The Justice, April 5, 2011 issue

Page 1

ARTS Page 20

SPORTS Baseball wins three games 16

ADAGIO SHOW

FORUM Athletic scholarship debate 12 The Independent Student Newspaper

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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

Justice

Volume LXIII, Number 25

www.thejustice.org

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Waltham, Mass.

TRUSTEES APPROVE $10 MILLION LOAN FOR REPAIRS

Linsey Pool to reopen ■ The repairs to the pool as

well as the electrical and mechanical systems will be completed by early 2012. By andrew wingens JUSTICE editorial assistant

The Board of Trustees unanimously approved a plan to renovate the Linsey Pool for $3 million on Thursday, said Senior Vice President for Administration Mark Collins in an April 1 interview with the Justice. Collins said the renovation project includes repairs to the mechanical and electrical systems, repairs to the pool and the pool deck, new lighting in the facility, new team locker rooms, a new lobby and a refurbished entryway. The renovations will begin later this spring with an expected completion date of early 2012, according to a BrandeisNOW press release. The Linsey Pool opened in 1966

and was closed in fall 2008 due to infrastructure problems such as the broken pool heating systems, which the University decided not to immediately repair primarily because of financial constraints, according to Collins.

☛ For more information about the University swimming and diving team’s reinstitution, see Sports, page 16. In 2008, then-Senior Vice President for Communications Lorna Miles estimated in an interview with the Justice that repairing of the broken aspects of the pool would cost about $2 million and a complete renovation of the pool facility would cost $10 to $12 million, Collins said while the Linsey Pool is one of several campus facilities that have experienced “deferred

Univ network to undergo upgrades

maintenance,” such as the residence halls in East Quad, the Usen Castle and the Foster Mods, the pool is the only building that is closed. The pool renovations will be funded through a $10-million capital lease finance agreement, wrote Senior Vice President for Finance and Chief Financial Officer Frances Drolette in an e-mail to the Justice. The term for the lease will be 7 years with an annual interest expense of about $150,000 per year. The annual principle payments on the lease will be $1.3 million and will be funded through the capital budget, according to Drolette. There are no plans to reduce other parts of the budget as a result of the lease, and “the University is in a comfortable position to adequately cover the costs of the capital lease,” wrote Drolette in an e-mail to the Justice. Student Union President Daniel Acheampong ’11 said in an interview with the Justice that

■ The network upgrades,

which will strengthen the wireless signal on campus, will begin over the summer and be completed by the end of summer 2012. By nashrah rahman JUSTICE editor

The Board of Trustees approved a $6 million capital project to upgrade the campus technology network at last its meeting last Thursday, according to a March 31 BrandeisNOW article. In an interview with the Justice, Director of Networks and Systems John Turner said that the plan consists of strengthening the technology signal rather than extending the network’s

See POOL, 3 ☛

coverage. The network currently covers all University buildings and residence halls, Turner said. Turner said that the upgrade will revamp both the wireless and non-wireless networks. “What our studies have shown is that the biggest impact will be on wireless, because we have just way more people connecting via wireless,” he said. The upgrade, which will begin in residence halls over the summer, is expected to be completed by the end of summer 2012, Turner said. “We will complete the dorm upgrades before the students come back, and as soon as we’re done with the dorms, we’re going to start on the [Shapiro] Campus Center, the library, basically all

See TECH, 3 ☛

panel

Israeli Knesset members speak at town hall-style meeting

■ Six members of the Israeli

Parliament house spoke as part of the first year of the Ruderman Fellows Program. By ALLYSON CARTTER JUSTICE STAFF WRITER

Six members from three opposing parties of the Israeli Knesset spoke yesterday evening at a town hall meeting in the Levin Ballroom about Israel’s relationship with the American Jewish community and Israel’s role in the world and in global politics as part of the inaugural Ruderman Fellows Program. The six members in attendance represented three of the parties of which the Knesset, the legislative branch of the Israeli government, is comprised. Eitan Cabel and Daniel Ben-Simon represented the Labor Party. Avi Dichter and Ronit Tirosh represented the Kadima Party. Tzipi Hotovely and Carmel Shama were present for the Likud Party. Shama is also the chairperson of the Finance Committee, and Hoto-

vely is the chairperson of the Committee on the Status of Women. The Ruderman Family Foundation and the Hornstein Jewish Professional Leadership Program cosponsored the event. This is the first year of the Ruderman Fellows Program, which as described in the program distributed at the event, “brings members of the Israeli Knesset to America to learn about American Jewish life and to deepen the bonds of understanding between Israeli leaders and the American Jewish community.” The six Knesset members are the first fellows in the program. Prof. Ilan Troen (NEJS), the moderator of the event, said the goal of the program is for Israelis to learn about America and to determine on which lessons from American life the six Knesset members will focus. “Small countries in particular … often seek models in larger and more powerful countries. What is worth taking back to Israel, and no less important, what is not?” Troen said. Troen explained at the beginning of the event that, to maintain a bal-

See KNESSET, 7 ☛

JOSHUA LINTON/the Justice

FOREIGN DIPLOMACY: Israeli MK Ben-Simon answered questions posed by students as part of a Ruderman Fellows program.

Your brother’s keeper

Hoops for Haiti

Union race begins

 Clare Gohorel ’12 finds care and hospitality in Ghana's culture while studying abroad.

 The annual student vs. faculty/ staff game was held last night to fundraise for Haiti and Japan.

 The Student Union will begin the race for executive board elections tomorrow.

FEATURES 8 For tips or info e-mail editor@thejustice.org

Let your voice be heard! Submit letters to the editor online at www.thejustice.org

INDEX

SPORTS 13 ARTS SPORTS

17 16

EDITORIAL FEATURES

10 8

OPINION POLICE LOG

10 2

COMMENTARY

11

News 5 COPYRIGHT 2011 FREE AT BRANDEIS. Email managing@thejustice.org for home delivery.


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