The Justice, March 26, 2019

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the

Justice www.thejustice.org

The Independent Student Newspaper Volume LXXI, Number 21

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, March 26, 2019

ADVOCACY THROUGH ART

Waltham, Mass.

STUDENT UNION

Union election results announced ■ Students elected a new

president, vice president, secretary, treasurer and representatives. By NATALIA WIATER JUSTICE EDITOR

After a tight race last Thursday, the student body voted to instate Simran Tatuskar ’21 as President of the Student Union. 14 students ran for a variety of positions on the Executive Board, as well as two positions on the Brandeis Sustainability Fund. Out of an undergraduate population of 3,369, only 27.45 percent of students voted.

President

SARAH KATZ/the Justice

ADVANCING SOCIAL JUSTICE: Univ. President Ron Liebowitz gave actress, educator and playwright Anna Deavere Smith the Richman Distinguished Fellow in Public Life award Thursday. She has written 15 plays about community, race, education and more.

Playwright and actress receives activism award ■ Anna Deavere Smith

receives the sixth annual Richman Distinguished Fellow in Public Life award. By GILDA GEIST JUSTICE EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

University President Ron Liebowitz presented actress and playwright Anna Deavere Smith with the sixth annual Richman Distinguished Fellow in Public Life award on Thursday. Smith has appeared on television shows such as “The West Wing” and “Black-ish,” and over the past few years she has devoted much of her time to writing onewoman shows based on her interviews with over 250 people. In her plays, she delivers monologues from the point of view of the people she interviews as a way to discuss themes of equality, race relations, education and more. Carol Richman Saivetz ’69 and her children Michael Saivetz ’97 and Aliza Saivetz Glasser ’01 created the Richman Fellow award six years ago in honor of Richman Saivetz’s parents, Fred and Rita, Liebowitz said. The Richman Fellow award is given to “individuals active in public life whose contributions have had a significant impact on improving American society, strengthening democratic institutions [or] advancing social justice,” according to the Richman Fellow website. Explaining why Smith received the award, Liebowitz extolled her accomplishments. “For several decades, she has used her singular brand of the-

ater to explore issues of community, character and diversity in America,” he said. Smith is also the founder and director of the arts education program Institute on the Arts and Civic Dialogue at New York University, according to the Richman Fellow website. Harry S. Levitan Director of Teacher Education and Professor of the Practice of Education Marya Levenson introduced Smith. “We are very fortunate to welcome this skilled, talented and powerful performer and woman who is able to bring us the voices of the people who are not so powerful,” Levenson said. After the introduction, Smith delivered her acceptance speech, which included performances from interviews she had conducted for her plays. Smith spoke about how the topic of race is often considered taboo and rarely brought up in mainstream American conversation. “There are very small windows where we care about race,” she said. She cited the national reaction to the 2015 murder of Freddie Gray by police as an example of one of these windows. In 2015, during the riots following Gray’s murder, Smith spoke to Kevin Moore, the man who took a video of the confrontation between Gray and the police on his phone. Using direct quotes from his interview, Smith performed a monologue from Moore’s perspective. As Moore, she talked about his reaction to what happened to Gray. “Come on. A crushed larynx? Can you do that to yourself? Three cracked vertebrae? Can you do that to yourself? Can you sever 80 percent of your own spinal cord?” she asked.

She also quoted Moore as saying, “The camera’s the only thing we have that can protect us.” Smith recalled another video documenting police brutality, this time taking place at Spring Valley High School in Columbia, South Carolina. Sixteenyear-old Shakara was placed into a chokehold and handcuffed by a school officer for refusing to put her cellphone away in class. Her classmate, Niya Kenny, was arrested for speaking up and filming the confrontation. After telling Shakara’s story by performing as Kenny, Smith explained how Kenny was implicated in the conflict. According to Smith, the officer told Kenny to “shut up,” but Kenny continued to protest until he eventually handcuffed her. “The problem that girls have is if you run your mouth … and to me, that’s what she [Kenny] paid for,” Smith said. Next, Smith talked about interviewing a fifth-grade teacher named Sari Muhonen in Helsinki, Finland. Smith recalled showing Muhonen the video that Kenny took of Shakara. Performing as Muhonen responding to the video, Smith said, “I have never seen like this in Finland. … I cannot find a situation that would need handcuffs.” Smith said she asked Muhonen how discipline works in schools in Finland. Performing as Muhonen again, she said that while she couldn’t identify one overarching form of discipline, she would tell her students, “I see you and you are really welcome here,” as a preventative measure against acting up in class. For Smith’s final performance, she

See RICHMAN FELLOW, 7 ☛

Tatuskar currently serves as the Union’s secretary, a position she was voted into at the end of last semester. She also sat on the Rules and Dining committees, and previously served as co-chair of the Health and Safety Committee. Tatuskar first ran for Union office as a first-year for the position of Class of 2021 Senator, but she lost. During her time as secretary, Tatuskar worked as the liaison between the accessibility movement and the administration and maintained a line of communication between the

Vice President

Guillermo Caballero ’20, who ran against Trevor Filseth ’20, was elected as Vice President by a wide margin of 538 to 199. This was Cabellero’s second attempt at the vice presidency: he first faced current Vice President Aaron Finkel ’19 in a close race and lost by just 34 votes. Caballero does not have much previous experience with the Union except for his service on the Club Support Committee. In his candidate bio, Caballero wrote that his primary goal as vice president is to “make the branches of the student union more cohesive and united.” Like Tatuskar, commu-

See ELECTION, 7 ☛

INTERVIEW

Univ. tech services discuss DUO software ■ Information Techonology

Services addresses concerns about the new two-factor authentication software. By EMILY BLUMENTHAL JUSTICE EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

Over the past year, the University’s Information Technology Services has been rolling out the two-factor authentication software DUO to faculty, staff and students. Seeking to dispel misconceptions about the software, University Chief Information Officer Jim La Creta, Director of Networks, Systems and Security David Albrecht and Communications and Change Management Specialist Christine Jacinto met with the Justice on Wednesday for an interview. Albrecht explained that DUO is “a way to better protect user identities,” which requires a password and a “form of authentication:” either a push notification from the DUO app, a text, a phone call or a hardware token. The tokens are small devices, he said, that “spit out pseudo-random numbers that would correspond to numbers that would pop up on the app that you would type in for the second fac-

tor of authentication.” Albrecht said that 300 people have requested the token for several reasons — “they don’t have a phone, or they have a phone but want a token, or they don’t want to use any of their own devices whatsoever.” The easiest method of authentication, he said, is using DUO’s mobile app. Albrecht said that “Brandeis holds a significant amount of … personallyidentifiable information,” and under laws such as the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, which protects educational records, and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which concerns financial information, the University is required “to maintain and protect that information.” Additionally, DUO can aid in protecting one’s own personal information, Albrecht said. He explained that for student workers, this includes W-2 forms and direct deposit information. DUO also protects against phishing, Albrecht said. There have been “malicious emails that have come through that have caused people to enter their password credentials unknowingly to a third party,” he continued, which compromised the accounts. La Creta added that DUO is “part of a larger security program”

See DUO, 7 ☛

Finding her passion

Black Effect

'Brandeis in The Hague' program canceled By EMILY BLUMENTHAL

 Simran Tatuskar '21 follows her own path.

 Brandeis Black Student Organization hosted its second annual showcase of Shades of Blackness.

By JOCELYN GOULD

By ELLIE WHISENANT Photo Courtesy of SIMRAN TATUSKAR

student body and the Brandeis Counseling Center, per a March 19 Justice article. As president, Tatuskar plans to tackle a variety of issues, many of them involving improving communication between various institutions on campus, according to her campaign website. Some of these changes include writing weekly reports to the community, improving lines of communication with activist groups, creating a working relationship with the Graduate Student Association and increasing transparency surrounding the Board of Trustees.

FEATURES 8 For tips or info email editor@thejustice.org

CLARA ALEXANDER/the Justice

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

NEWS 5

Admissions scandal reveals false meritocracy By VIOLET FEARON

FORUM 11

Men's Ultimate Frisbee, a.k.a. TRON

ARTS 18

By MEGAN GELLER

COPYRIGHT 2019 FREE AT BRANDEIS.

SPORTS 16


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