Volume 12 Number 13
www.brandeishoot.com
Brandeis University’s Community Newspaper • Waltham, Mass.
September 4, 2015
Brandeis works toward completion of renovations By Charlotte Aaron, Emily Smith & Hannah Schuster Editors
The Brandeis campus underwent quite a few changes over the summer. In an email to the Brandeis community on Aug. 31, Vice President of Operations Jim Gray outlined the changes that took place. The university renovated Sherman Dining Hall, with expanded seating. For more information, see the article in The Brandeis Hoot’s Features section. Gray also announced that “we made progress on our five-year plan to refresh the Mandel Humanities Quad, installing new fire-safety and window systems in Rabb and Golding.” According to Gray, the new systems reduce energy consumption, and the plan is to install these items in other buildings in Mandel in the future. Old dorm furniture donated to nonprofit The university renovated many
shiny new buffet in sherman
residence halls over the summer, including buildings in Ziv, Rosenthal and North Quads. The renovations included the purchasing of new furniture. One student, Sophia Lavrentyeva ’17, a co-coordinator of Brandeis’ Habitat for Humanity chapter (which falls under the umbrella of the Waltham Group), organized the donation of old dorm furniture to the non-profit orga-
Editor
This summer, three Brandeis students, Hannah Kober ’16, Risa Dunbar ’17 and Leah Susman ’18, along with Brandeis Professor Bernadette Brooten (NEJS) visited Al-Quds University. Brandeis maintained a partnership with Al-Quds University until November 2013 when a rally on the Al-Quds campus led former President Frederick Lawrence to suspend the partnership. The Brandeis University/ Al-Quds University Student Dialogue Initiative believes it is time to reinstate the partnership. In an interview with The Brandeis Hoot, Susman and Dunbar discussed their summer trip to Al-Quds and the Dialogue Initiative’s plans for the future. They explained that the organization of the trip began with Professor Sue Lanser (ENG), who has been involved with AlQuds since the inception of the partnership. Lanser visited AlQuds in May and began planning the trip with students and faculty. At the end of the spring 2015 semester, students with the Dialogue Initiative wrote letters to President Lawrence asking him to help fund the trip, but the students did not receive any funding from Brandeis. Susman, Dunbar and Kober were each in Israel for personal reasons: Susman volunteering with the inter-
Inside this issue:
faith organization Kids for Peace, Dunbar as an art specialist at an integrated summer camp and Kober doing thesis research and studying Arabic, and they decided to make the trip happen. The three students met with Brooten, who was in Israel working at Hebrew University at the time, to coordinate the trip to Al-Quds. “It was wholeheartedly the four of us with the support of Sue and the administration from AlQuds” that made the trip happen, said Dunbar. Dunbar and Susman explained that Al-Quds funded their stay at a four-star hotel and provided them with meals even though it was during Ramadan. Their AlQuds hosts insisted on paying for their meals, transportation and even ice cream when they visited a famous shop one night. “It just showed so much about how hospitable they were,” said Susman. While at Al-Quds, the group from Brandeis toured the university’s Abu Dis campus. Students and faculty at Al-Quds showed the Brandeis representatives around the area, exposing them to their culture. “The special part about being there was that it was during Ramadan, so we were able to celebrate Iftar,” said Susman, noting that they attended a break the fast at a faculty member’s home See AL-QUDS, page 3
News: Schuster Inst. helps exonerate innocent man Online Arts, Etc.: Senior thesis modernizes “Macbeth” Page 6 Opinion: New residence halls should be priority Page 13 Features: Opposites attract in Ziv Page 11 Editorial: Univ. must step up upgrade quality Page 10
See UPGRADES, page 2
photos by sharon cai/the hoot
usen castle under wraps while surveyed
Policies remain the same at PCC
Summer trip to Al-Quds By Hannah Schuster
nization Household Goods Recycling of Massachusetts (HGRM). HGRM is located in Acton, MA, and offers furniture and home goods to families in need. “The organization runs primarily on donations and volunteer hours,” wrote Lavrentyeva in an email to The Hoot. “As we have spent more time at HGRM,
photo by emma hanselman/the hoot
mailman house: home to the psychiatric counseling center
By Charlotte Aaron editor
In a sign of dedication to student mental health, the Brandeis Psychological Counseling Center (PCC) will continue to provide every student with 12 free individual therapy sessions, as well as over 20 group therapy options, an increase from the 12 group therapy options available last year. The student demand for counseling at the PCC has increased six to 12 percent each year for the past seven years, said Dr. Mi-
chael LaFarr, executive director of health and wellness, in an interview with The Brandeis Hoot. Because of the continuous increase in student usage of the PCC, LaFarr and other staff members have recently begun exploring options to assure mental health treatment remains available to all students. In late August during an Orientation Leader and Community Advisor training session, Dr. Joy von Steiger, PCC senior associate director and clinical director, discouraged student leaders from using language such as “12 free
photo by marian siljeholm/the hoot
therapy sessions,” as questions had arisen about whether or not this would be an option in the academic year 2016-2017. In her presentation to the student leaders, von Steiger announced the PCC was considering billing student insurance for psychotherapy sessions beginning with the first time a student sees a PCC therapist. This raised many immediate concerns for student leaders. Questions were asked regarding anonymity within the health in-
Improv showcase
Men’s soccer scores
Arts: Page 16
Sports: Page 4
Campus comedy groups perform for first-years before opening up auditions
Christian Hernandez ’18 wins game for Judges with late-game heroics
See PCC, page 3