all club leaders will stipulate the roles and responsibilities of their advisor in a formal contract, though it does not lay out the process for creating that contract. In these contracts, club leaders can lay out responsibilities for their advisors. The bylaw suggests a few: advising clubs on intragroup or intergroup conflicts, helping clubs self-advocate to the administration, providing third-party feedback on club events and operations and net-
See CLUB ADVISORS, 6 ☛
TECHNOLOGY
Students develop realtime translation app ■ Students made it to the final
round of the Hult Prize Boston Regional competition with their app, 'Talk.' By JOCELYN GOULD JUSTICE EDITOR
Drawing on skills fostered through a range of Brandeis coursework and life experience, a team of four Brandeis students made it to the final round of the Hult Prize Boston Regional competition on March 15-16. Graduate students Max Brodsky (Heller), Abigail Montine (Heller), Liza Korotkova (IBS) and R Matthews ’19 pitched their project, Talk, an app that would connect interpreters with people who need interpretation services in real time through a video call. “Talk is a platform that employs multilingual young adults to serve as interpreters using a video-remote interpreting service for businesses, nonprofits, governments and emergency services,” Brodsky said in an interview with the Justice that included Montine and Korotkova. Brodsky developed the
idea for the project with Montine to address the theme of this year’s Hult competition: youth unemployment. The Hult Prize Foundation is “the world’s biggest engine for the launch of for-good, for-profit startups emerging from [universities],” according to their website. Universities can hold initial Hult Prize On Campus competitions, whose winners then join other teams at over 25 Hult Prize Regional Summits. The regional winners travel to the Hult Castle in the United Kingdom to participate in the Hult Prize Accelerator Program, and the top six teams pitch their ideas in front of the United Nations, competing for $1 million of startup funding, per the Boston competition’s Welcome Guide. Brodsky previously worked as a director of a small nonprofit in Waltham, an experience which showed him the importance of interpreters. He said he “really struggled to meet the needs of the families” due to language barriers. More recently, Brodsky has connected with Kaytie Dowcett ’99, Heller ’15, executive director of the Waltham Partnership for Youth,
See TALK, 6 ☛
Ballin' in Levin
Mamma Mia!
Discussing racial justice bystander interventions
The Campus Activities Board’s second annual formal draws a crowd.
The UTC presents a popular jukebox musical.
By NANCY ZHAI
By KENT DINLENC
AIPAC is a noble organization By TREVOR FILSETH
By SAMMY PARK
NEWS 3 FORUM 11
Track and Field starts its outdoor season ANDREW BAXTER/the Justice
FEATURES 8-9 For tips or info email editor@thejustice.org
NOAH ZEITLIN/the Justice
Make your voice heard! Submit letters to the editor to letters@thejustice.org
ARTS 19
By ELLIE WHISENANT
COPYRIGHT 2019 FREE AT BRANDEIS.
SPORTS 16