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Brandeis University

Brandeis University /ˈbrænds/ is a private research university in Waltham, Massachusetts. Founded in 1948 as a non-sectarian, coeducational institution sponsored by the Jewish community, Brandeis was established on the site of the former Middlesex University. The university is named after Louis Brandeis, the first Jewish Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Brandeis University
MottoHebrew: אמת, romanizedEmet (Truth)
Motto in English
"Truth even unto its innermost parts"[1]
TypePrivate research university
EstablishedOctober 20, 1948; 74 years ago (1948-10-20)[2]
AccreditationNECHE
Academic affiliations
Endowment$1.20 billion (2022)[4]
PresidentRonald D. Liebowitz
ProvostCarol Fierke
Academic staff
544 (2021)[5]
Administrative staff
1,314 (2021)[5]
Students5,458 (2021)
Undergraduates3,591 (2021)[5]
Postgraduates1,967 (2021)[5]
Location, ,
United States
CampusSmall City,[6] 235 acres (95 ha)[5]
Newspaper
Colors  Brandeis Blue[7]
NicknameJudges
Sporting affiliations
MascotThe Judge and Ollie the Owl (named for Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.)
Websitewww.brandeis.edu

In 2018, it had a total enrollment of 5,800 students on its suburban campus spanning 235 acres (95 hectares).[5] The institution offers more than 43 majors and 46 minors and two-thirds of undergraduate classes have 20 students or fewer.[8] It is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity"[9] and is a member of Association of American Universities and the Boston Consortium, which allows students to cross-register to attend courses at other institutions including Boston College, Boston University and Tufts University.[10][11]

The university has a strong liberal arts focus and attracts a geographically and economically diverse student body, with 72% of its non-international undergraduates being from out of state, 50% of full-time undergraduates receiving need-based financial aid and 13.5% being recipients of the federal Pell Grant. 34% of students identify as Jewish.[12] It has the eighth-largest proportion of international students of any university in the United States.[8][13][14][15] Alumni and affiliates of the university include former first lady of the United States Eleanor Roosevelt, Nobel Prize laureate Roderick MacKinnon and Fields Medalist Edward Witten, as well as foreign heads of state, congressmen, governors, diplomats, and recipients of the Nobel Prize, Pulitzer Prize, Academy Award, Emmy Award, and MacArthur Fellowship.[16] Brandeis University is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education.[17]

History

Founding

 
Seal of the former Middlesex University
 
Usen Castle, a building on campus

Middlesex University was a medical school located in Waltham, Massachusetts, that was at the time the only medical school in Massachusetts that did not impose a quota on Jews. The founder, John Hall Smith, died in 1944. Smith's will stipulated that the school should go to any group willing to use it to establish a non-sectarian university.[18] Within two years, Middlesex University was on the brink of financial collapse. The school had not been able to secure accreditation by the American Medical Association, which Smith partially attributed to institutional antisemitism in the American Medical Association,[19] and, as a result, Massachusetts had all but shut it down.

Smith's son, C. Ruggles Smith, was desperate for a way to save something of Middlesex University. He learned of a New York committee headed by Israel Goldstein that was seeking a campus to establish a Jewish-sponsored secular university. Smith approached Goldstein with a proposal to give the Middlesex campus and charter to Goldstein's committee, in the hope that his committee might "possess the apparent ability to reestablish the School of Medicine on an approved basis." While Goldstein was concerned about being saddled with a failing medical school, he was excited about the opportunity to secure a 100-acre (40-hectare) "campus not far from New York, the premier Jewish community in the world, and only 9 miles (14 km) from Boston, one of the important Jewish population centers."[19] Goldstein agreed to accept Smith's offer, proceeding to recruit George Alpert, a Boston lawyer with fundraising experience as national vice president of the United Jewish Appeal.[citation needed]

 
Brandeis University sign

Alpert had worked his way through Boston University School of Law and co-founded the firm of Alpert and Alpert. Alpert's firm had a long association with the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, of which he was to become president from 1956 to 1961.[20][21] He is best known today as the father of Richard Alpert (Baba Ram Dass).[22] He was influential in Boston's Jewish community. His Judaism "tended to be social rather than spiritual."[23] He was involved in assisting children displaced from Germany.[24] Alpert was to be chairman of Brandeis from 1946 to 1954, and a trustee from 1946 until his death.[20] By February 5, 1946, Goldstein had recruited Albert Einstein, whose involvement drew national attention to the nascent university.[25] Einstein believed the university would attract the best young people in all fields, satisfying a real need.[26]

In March 1946, Goldstein said the foundation had raised $10 million that it would use to open the school by the following year.[27] The foundation purchased Middlesex University's land and buildings for two million dollars.[26] The charter of this operation was transferred to the foundation along with the campus. The founding organization was announced in August and named The Albert Einstein Foundation for Higher Learning, Inc.[28] The new school would be a Jewish-sponsored secular university open to students and faculty of all races and religions.[28]

 
Rabb Graduate Center (1965, Benjamin Thompson)

The trustees offered to name the university after Einstein in the summer of 1946, but Einstein declined, and on July 16, 1946, the board decided the university would be named after Louis Brandeis.[29] Einstein objected to what he thought was excessively expansive promotion, and to Goldstein's sounding out Abram L. Sachar as a possible president without consulting Einstein. Einstein took great offense at Goldstein's having invited Cardinal Francis Spellman to participate in a fundraising event. Einstein also became alarmed by press announcements that exaggerated the school's success at fundraising.

Einstein threatened to sever ties with the foundation on September 2, 1946. Believing the venture could not succeed without Einstein, Goldstein quickly agreed to resign himself, and Einstein recanted.[30] Einstein's near-departure was publicly denied.[31][32] Goldstein said that, despite his resignation, he would continue to solicit donations for the foundation.[31] On November 1, 1946, the foundation announced that the new university would be named Brandeis University, after Louis D. Brandeis, justice of the United States Supreme Court.[33] By the end of 1946, the foundation said it had raised over five hundred thousand dollars,[34] and two months later it said it had doubled that amount.[35]

The Brandeis board felt it was in no position to make the investment in the medical school that would enable it to receive accreditation, and closed it in 1947. Einstein wanted Middlesex University's veterinary school's standards to be improved before expanding to the school,[30] while others in the foundation wanted to simply close the veterinary school,[32] which, by the winter of 1947, had an enrollment of just about 100 students.[35] A professional study of the veterinary school recommended dismissing certain instructors and requiring end-of-year examinations for the students, but the foundation declined to enact any of the recommendations, to the dismay of Einstein and a couple of the foundation's trustees.[36]

In early June 1947, Einstein made a final break with the foundation.[30][37] The veterinary school was closed, despite students' protests and demonstrations.[32] According to George Alpert, a lawyer responsible for much of the organizational effort, Einstein had wanted to offer the presidency of the school to left-wing scholar Harold Laski,[38] someone that Alpert had characterized as "a man utterly alien to American principles of democracy, tarred with the Communist brush."[25] He said, "I can compromise on any subject but one: that one is Americanism."[32] Two of the foundation's trustees, S. Ralph Lazrus and Dr. Otto Nathan, quit the foundation at the same time as Einstein.[30] In response, Alpert said that Lazrus and Nathan had tried to give Brandeis University a "radical, political orientation."[39] Alpert also criticized Lazrus' lack of fundraising success and Nathan's failure to organize an educational advisory committee.[39] Einstein said he, Lazrus, and Nathan "have always been and have always acted in complete harmony."[40]

Opening

 
Brandeis's admissions building at night

On April 26, 1948, Brandeis University announced that Abram L. Sachar, chairman of the National Hillel Commission, had been chosen as Brandeis' first president.[41] Sachar promised that Brandeis University would follow Louis Brandeis' principles of academic integrity and service.[42] He also promised that students and faculty would never be chosen based on quotas of "genetic or ethnic or economic distribution" because choices based on quotas "are based on the assumption that there are standard population strains, on the belief that the ideal American must look and act like an eighteenth-century Puritan, that the melting pot of America must mold all who all who live here into such a pattern."[43] Students who applied to the school were not asked their race, religion, or ancestry.[44]

Brandeis decided its undergraduate instruction would not be organized with traditional departments or divisions, and instead it would have four schools, namely the School of General Studies, the School of Social Studies, the School of Humanities, and the School of Science.[45] On October 14, 1948,[43] Brandeis University received its first freshman class of 107 students.[46] They were taught by thirteen instructors[47] in eight buildings on a 100-acre (40-hectare) campus.[48] Students came from 28 states and six foreign countries.[49] The library was formerly a barn, students slept in the former medical school building and two army barracks, and the cafeteria was where the medical school had stored cadavers.[18] Historians Elinor and Robert Slater later called the opening of Brandeis one of the great moments in Jewish history.[50]

Early years

Eleanor Roosevelt joined the board of trustees in 1949.[51] Joseph M. Proskauer joined the board in 1950.[52] Construction of on-campus dormitories began in March 1950 with the goal of ninety percent of students living on campus.[53] Construction on an athletic field began in May 1950.[54] Brandeis' football team played its first game on September 30, 1950, a road win against Maine Maritime Academy.[55] Its first varsity game was on September 29, 1951, with a home loss against the University of New Hampshire.[56] Brandeis Stadium opened in time for a home win against American International College on October 13, 1951.[57] The team won four of nine games during its first season. Construction of a 2,000-seat amphitheater began in February 1952.[58]

The state legislature of Massachusetts authorized Brandeis to award master's degrees, doctorate degrees, and honorary degrees in 1951.[46] Brandeis' first graduating class of 101 students received degrees on June 16, 1952.[47][59] Leonard Bernstein, director of Brandeis' Center of Creative Arts, planned a four-day ceremony to commemorate the occasion.[59] Held in the newly opened amphitheater, the ceremony included the world premier of Bernstein's opera Trouble in Tahiti.[59][60] Eleanor Roosevelt and Massachusetts Governor Paul A. Dever spoke at the commencement ceremony.[61]

In 1953, Einstein declined the offer of an honorary degree from Brandeis, writing to Brandeis president Abram L. Sachar that "what happened in the stage of preparation of Brandeis University was not at all caused by a misunderstanding and cannot be made good any more."[62] Instead, at the graduation ceremony for Brandeis' second graduating class of 108 students, individuals given Brandeis' first honorary degrees included Illinois Senator Paul H. Douglas, Rabbi Louis Ginzberg, and Alpert.[63] 1953 also saw the creation of the Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, one of the first academic programs in Jewish Studies at an American university. Among the founders were distinguished emigre scholars Alexander Altmann, Nathan Glatzer and Simon Rawidowicz. Brandeis inaugurated its graduate program, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, in 1954.[64] In the same year, Brandeis became fully accredited, joining the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools.[48] As of 1954, Brandeis had 22 buildings and a 192-acre (78-hectare) campus.[48]

 
Chapels Pond

In 1954, Brandeis began construction on an interfaith center consisting of separate Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish chapels.[65] Designed by the architectural firm of Harrison & Abramovitz, the three chapels surrounded a natural pond.[65] Brandeis announced that no official chaplains would be named, and attendance at chapel services would not be required.[65] The Roman Catholic chapel was named Bethlehem, meaning house of bread, and it was dedicated on September 9, 1955.[66] Dedicated on September 11, 1955, the Jewish chapel was named in memory of Mendel and Leah Berlin, parents of Boston surgeon Dr. David D. Berlin.[67] Named in memory of Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan, the Protestant chapel was dedicated on October 30, 1955.[67]

 
Farber Library at left (1984, Abramovitz, Harris, & Kingsland); Goldfarb Library at right (1959, Harrison & Abramovitz)

In 1956 Brandeis received a one-million-dollar donation from New York industrialist Jack A. Goldfarb to build a library.[68][69] The building, named the Bertha and Jacob Goldfarb Library in his honor, was designed by Harrison & Abramovitz, a firm which designed many campus buildings in the 1950s.[69] Built of brick and glass, the library was designed to hold 750,000 volumes.[69]

 
Robert Berks' statue of Louis Brandeis stands atop the outcropping in Fellows Garden, in the center of campus (1956).

A nine-foot bronze statue of Justice Louis D. Brandeis is a campus landmark. The sculpture, created by sculptor Robert Berks, was unveiled in 1956 in honor of the 100th anniversary of Brandeis' birth.[70][71] Berks' wife Dorothy had been the Justice's personal assistant for 39 years and wore his actual robes to model the statue.[71]

After Brandeis University awarded an honorary doctorate to Israeli Premier David Ben-Gurion in 1960,[72] Jordan boycotted Brandeis University, announcing that it would not issue currency permits to Jordanian students at Brandeis.[73]

Beginning in fall 1959, singer Eddie Fisher established two scholarships at the university, one for classical and one for popular music, in the name of Eddie Cantor.[74]

On May 16, 1960, Brandeis announced it would discontinue its varsity football team.[75] President Abram Sachar pointed to the cost of the team as one reason for the decision.[75] Brandeis' football coach Benny Friedman said it was difficult to recruit football players who were also excellent students with so much competition in the Boston metropolitan area.[76] Brandeis said the discontinuation of varsity football would allow it to expand intercollegiate activity in other sports.[76] During its nine years of varsity play, Brandeis' football team recorded 34 wins, 33 losses, and four ties.[76] In 1985, Brandeis was elected to membership in the Association of American Universities, an association that focuses on graduate education and research.[77]

1960s: Countercultural epicenter

Brandeis became an epicenter of radical student activism and anti–Vietnam War protests during the counterculture of the 1960s.[78] It was the National Student Strike Information Center during the student strike of 1970.[78]

Student takeover of Ford Hall

On January 8, 1969, about 70 black students entered then-student-center, Ford Hall, ejected everyone else from the building, and refused to leave.[79] The students' demands included the hiring of more black faculty members, increasing black student enrollment from four percent to ten percent of the student body,[80] establishing an independent department on African American studies,[81] and an increase in scholarships for black students.[82] Over 200 white students staged a sit-in in the lobby of the administration building.[83] President Morris B. Abram said that, although he recognized "the deep frustration and anger which black students here and all over the country—and often is—the indifference and duplicity of white men in relation to blacks",[83] the students' actions were an affront to the university. The faculty condemned the students' actions as well.[80] On the fourth day of the protest, the Middlesex Superior Court issued a temporary restraining order, requiring the students to leave Ford Hall.[81] While Abram would not allow the order to be enforced by forcibly removing the students from Ford Hall, 65 students had been suspended for their actions.[83] On January 18, the black students exited Ford Hall, ending the eleven-day occupation of the building.[84] There had been no violence or destruction of property during the occupation, and Brandeis gave the students amnesty from their actions.[84] Ronald Walters became the first chair of Afro-American studies at Brandeis later the same year.[85] Ford Hall was demolished in August 2000 to make way for the Shapiro Campus Center, which was opened and dedicated October 3, 2002.

Late 20th century: Institutional crisis

In the 1970s, Brandeis faced a financial crisis as donations from American Jews decreased as they turned toward support for Israel and other causes.[78]

Samuel O. Thier, president from 1991 to 1994, helped to restabilize the university.[78]

21st century

 
The Volen Center for Complex Systems (1994, CannonDesign)
 
Landsman Research Facility (completed 2005, dedicated 2008), home to a superconducting magnet.[86]

In 2014, Brandeis announced it would offer an honorary doctorate to Ayaan Hirsi Ali, "a staunch supporter of women's rights",[87] and an outspoken campaigner against female genital mutilation, honor killing and Islamic extremism in general. After complaints from the Council on American-Islamic Relations and internal consultation with faculty and students, Brandeis publicly withdrew the offer, citing that Ali's statements condemning Islam[88] were "inconsistent with the University's core values".[89] 87 out of 511 faculty members at Brandeis signed a letter to the university president.

The university announced that the decision to withdraw the invitation was made after a discussion between Ayaan Ali and President Frederick Lawrence, stating that "She is a compelling public figure and advocate for women's rights ... but we cannot overlook certain of her past statements".[90] According to Brandeis, Ali was never invited to speak at commencement, she was only invited to receive an honorary degree.[91] Ali said that Brandeis' decision surprised her because Brandeis said they did not know what she had said in the past even though her speeches were publicly available on the internet, calling it a "feeble excuse".[92] Ali stated that the university's decision was motivated in part by fear of offending Muslims.[92] She argued that the "spirit of free expression" referred to in the Brandeis statement has been betrayed and stifled.[93]

While some commentators such as Abdullah Antepli, the Muslim chaplain and adjunct faculty of Islamic Studies at Duke University, applauded the decision and warned against "making renegades into heroes",[94] other academic commentators such as the University of Chicago's Jerry Coyne[95] and the George Mason University Foundation Professor David Bernstein[96] criticized the decision as an attack on academic values such as freedom of inquiry and intellectual independence from religious pressure groups.

Presidents

The presidents of Brandeis University are as follows.

Presidents of Brandeis University
Name Tenure Note
Abram L. Sachar 1948–1968[41]
Morris B. Abram 1968–1970[97]
Charles I. Schottland 1970–1972[98]
Marver H. Bernstein 1972–1983[99]
Evelyn E. Handler 1983–1991[100]
Stuart H. Altman 1990–1991[101] interim
Samuel O. Thier 1991–1994[102]
Jehuda Reinharz 1994–2010[103]
Frederick M. Lawrence 2011–2015[104]
Lisa M. Lynch 2015–2016 interim
Ronald D. Liebowitz 2016–present

Campus

 
Aerial view of campus in Waltham, Massachusetts
 
Carl and Ruth Shapiro Campus Center (2002, Charles Rose Architects)

The Heller School

The Heller School for Social Policy and Management is notable for its programs in social policy, health policy and management, and international development. Researchers at the graduate school and research institution research policy in health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; developmental disabilities; philanthropy; and work and inequalities. U.S. News & World Report ranked the Heller School in the top 10 schools of social policy in its 2013 rankings.[105]

International Business School

Brandeis International Business School is a professional school dedicated to teaching and research in business, finance, economics and data analytics. The International Business School is an AACSB-accredited institution with programs ranked among the best in the world.

The International Business School offers five graduate programs, two accelerated graduate programs, six dual-degree programs and undergraduate majors and minors in business and economics. The school was established in 1994 as the Graduate School of International Economics and Finance, offering a PhD in International Economics and Finance and Master of Arts in International Economics and Finance (MA). In 1998, the school launched the Master of Business Administration (MBA) and Master of Science in finance (MSF) programs. In 2003, the school changed its name to Brandeis International Business School. In 2018, the school launched the Master of Science in business analytics (MSBA) program.

The Rabb School of Continuing Studies

 
Carl J. Shapiro Science Center (2009, Payette)

With more than 4,000 enrollments a year,[106] the Rabb School of Continuing Studies develops educational offerings across four distinct divisions. It provides professional development opportunities through degree programs, personal enrichment and lifelong learning.

Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

One of four graduate schools on campus, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) offers over 40 programs, 18 of which are doctoral programs. Brandeis graduate students are eligible to cross-register for courses at Boston College, Boston University, Tufts University, and the Graduate Consortium in Women's Studies at MIT. Brandeis is also a member of the Boston Library Consortium,[107] composed of 18 academic and research institutions in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire.

Rose Art Museum

 
The Rose Art Museum (1961, Harrison & Abramovitz)

Established in 1961, the Rose Art Museum is a museum dedicated to 20th- and 21st-century art.

Library

The Brandeis Library[108] provides resources and services to support research, scholarship, teaching, and learning on campus.

The library manages more than 1,500,000 physical volumes, and more than 600,000 electronic books, as well as electronic journals and online databases. As part of the library, the Robert D. Farber University Archives & Special Collections Department houses Brandeis University's unique and rare primary sources, which support teaching, research and scholarship at the university and beyond. The department comprises University Archives, containing materials related to Brandeis University, and Special Collections, including rare books, original manuscripts dating from the 13th to 21st centuries, unique primary source material, and a wide variety of visual material.[citation needed]

Subject strengths include the Holocaust and Jewish resistance to persecution; Jewish-American and émigré writers, composers and performing artists; left- and right-wing movements in the United States and Europe; and American and European political leaders and social reformers. Major collections include material on the Spanish Civil War, novelist Joseph Heller, caricaturist Honoré Daumier, and Justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis.

 
Campus buildings viewed from Starr Plaza (1997, Pressley Associates), left to right: Shapiro Campus Center (2002, Charles Rose architects); Gryzmish Center (1959, Hugh Stubbins); Irving Presidential Enclave (1959, Hugh Stubbins); Bernstein-Marcus Administration Center (1959, Hugh Stubbins).

Academics

Rankings

  • Brandeis was ranked No. 1 among the top 380 colleges in the United States for student engagement in community service, according to The Princeton Review in 2015.[118]
  • U.S. News & World Report ranked Brandeis tied for No. 44 in its 2022 annual list of Best National Universities.[119] Acceptance to Brandeis was characterized as "most selective".
  • It was ranked No. 9 of Most Liberal Students in 2009, and No. 10 in 2014.[120]
  • No. 34 among Best Values in Private Universities according to Kiplinger's Personal Finance in its 2016 ranking of best value private universities in the United States.[121]
  • No. 2 among national universities for doctoral program in Neuroscience and Neurobiology (tied with Johns Hopkins University and Yale University), according to the National Research Council (United States) in 2010.[122]
  • No. 99 among 650 undergraduate institutions and 51st among national research universities in the 2017 ranking from Forbes.[123]
  • One of the Top 20 Small Research Universities based on the Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index (2006–07)[124]
  • Named the 6th happiest university by Unigo in 2012[125]
  • Brandeis International Business School was ranked No. 1 by Financial Times from 2010 through 2013 for its Master of Arts in International Economics and Finance Program.[126]
 
Slosberg Music Center

Organization and administration

The schools of the university include:

The College of Arts and Sciences comprises 24 departments and 22 interdepartmental programs, which, in total, offer 43 majors and 47 minors.

The Heller School for Social Policy and Management, founded in 1959, is noteworthy for its graduate programs in healthcare administration, social policy, social work, and international development.[127][128] Internships, research assistantships and other hands-on experiences are available throughout the curriculum. The global and experiential dimensions of education at Brandeis are carried out through international centers and institutes, which sponsor lectures and colloquia and add to the ranks of distinguished scholars on campus.

The Brandeis University Press, a member of the University Press of New England, publishes books in a variety of scholarly and general interest fields. The Goldfarb Library at Brandeis has more than 1.6 million volumes and 300,000 e-journals. The library also houses a large United States Government archive. Brandeis University is a part of the Boston Library Consortium, which allows its students, faculty, and staff to access and borrow books and other materials from other BLC institutions including Tufts University and Williams College.

Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies

In 1980, Brandeis University established the Maurice and Marilyn Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies,[129] the first academic center devoted to the study of Jewish life in the United States. The Cohen Center's work spans basic research on Jewish identity to applied educational evaluation studies. The center's recent signature studies include research with participants in Taglit-Birthright Israel, investigations of synagogue transformation, analyses of Jewish summer camping, and socio-demographic studies of Jewish communities throughout the United States. CMJS research has altered the understanding of contemporary Jewish life and the role of Jewish institutions in the United States.

Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism

The Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism was launched in September 2004 as the first investigative reporting center based at a United States university.[130] It was named for founding benefactors Elaine Schuster and Gerald Schuster.

The institute's major projects were:

  • the Political & Social Justice Project
  • the Justice Brandeis Innocence Project
  • the Gender & Justice Project.[131]

The Schuster Institute closed at the end of 2018 due to financial considerations.[130]

Steinhardt Social Research Institute

The Steinhardt Social Research Institute[132] was created in 2005 from a gift from Michael Steinhardt as a forum to collect, analyze, and disseminate data about the Jewish community and about religion and ethnicity in the United States. The first mission of SSRI was to interpret the inherent problems with the National Jewish Population Survey of 2000 (NJPS). SSRI has done a Jewish Population Survey of the Greater Boston area, the results of which were released on November 9, 2006.[133]

The Institute collects and organizes existing socio-demographic data from private, communal, and government sources and will conduct local and national studies of the character of American Jewry and Jewish organizations. The work of the institute is done by a multidisciplinary staff of faculty and scholars, working with undergraduate and graduate students, and augmented by visiting scholars and consultants. The institute works in close collaboration with the Maurice and Marilyn Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies.

Women's Studies Research Center

 
Women's Studies Research Center

The Women's Studies Research Center (WSRC) is directed by Professor of Sociology and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies Karen V. Hansen.[134] The WSRC was founded in 2001 by Professor Emerita of Sociology Shulamit Reinharz. It is home to three general programs:

  • The Scholars Program, which consists of about 70 academic scholars from around the world who study gender through an interdisciplinary lens
  • The Student-Scholar Partnership Program, which pairs Brandeis University undergraduate students with WSRC scholars for semester-long, paid research assistantships
  • The Arts Program, which oversees the Kniznick Gallery, devoted to feminist artwork

The center is located at the Epstein Building on the Brandeis campus.

Notable faculty and graduates

Among the better-known graduates are co-creators of the television show Friends David Crane and Marta Kauffman, political activists Abbie Hoffman and Angela Davis, journalists Thomas Friedman and Paul Solman, Congressman Stephen J. Solarz, physicist and Fields medalist Edward Witten, mathematician and Abel Prize recipient Karen Uhlenbeck, novelist Ha Jin, political theorist Michael Walzer, actresses Debra Messing and Loretta Devine, philosopher Michael Sandel, Olympic Silver Medalist fencer Tim Morehouse, social and psychoanalytic theorist Nancy Chodorow, author Mitch Albom, filmmakers Debra Granik and Jonathan Newman, music producer Jon Landau,[136] and computer scientist Leslie Lamport.

Among the distinguished faculty, present and past, are mathematician Heisuke Hironaka, a Fields medalist, biologists and Nobel laureates Michael Rosbash and Jeffrey C. Hall, composers Arthur Berger, Leonard Bernstein, Martin Boykan, Eric Chasalow, Irving Fine, Donald Martino, David Rakowski, Harold Shapero, and Yehudi Wyner, social theorist Herbert Marcuse, psychologist Abraham Maslow, linguist James Pustejovsky, human rights activist Eleanor Roosevelt, Anita Hill, historian David Hackett Fischer, economist Thomas Sowell, chemist S Katharine Hammond, diplomat Dennis Ross, children's author Margret Rey, former United States Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, sociologist Morrie Schwartz, poets Olga Broumas and Adrienne Rich, author Stephen McCauley, virologist and author of Fields Virology Bernard N. Fields and Pulitzer Prize–winning columnist Eileen McNamara.

Publications

Newspaper and yearbook

  • Archon, the yearbook
  • The Barrister News Ltd was a politically neutral broadside weekly newspaper with nationally syndicated features, published 1985–1991.[137]
  • The Blowfish, a satirical newspaper founded in February 2006, is published every other Thursday. The first issue appeared inside The Hoot, and every issue since then has been published independently.
  • The Justice, which was founded in 1949 (one year after the university's inception) is an administratively independent weekly newspaper distributed every Tuesday during term.
  • The Brandeis Hoot, founded in 2005, is an independent weekly newspaper published on Fridays.

Magazines

  • The Louis Lunatic, founded in the winter of 2004, is a student-run sports magazine released each semester, discussing Brandeis and national sports.
  • Gravity, a humor magazine founded in 1990
  • Laurel Moon, a literary magazine launched in 1991
  • Artemis, a feminist magazine published intermittently in the 1980s-1990s and revived during the fall 2013 semester.
  • Under the Robe, an arts and entertainment social tabloid published by The Barrister 1985–1988
  • Where the Children Play, a literature and arts magazine founded in 1994 by Phil Robinson and Abigail Myers

Journals

  • Brandeis Economic & Finance Review, founded by Jordan Caruso in 2010, is a student-run online and print publication dedicated to issues in business, economics, and finance. Nobel Laureate Dr. Robert Solow contributed an original article for the Fall 2010 printed publication.
  • Brandeis International Journal, a student-run semesterly publication on international affairs, which became the Brandeis Journal of Politics.
  • Brandeis University Law Journal, founded in 2008, is the only undergraduate-edited legal publication not affiliated with a law school in the United States.[138]
  • The Brandeis Scope reports on research occurring on the Brandeis University campus and affiliated laboratories in the sciences.
  • Louis Magazine, a defunct journal of intellectual discourse, 1999–2002
  • The Pulse, reports on advances in medicine; published by the Pre-Health Society

Athletics

Brandeis fields 19 Division III varsity athletic programs. Brandeis athletic teams compete in the University Athletic Association (UAA).

Brandeis has won NCAA team championships in men's soccer (1976) and men's cross country (1983), as well as 24 individual titles. Brandeis teams have earned 17 NCAA Division III Tournament berths and won eight Eastern Collegiate Athletic Association (ECAC) New England crowns in the last decade. Nine teams have earned national rankings, with men's and women's basketball and men's and women's soccer all ascending to the top 10 in the nation during that span.[139][140][141] In 2017, the men's team reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament for the sixth year in a row, and reached the Final Four for the second straight year. It was the fourth straight year they finished ranked a top ten team in the country. Also earning national rankings in '13-14 were women's cross country[142] and men's and women's tennis.[143][144]

Brandeis also sponsors 20 club sports. Among them, ultimate frisbee, crew, archery and women's rugby have had success on a national level. The program's many intramural sports are open to students, faculty and staff.

Research

Brandeis is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very High Research Activity".[145] In FY 2017, Brandeis spent $68.4 million on research and was ranked 174 in the nation by total R&D expenditure.[146][147] These include sponsored research funds from sources including the National Institutes of Health; the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Health and Human Services as well as a range of foundations.[148]

The university's Division of Science encompasses seven departments (Biochemistry, Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Mathematics, Physics, and Psychology), five interdepartmental programs (Biochemistry & Biophysics, Biological Physics, Biotechnology, Genetic Counseling, Molecular & Cell Biology, and Neuroscience), six science centers (Ashton Graybiel Spatial Orientation Laboratory, National Center for Behavioral Genomics, Rosenstiel Basic Medical Sciences Research Center, Sloan-Swartz Center for Theoretical Neurobiology, Benjamin and Mae Volen National Center for Complex Systems, and W.M. Keck Institute for Cellular Visualization), and more than 50 laboratories[149] that investigate fundamental life processes ranging from the structure and function of individual macromolecules to the mechanisms that control the behavior of whole organisms.

Faculty, postdoctoral fellows, graduate students and undergraduates investigate areas such as neuronal development and plasticity, signal transduction, immunology, the molecular basis of genetic recombination, and the three-dimensional structure of macromolecular assemblies. Brandeis science faculty include 12 National Academy of Science members,[150] three Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigators,[151] two Howard Hughes Medical Institute professors,[151] two MacArthur Foundation Fellows,[152] and 15 American Association for the Advancement of Sciences Fellows.[153]

Brandeis undergraduate students have the opportunity to work with faculty, postdoctoral students and graduate students to conduct original laboratory research.[154] Brandeis also offers a number of funding resources to support independent undergraduate research projects. In 2008, Brandeis established a Science Posse program, a merit-based scholarship program that admits students based on their academic, leadership and communication skills, and their interests in studying science. Founded by Irving Epstein, the Henry F. Fischbach Professor of Chemistry, and supported by a Howard Hughes Medical Institute grant, the Science Posse program is focused on increasing the recruitment and retention of students from traditionally underrepresented groups in the sciences. The program recruits, trains, and provides mentoring and other services for 10 inner-city Atlanta students each year who are interested in studying science at the undergraduate level.[155]

In 2014, the National Science Foundation renewed funding for Brandeis' Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC), which was established in 2008. This center supports interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary materials research and education that address fundamental problems in science and engineering that are important to society.[156] In particular, the center uses simplified components to create new materials that have some of the functionalities found in living organisms.

Student life

Student body composition as of May 2, 2022
Race and ethnicity[157] Total
White 44% 44
 
Foreign national 20% 20
 
Asian 15% 15
 
Hispanic 8% 8
 
Other[a] 7% 7
 
Black 6% 6
 
Economic diversity
Low-income[b] 16% 16
 
Affluent[c] 84% 84
 
 
Undergraduate Admissions Center
 
Shapiro Campus Center

The university has an active student government, the Brandeis Student Union,[158] as well as more than 270 student organizations.[159] Fraternities and sororities aren't officially recognized by Brandeis University, as they are contrary to a central tenet of the university, namely, that student organizations be open to all students, with membership determined by competency or interest. According to an official handbook, "exclusive or secret societies are inconsistent with the principles of openness to which the University is committed.".[160]

Brandeis has 11 a cappella groups, six undergraduate-run theater companies, one sketch comedy troupe (Boris' Kitchen, founded in 1987),[161] four improv-comedy groups, and many other cultural and arts clubs, as well as student activism groups that advocate for causes including environmentalism, immigration reform, LGBTQ rights, feminism, and anti-racism. Brandeis is also home to what has been cited as one of the country's few undergraduate-run law publications.[162] Of particular note is the Brandeis Academic Debate and Speech Society (B.A.D.A.S.S.), which consistently ranks as one of the top 10 debate teams in the United States, and participates across the globe in the World Universities Debating Championships each year. During the 2012–2013 school year, B.A.D.A.S.S. was the second most successful team overall on the American Parliamentary Debate Association Circuit.[163]

Cholmondeley's coffeehouse, commonly referred to as "Chums", is located in Brandeis' Usen Castle. Chums is a popular site for student performances and concerts, including Tracy Chapman, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Matt Pond PA, and Genesis (notable as their first American performance). Early footage of Chums appears in the short documentary film, Coffee House Rendezvous.[164] Cholmondley's is named after a notoriously ill-tempered Basset hound that was the on-campus pet for Ralph Norman, the campus photographer during the first years of Brandeis. The dog roamed the campus after dark, growling at students, often nipping at their cuffs and making a general nuisance of himself. After his death, the coffee house was named for him, not so much in remembrance but in celebration.[165] In 2015, in an email to student workers of the coffee house, Brandeis administration announced the immediate closure of Chums Coffeehouse, leaving said student workers unemployed. After significant pushback from the student body and alumni alike, the administration determined to make the closure temporary while the space underwent renovations.[166]

Brandeis University's Campus Sustainability Initiative seeks to reduce the university's environmental and climate change impact. The university's accomplishments in the arena of sustainability include the creation of a student-organized on-campus Farmers' Market, the implementation of a single-stream recycling program, and the transition to GreenE certified wind power for 15% of the school's electricity needs.[167] Brandeis also offers an environmental studies academic program, which includes courses such as Greening the Ivory Tower: Improving Sustainability of Brandeis and Community, which serves as an incubator for student led sustainability projects.[168] Student projects have included greening campus offices, running after-school environmental education programs for children in the Waltham schools, and cleaning up local streams and ponds.[169] In addition, a student-led project in 2014 established a rooftop farm atop the Gerstenzang science building consisting of 1,500 potted milk crates.[170]

Students also have the option of taking courses with a "Community Engaged Learning" (CEL) aspect. Community-engaged learning is an aspect of the university's broad-based commitment to experiential learning.

Emergency medical services are provided by the Brandeis Emergency Medical Corps, nicknamed BEMCO, a Massachusetts-certified EMT-Basic volunteer student organization[171] which does not charge a fee for any of its emergency services.[172]

Security escort services are provided around the campus and into Waltham by the student-run "Branvan," which runs on a daily schedule from 4:00 pm to 2:30 am on weekdays and from 12:00 pm to 2:30 am on weekends.

The university is 9 miles (14 km) west of Boston and is accessible through Brandeis/Roberts station on the Fitchburg Commuter Rail Line, a free shuttle that services Boston and Cambridge (Harvard Square) Thursday through Sunday,[173] the nearby Riverside subway station (above ground) on the Green Line, and the 553 MBTA bus.[174]

Wien International Scholarship

The Wien International Scholarship Program[175] was instituted by Brandeis University for international undergraduate students. It was established in 1958 by Lawrence A. and Mae Wien. The family had three objectives: to further international understanding, to provide foreign students an opportunity to study in the United States, and to enrich the intellectual and cultural life at Brandeis. The Wien Scholarship offers full or partial tuition awards; these awards are need-based and require the applicants to present outstanding academic and personal achievement. Each year, the recipients of the scholarship take a week-long tour of a destination in the United States. In previous years, the students have visited the United Nations in New York City, and did relief work in New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina. In April 2008, the university hosted a three-day-long celebration for the 50th anniversary of the program.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.

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Further reading

  • Pasternack, Susan, and Ralph Norman. From the Beginning: A Picture History of the First Four Decades of Brandeis University (1988)
  • Sachar, Abram L. Brandeis University: A Host at Last (1995), Scholarly history of the school
  • Whitfield, Stephen J., and Jonathan B. Krasner. "Jewish Liberalism and Racial Grievance in the Sixties: The Ordeal of Brandeis University," Modern Judaism, (Feb. 2015) 35#1 pp: 18–41.

External links

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website
  • Website of The Justice campus newspaper

Coordinates: 42°21′56″N 71°15′35″W / 42.365664°N 71.259742°W / 42.365664; -71.259742

brandeis, university, university, louisville, school, louis, brandeis, school, private, research, university, waltham, massachusetts, founded, 1948, sectarian, coeducational, institution, sponsored, jewish, community, brandeis, established, site, former, middl. For the University of Louisville law school see Louis D Brandeis School of Law Brandeis University ˈ b r ae n d aɪ s is a private research university in Waltham Massachusetts Founded in 1948 as a non sectarian coeducational institution sponsored by the Jewish community Brandeis was established on the site of the former Middlesex University The university is named after Louis Brandeis the first Jewish Justice of the U S Supreme Court Brandeis UniversityMottoHebrew אמת romanized Emet Truth Motto in English Truth even unto its innermost parts 1 TypePrivate research universityEstablishedOctober 20 1948 74 years ago 1948 10 20 2 AccreditationNECHEAcademic affiliationsAAUNAICU 3 AICUMEndowment 1 20 billion 2022 4 PresidentRonald D LiebowitzProvostCarol FierkeAcademic staff544 2021 5 Administrative staff1 314 2021 5 Students5 458 2021 Undergraduates3 591 2021 5 Postgraduates1 967 2021 5 LocationWaltham Massachusetts United StatesCampusSmall City 6 235 acres 95 ha 5 NewspaperThe Brandeis HootThe JusticeColors Brandeis Blue 7 NicknameJudgesSporting affiliationsNCAA Division III UAAECACMascotThe Judge and Ollie the Owl named for Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr Websitewww wbr brandeis wbr eduIn 2018 it had a total enrollment of 5 800 students on its suburban campus spanning 235 acres 95 hectares 5 The institution offers more than 43 majors and 46 minors and two thirds of undergraduate classes have 20 students or fewer 8 It is classified among R1 Doctoral Universities Very high research activity 9 and is a member of Association of American Universities and the Boston Consortium which allows students to cross register to attend courses at other institutions including Boston College Boston University and Tufts University 10 11 The university has a strong liberal arts focus and attracts a geographically and economically diverse student body with 72 of its non international undergraduates being from out of state 50 of full time undergraduates receiving need based financial aid and 13 5 being recipients of the federal Pell Grant 34 of students identify as Jewish 12 It has the eighth largest proportion of international students of any university in the United States 8 13 14 15 Alumni and affiliates of the university include former first lady of the United States Eleanor Roosevelt Nobel Prize laureate Roderick MacKinnon and Fields Medalist Edward Witten as well as foreign heads of state congressmen governors diplomats and recipients of the Nobel Prize Pulitzer Prize Academy Award Emmy Award and MacArthur Fellowship 16 Brandeis University is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education 17 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 Opening 1 3 Early years 1 4 1960s Countercultural epicenter 1 4 1 Student takeover of Ford Hall 1 5 Late 20th century Institutional crisis 1 6 21st century 1 7 Presidents 2 Campus 2 1 The Heller School 2 2 International Business School 2 3 The Rabb School of Continuing Studies 2 4 Graduate School of Arts and Sciences 2 5 Rose Art Museum 2 6 Library 3 Academics 3 1 Rankings 3 2 Organization and administration 3 3 Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies 3 4 Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism 3 5 Steinhardt Social Research Institute 3 6 Women s Studies Research Center 4 Notable faculty and graduates 5 Publications 5 1 Newspaper and yearbook 5 2 Magazines 5 3 Journals 6 Athletics 7 Research 8 Student life 9 Wien International Scholarship 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditFounding Edit Seal of the former Middlesex University Usen Castle a building on campus Middlesex University was a medical school located in Waltham Massachusetts that was at the time the only medical school in Massachusetts that did not impose a quota on Jews The founder John Hall Smith died in 1944 Smith s will stipulated that the school should go to any group willing to use it to establish a non sectarian university 18 Within two years Middlesex University was on the brink of financial collapse The school had not been able to secure accreditation by the American Medical Association which Smith partially attributed to institutional antisemitism in the American Medical Association 19 and as a result Massachusetts had all but shut it down Smith s son C Ruggles Smith was desperate for a way to save something of Middlesex University He learned of a New York committee headed by Israel Goldstein that was seeking a campus to establish a Jewish sponsored secular university Smith approached Goldstein with a proposal to give the Middlesex campus and charter to Goldstein s committee in the hope that his committee might possess the apparent ability to reestablish the School of Medicine on an approved basis While Goldstein was concerned about being saddled with a failing medical school he was excited about the opportunity to secure a 100 acre 40 hectare campus not far from New York the premier Jewish community in the world and only 9 miles 14 km from Boston one of the important Jewish population centers 19 Goldstein agreed to accept Smith s offer proceeding to recruit George Alpert a Boston lawyer with fundraising experience as national vice president of the United Jewish Appeal citation needed Brandeis University sign Alpert had worked his way through Boston University School of Law and co founded the firm of Alpert and Alpert Alpert s firm had a long association with the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad of which he was to become president from 1956 to 1961 20 21 He is best known today as the father of Richard Alpert Baba Ram Dass 22 He was influential in Boston s Jewish community His Judaism tended to be social rather than spiritual 23 He was involved in assisting children displaced from Germany 24 Alpert was to be chairman of Brandeis from 1946 to 1954 and a trustee from 1946 until his death 20 By February 5 1946 Goldstein had recruited Albert Einstein whose involvement drew national attention to the nascent university 25 Einstein believed the university would attract the best young people in all fields satisfying a real need 26 In March 1946 Goldstein said the foundation had raised 10 million that it would use to open the school by the following year 27 The foundation purchased Middlesex University s land and buildings for two million dollars 26 The charter of this operation was transferred to the foundation along with the campus The founding organization was announced in August and named The Albert Einstein Foundation for Higher Learning Inc 28 The new school would be a Jewish sponsored secular university open to students and faculty of all races and religions 28 Rabb Graduate Center 1965 Benjamin Thompson The trustees offered to name the university after Einstein in the summer of 1946 but Einstein declined and on July 16 1946 the board decided the university would be named after Louis Brandeis 29 Einstein objected to what he thought was excessively expansive promotion and to Goldstein s sounding out Abram L Sachar as a possible president without consulting Einstein Einstein took great offense at Goldstein s having invited Cardinal Francis Spellman to participate in a fundraising event Einstein also became alarmed by press announcements that exaggerated the school s success at fundraising Einstein threatened to sever ties with the foundation on September 2 1946 Believing the venture could not succeed without Einstein Goldstein quickly agreed to resign himself and Einstein recanted 30 Einstein s near departure was publicly denied 31 32 Goldstein said that despite his resignation he would continue to solicit donations for the foundation 31 On November 1 1946 the foundation announced that the new university would be named Brandeis University after Louis D Brandeis justice of the United States Supreme Court 33 By the end of 1946 the foundation said it had raised over five hundred thousand dollars 34 and two months later it said it had doubled that amount 35 The Brandeis board felt it was in no position to make the investment in the medical school that would enable it to receive accreditation and closed it in 1947 Einstein wanted Middlesex University s veterinary school s standards to be improved before expanding to the school 30 while others in the foundation wanted to simply close the veterinary school 32 which by the winter of 1947 had an enrollment of just about 100 students 35 A professional study of the veterinary school recommended dismissing certain instructors and requiring end of year examinations for the students but the foundation declined to enact any of the recommendations to the dismay of Einstein and a couple of the foundation s trustees 36 In early June 1947 Einstein made a final break with the foundation 30 37 The veterinary school was closed despite students protests and demonstrations 32 According to George Alpert a lawyer responsible for much of the organizational effort Einstein had wanted to offer the presidency of the school to left wing scholar Harold Laski 38 someone that Alpert had characterized as a man utterly alien to American principles of democracy tarred with the Communist brush 25 He said I can compromise on any subject but one that one is Americanism 32 Two of the foundation s trustees S Ralph Lazrus and Dr Otto Nathan quit the foundation at the same time as Einstein 30 In response Alpert said that Lazrus and Nathan had tried to give Brandeis University a radical political orientation 39 Alpert also criticized Lazrus lack of fundraising success and Nathan s failure to organize an educational advisory committee 39 Einstein said he Lazrus and Nathan have always been and have always acted in complete harmony 40 Opening Edit Brandeis s admissions building at night On April 26 1948 Brandeis University announced that Abram L Sachar chairman of the National Hillel Commission had been chosen as Brandeis first president 41 Sachar promised that Brandeis University would follow Louis Brandeis principles of academic integrity and service 42 He also promised that students and faculty would never be chosen based on quotas of genetic or ethnic or economic distribution because choices based on quotas are based on the assumption that there are standard population strains on the belief that the ideal American must look and act like an eighteenth century Puritan that the melting pot of America must mold all who all who live here into such a pattern 43 Students who applied to the school were not asked their race religion or ancestry 44 Brandeis decided its undergraduate instruction would not be organized with traditional departments or divisions and instead it would have four schools namely the School of General Studies the School of Social Studies the School of Humanities and the School of Science 45 On October 14 1948 43 Brandeis University received its first freshman class of 107 students 46 They were taught by thirteen instructors 47 in eight buildings on a 100 acre 40 hectare campus 48 Students came from 28 states and six foreign countries 49 The library was formerly a barn students slept in the former medical school building and two army barracks and the cafeteria was where the medical school had stored cadavers 18 Historians Elinor and Robert Slater later called the opening of Brandeis one of the great moments in Jewish history 50 Early years Edit Eleanor Roosevelt joined the board of trustees in 1949 51 Joseph M Proskauer joined the board in 1950 52 Construction of on campus dormitories began in March 1950 with the goal of ninety percent of students living on campus 53 Construction on an athletic field began in May 1950 54 Brandeis football team played its first game on September 30 1950 a road win against Maine Maritime Academy 55 Its first varsity game was on September 29 1951 with a home loss against the University of New Hampshire 56 Brandeis Stadium opened in time for a home win against American International College on October 13 1951 57 The team won four of nine games during its first season Construction of a 2 000 seat amphitheater began in February 1952 58 The state legislature of Massachusetts authorized Brandeis to award master s degrees doctorate degrees and honorary degrees in 1951 46 Brandeis first graduating class of 101 students received degrees on June 16 1952 47 59 Leonard Bernstein director of Brandeis Center of Creative Arts planned a four day ceremony to commemorate the occasion 59 Held in the newly opened amphitheater the ceremony included the world premier of Bernstein s opera Trouble in Tahiti 59 60 Eleanor Roosevelt and Massachusetts Governor Paul A Dever spoke at the commencement ceremony 61 In 1953 Einstein declined the offer of an honorary degree from Brandeis writing to Brandeis president Abram L Sachar that what happened in the stage of preparation of Brandeis University was not at all caused by a misunderstanding and cannot be made good any more 62 Instead at the graduation ceremony for Brandeis second graduating class of 108 students individuals given Brandeis first honorary degrees included Illinois Senator Paul H Douglas Rabbi Louis Ginzberg and Alpert 63 1953 also saw the creation of the Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies one of the first academic programs in Jewish Studies at an American university Among the founders were distinguished emigre scholars Alexander Altmann Nathan Glatzer and Simon Rawidowicz Brandeis inaugurated its graduate program the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in 1954 64 In the same year Brandeis became fully accredited joining the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools 48 As of 1954 Brandeis had 22 buildings and a 192 acre 78 hectare campus 48 Chapels Pond In 1954 Brandeis began construction on an interfaith center consisting of separate Roman Catholic Protestant and Jewish chapels 65 Designed by the architectural firm of Harrison amp Abramovitz the three chapels surrounded a natural pond 65 Brandeis announced that no official chaplains would be named and attendance at chapel services would not be required 65 The Roman Catholic chapel was named Bethlehem meaning house of bread and it was dedicated on September 9 1955 66 Dedicated on September 11 1955 the Jewish chapel was named in memory of Mendel and Leah Berlin parents of Boston surgeon Dr David D Berlin 67 Named in memory of Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan the Protestant chapel was dedicated on October 30 1955 67 Farber Library at left 1984 Abramovitz Harris amp Kingsland Goldfarb Library at right 1959 Harrison amp Abramovitz In 1956 Brandeis received a one million dollar donation from New York industrialist Jack A Goldfarb to build a library 68 69 The building named the Bertha and Jacob Goldfarb Library in his honor was designed by Harrison amp Abramovitz a firm which designed many campus buildings in the 1950s 69 Built of brick and glass the library was designed to hold 750 000 volumes 69 Robert Berks statue of Louis Brandeis stands atop the outcropping in Fellows Garden in the center of campus 1956 A nine foot bronze statue of Justice Louis D Brandeis is a campus landmark The sculpture created by sculptor Robert Berks was unveiled in 1956 in honor of the 100th anniversary of Brandeis birth 70 71 Berks wife Dorothy had been the Justice s personal assistant for 39 years and wore his actual robes to model the statue 71 After Brandeis University awarded an honorary doctorate to Israeli Premier David Ben Gurion in 1960 72 Jordan boycotted Brandeis University announcing that it would not issue currency permits to Jordanian students at Brandeis 73 Beginning in fall 1959 singer Eddie Fisher established two scholarships at the university one for classical and one for popular music in the name of Eddie Cantor 74 On May 16 1960 Brandeis announced it would discontinue its varsity football team 75 President Abram Sachar pointed to the cost of the team as one reason for the decision 75 Brandeis football coach Benny Friedman said it was difficult to recruit football players who were also excellent students with so much competition in the Boston metropolitan area 76 Brandeis said the discontinuation of varsity football would allow it to expand intercollegiate activity in other sports 76 During its nine years of varsity play Brandeis football team recorded 34 wins 33 losses and four ties 76 In 1985 Brandeis was elected to membership in the Association of American Universities an association that focuses on graduate education and research 77 1960s Countercultural epicenter Edit Brandeis became an epicenter of radical student activism and anti Vietnam War protests during the counterculture of the 1960s 78 It was the National Student Strike Information Center during the student strike of 1970 78 Student takeover of Ford Hall Edit On January 8 1969 about 70 black students entered then student center Ford Hall ejected everyone else from the building and refused to leave 79 The students demands included the hiring of more black faculty members increasing black student enrollment from four percent to ten percent of the student body 80 establishing an independent department on African American studies 81 and an increase in scholarships for black students 82 Over 200 white students staged a sit in in the lobby of the administration building 83 President Morris B Abram said that although he recognized the deep frustration and anger which black students here and all over the country and often is the indifference and duplicity of white men in relation to blacks 83 the students actions were an affront to the university The faculty condemned the students actions as well 80 On the fourth day of the protest the Middlesex Superior Court issued a temporary restraining order requiring the students to leave Ford Hall 81 While Abram would not allow the order to be enforced by forcibly removing the students from Ford Hall 65 students had been suspended for their actions 83 On January 18 the black students exited Ford Hall ending the eleven day occupation of the building 84 There had been no violence or destruction of property during the occupation and Brandeis gave the students amnesty from their actions 84 Ronald Walters became the first chair of Afro American studies at Brandeis later the same year 85 Ford Hall was demolished in August 2000 to make way for the Shapiro Campus Center which was opened and dedicated October 3 2002 Late 20th century Institutional crisis Edit In the 1970s Brandeis faced a financial crisis as donations from American Jews decreased as they turned toward support for Israel and other causes 78 Samuel O Thier president from 1991 to 1994 helped to restabilize the university 78 21st century Edit The Volen Center for Complex Systems 1994 CannonDesign Landsman Research Facility completed 2005 dedicated 2008 home to a superconducting magnet 86 In 2014 Brandeis announced it would offer an honorary doctorate to Ayaan Hirsi Ali a staunch supporter of women s rights 87 and an outspoken campaigner against female genital mutilation honor killing and Islamic extremism in general After complaints from the Council on American Islamic Relations and internal consultation with faculty and students Brandeis publicly withdrew the offer citing that Ali s statements condemning Islam 88 were inconsistent with the University s core values 89 87 out of 511 faculty members at Brandeis signed a letter to the university president The university announced that the decision to withdraw the invitation was made after a discussion between Ayaan Ali and President Frederick Lawrence stating that She is a compelling public figure and advocate for women s rights but we cannot overlook certain of her past statements 90 According to Brandeis Ali was never invited to speak at commencement she was only invited to receive an honorary degree 91 Ali said that Brandeis decision surprised her because Brandeis said they did not know what she had said in the past even though her speeches were publicly available on the internet calling it a feeble excuse 92 Ali stated that the university s decision was motivated in part by fear of offending Muslims 92 She argued that the spirit of free expression referred to in the Brandeis statement has been betrayed and stifled 93 While some commentators such as Abdullah Antepli the Muslim chaplain and adjunct faculty of Islamic Studies at Duke University applauded the decision and warned against making renegades into heroes 94 other academic commentators such as the University of Chicago s Jerry Coyne 95 and the George Mason University Foundation Professor David Bernstein 96 criticized the decision as an attack on academic values such as freedom of inquiry and intellectual independence from religious pressure groups Presidents Edit The presidents of Brandeis University are as follows Presidents of Brandeis University Name Tenure NoteAbram L Sachar 1948 1968 41 Morris B Abram 1968 1970 97 Charles I Schottland 1970 1972 98 Marver H Bernstein 1972 1983 99 Evelyn E Handler 1983 1991 100 Stuart H Altman 1990 1991 101 interimSamuel O Thier 1991 1994 102 Jehuda Reinharz 1994 2010 103 Frederick M Lawrence 2011 2015 104 Lisa M Lynch 2015 2016 interimRonald D Liebowitz 2016 presentCampus Edit Aerial view of campus in Waltham Massachusetts Carl and Ruth Shapiro Campus Center 2002 Charles Rose Architects The Heller School Edit Main article Heller School for Social Policy and ManagementThe Heller School for Social Policy and Management is notable for its programs in social policy health policy and management and international development Researchers at the graduate school and research institution research policy in health mental health substance abuse children youth and families aging international and community development developmental disabilities philanthropy and work and inequalities U S News amp World Report ranked the Heller School in the top 10 schools of social policy in its 2013 rankings 105 International Business School Edit Brandeis International Business School is a professional school dedicated to teaching and research in business finance economics and data analytics The International Business School is an AACSB accredited institution with programs ranked among the best in the world The International Business School offers five graduate programs two accelerated graduate programs six dual degree programs and undergraduate majors and minors in business and economics The school was established in 1994 as the Graduate School of International Economics and Finance offering a PhD in International Economics and Finance and Master of Arts in International Economics and Finance MA In 1998 the school launched the Master of Business Administration MBA and Master of Science in finance MSF programs In 2003 the school changed its name to Brandeis International Business School In 2018 the school launched the Master of Science in business analytics MSBA program The Rabb School of Continuing Studies Edit Carl J Shapiro Science Center 2009 Payette With more than 4 000 enrollments a year 106 the Rabb School of Continuing Studies develops educational offerings across four distinct divisions It provides professional development opportunities through degree programs personal enrichment and lifelong learning Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Edit One of four graduate schools on campus the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences GSAS offers over 40 programs 18 of which are doctoral programs Brandeis graduate students are eligible to cross register for courses at Boston College Boston University Tufts University and the Graduate Consortium in Women s Studies at MIT Brandeis is also a member of the Boston Library Consortium 107 composed of 18 academic and research institutions in Massachusetts Connecticut Rhode Island and New Hampshire Rose Art Museum Edit Main article Rose Art Museum The Rose Art Museum 1961 Harrison amp Abramovitz Established in 1961 the Rose Art Museum is a museum dedicated to 20th and 21st century art Library Edit The Brandeis Library 108 provides resources and services to support research scholarship teaching and learning on campus The library manages more than 1 500 000 physical volumes and more than 600 000 electronic books as well as electronic journals and online databases As part of the library the Robert D Farber University Archives amp Special Collections Department houses Brandeis University s unique and rare primary sources which support teaching research and scholarship at the university and beyond The department comprises University Archives containing materials related to Brandeis University and Special Collections including rare books original manuscripts dating from the 13th to 21st centuries unique primary source material and a wide variety of visual material citation needed Subject strengths include the Holocaust and Jewish resistance to persecution Jewish American and emigre writers composers and performing artists left and right wing movements in the United States and Europe and American and European political leaders and social reformers Major collections include material on the Spanish Civil War novelist Joseph Heller caricaturist Honore Daumier and Justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis Campus buildings viewed from Starr Plaza 1997 Pressley Associates left to right Shapiro Campus Center 2002 Charles Rose architects Gryzmish Center 1959 Hugh Stubbins Irving Presidential Enclave 1959 Hugh Stubbins Bernstein Marcus Administration Center 1959 Hugh Stubbins Academics EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2009 Rankings Edit Academic rankingsNationalARWU 109 95 116Forbes 110 128THE WSJ 111 109U S News amp World Report 112 44Washington Monthly 113 113GlobalARWU 114 301 400QS 115 468THE 116 201 250U S News amp World Report 117 250Brandeis was ranked No 1 among the top 380 colleges in the United States for student engagement in community service according to The Princeton Review in 2015 118 U S News amp World Report ranked Brandeis tied for No 44 in its 2022 annual list of Best National Universities 119 Acceptance to Brandeis was characterized as most selective It was ranked No 9 of Most Liberal Students in 2009 and No 10 in 2014 120 No 34 among Best Values in Private Universities according to Kiplinger s Personal Finance in its 2016 ranking of best value private universities in the United States 121 No 2 among national universities for doctoral program in Neuroscience and Neurobiology tied with Johns Hopkins University and Yale University according to the National Research Council United States in 2010 122 No 99 among 650 undergraduate institutions and 51st among national research universities in the 2017 ranking from Forbes 123 One of the Top 20 Small Research Universities based on the Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index 2006 07 124 Named the 6th happiest university by Unigo in 2012 125 Brandeis International Business School was ranked No 1 by Financial Times from 2010 through 2013 for its Master of Arts in International Economics and Finance Program 126 Slosberg Music Center Organization and administration Edit The schools of the university include The Brandeis University College of Arts and Sciences The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences The Heller School for Social Policy and Management Rabb School of Summer and Continuing Studies Brandeis International Business SchoolThe College of Arts and Sciences comprises 24 departments and 22 interdepartmental programs which in total offer 43 majors and 47 minors The Heller School for Social Policy and Management founded in 1959 is noteworthy for its graduate programs in healthcare administration social policy social work and international development 127 128 Internships research assistantships and other hands on experiences are available throughout the curriculum The global and experiential dimensions of education at Brandeis are carried out through international centers and institutes which sponsor lectures and colloquia and add to the ranks of distinguished scholars on campus The Brandeis University Press a member of the University Press of New England publishes books in a variety of scholarly and general interest fields The Goldfarb Library at Brandeis has more than 1 6 million volumes and 300 000 e journals The library also houses a large United States Government archive Brandeis University is a part of the Boston Library Consortium which allows its students faculty and staff to access and borrow books and other materials from other BLC institutions including Tufts University and Williams College Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies Edit In 1980 Brandeis University established the Maurice and Marilyn Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies 129 the first academic center devoted to the study of Jewish life in the United States The Cohen Center s work spans basic research on Jewish identity to applied educational evaluation studies The center s recent signature studies include research with participants in Taglit Birthright Israel investigations of synagogue transformation analyses of Jewish summer camping and socio demographic studies of Jewish communities throughout the United States CMJS research has altered the understanding of contemporary Jewish life and the role of Jewish institutions in the United States Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism Edit The Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism was launched in September 2004 as the first investigative reporting center based at a United States university 130 It was named for founding benefactors Elaine Schuster and Gerald Schuster The institute s major projects were the Political amp Social Justice Project the Justice Brandeis Innocence Project the Gender amp Justice Project 131 The Schuster Institute closed at the end of 2018 due to financial considerations 130 Steinhardt Social Research Institute Edit The Steinhardt Social Research Institute 132 was created in 2005 from a gift from Michael Steinhardt as a forum to collect analyze and disseminate data about the Jewish community and about religion and ethnicity in the United States The first mission of SSRI was to interpret the inherent problems with the National Jewish Population Survey of 2000 NJPS SSRI has done a Jewish Population Survey of the Greater Boston area the results of which were released on November 9 2006 133 The Institute collects and organizes existing socio demographic data from private communal and government sources and will conduct local and national studies of the character of American Jewry and Jewish organizations The work of the institute is done by a multidisciplinary staff of faculty and scholars working with undergraduate and graduate students and augmented by visiting scholars and consultants The institute works in close collaboration with the Maurice and Marilyn Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies Women s Studies Research Center Edit Women s Studies Research Center The Women s Studies Research Center WSRC is directed by Professor of Sociology and Women s Gender and Sexuality Studies Karen V Hansen 134 The WSRC was founded in 2001 by Professor Emerita of Sociology Shulamit Reinharz It is home to three general programs The Scholars Program which consists of about 70 academic scholars from around the world who study gender through an interdisciplinary lens The Student Scholar Partnership Program which pairs Brandeis University undergraduate students with WSRC scholars for semester long paid research assistantships The Arts Program which oversees the Kniznick Gallery devoted to feminist artworkThe center is located at the Epstein Building on the Brandeis campus Notable faculty and graduates EditMain article List of Brandeis University people Roderick MacKinnon BA 1978 won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2003 Karen Uhlenbeck PhD 1968 First and to date only woman to win the Abel Prize in Mathematics Edward Witten BA 1971 is a theoretical physicist and Fields Medal recipient Leslie Lamport PhD 1972 is a Turing Award winning computer scientist and inventor of the first algorithm for reading the state of an arbitrary distributed system Robert Zimmer BA 1968 is a mathematician and served as president of the University of Chicago from 2006 to 2021 Thomas Friedman BA 1975 won the Pulitzer Prize three times Margo Jefferson BA 1970 won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism V Balakrishnan physicist PhD 1970 is an Indian theoretical physicist Angela Davis BA 1965 is an American political activist philosopher academic and author Adam Cheyer BA 1988 is a co founder of Siri and former director of engineering for the iPhone Christie Hefner BA 1974 is the former CEO of Playboy Enterprises Debra Messing BA 1990 is an Emmy Award winning actress David Kertzer PhD 1974 is a Pulitzer Prize winning historian 2014 Mitch Albom BA is a best selling author known for writing Tuesdays with Morrie and The Five People You Meet in Heaven Sidney Blumenthal BA 1969 is a journalist and political operative known for his association with President Clinton Guy Raz BA 1996 is a radio host for NPR Abbie Hoffman BA 1959 was a co founder of the Youth International Party and one of the Chicago Seven Daniel B Shapiro BA 1991 was the United States Ambassador to Israel under Barack Obama Jeffrey C Hall Professor Emeritus of Biology won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2017 Michael Rosbash Peter Gruber Chair in Neuroscience won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2017 Robert Reich the United States Secretary of Labor was a professor of social and economic policy at Brandeis Anita Hill an American lawyer academic and public figure teaches at Brandeis John B Anderson a member of the U S House of Representatives and Presidential Candidate in the election of 1980 taught at Brandeis Frank Bidart is a poet who has received the Pulitzer Prize as well as the National Book Award twice Pauli Murray was a civil rights activist and lawyer who taught at Brandeis Eleanor Roosevelt was the longest serving First Lady of the United States as the wife of Franklin D Roosevelt the first U S delegate to the United Nations and an advocate for women s rights and civil rights for African Americans Leonard Bernstein acclaimed American composer and conductor faculty member 1951 to 1956 and early supporter of the university 135 Among the better known graduates are co creators of the television show Friends David Crane and Marta Kauffman political activists Abbie Hoffman and Angela Davis journalists Thomas Friedman and Paul Solman Congressman Stephen J Solarz physicist and Fields medalist Edward Witten mathematician and Abel Prize recipient Karen Uhlenbeck novelist Ha Jin political theorist Michael Walzer actresses Debra Messing and Loretta Devine philosopher Michael Sandel Olympic Silver Medalist fencer Tim Morehouse social and psychoanalytic theorist Nancy Chodorow author Mitch Albom filmmakers Debra Granik and Jonathan Newman music producer Jon Landau 136 and computer scientist Leslie Lamport Among the distinguished faculty present and past are mathematician Heisuke Hironaka a Fields medalist biologists and Nobel laureates Michael Rosbash and Jeffrey C Hall composers Arthur Berger Leonard Bernstein Martin Boykan Eric Chasalow Irving Fine Donald Martino David Rakowski Harold Shapero and Yehudi Wyner social theorist Herbert Marcuse psychologist Abraham Maslow linguist James Pustejovsky human rights activist Eleanor Roosevelt Anita Hill historian David Hackett Fischer economist Thomas Sowell chemist S Katharine Hammond diplomat Dennis Ross children s author Margret Rey former United States Secretary of Labor Robert Reich sociologist Morrie Schwartz poets Olga Broumas and Adrienne Rich author Stephen McCauley virologist and author of Fields Virology Bernard N Fields and Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Eileen McNamara Publications EditNewspaper and yearbook Edit Archon the yearbook The Barrister News Ltd was a politically neutral broadside weekly newspaper with nationally syndicated features published 1985 1991 137 The Blowfish a satirical newspaper founded in February 2006 is published every other Thursday The first issue appeared inside The Hoot and every issue since then has been published independently The Justice which was founded in 1949 one year after the university s inception is an administratively independent weekly newspaper distributed every Tuesday during term The Brandeis Hoot founded in 2005 is an independent weekly newspaper published on Fridays Magazines Edit The Louis Lunatic founded in the winter of 2004 is a student run sports magazine released each semester discussing Brandeis and national sports Gravity a humor magazine founded in 1990 Laurel Moon a literary magazine launched in 1991 Artemis a feminist magazine published intermittently in the 1980s 1990s and revived during the fall 2013 semester Under the Robe an arts and entertainment social tabloid published by The Barrister 1985 1988 Where the Children Play a literature and arts magazine founded in 1994 by Phil Robinson and Abigail MyersJournals Edit Brandeis Economic amp Finance Review founded by Jordan Caruso in 2010 is a student run online and print publication dedicated to issues in business economics and finance Nobel Laureate Dr Robert Solow contributed an original article for the Fall 2010 printed publication Brandeis International Journal a student run semesterly publication on international affairs which became the Brandeis Journal of Politics Brandeis University Law Journal founded in 2008 is the only undergraduate edited legal publication not affiliated with a law school in the United States 138 The Brandeis Scope reports on research occurring on the Brandeis University campus and affiliated laboratories in the sciences Louis Magazine a defunct journal of intellectual discourse 1999 2002 The Pulse reports on advances in medicine published by the Pre Health SocietyAthletics EditMain article Brandeis Judges Brandeis fields 19 Division III varsity athletic programs Brandeis athletic teams compete in the University Athletic Association UAA Brandeis has won NCAA team championships in men s soccer 1976 and men s cross country 1983 as well as 24 individual titles Brandeis teams have earned 17 NCAA Division III Tournament berths and won eight Eastern Collegiate Athletic Association ECAC New England crowns in the last decade Nine teams have earned national rankings with men s and women s basketball and men s and women s soccer all ascending to the top 10 in the nation during that span 139 140 141 In 2017 the men s team reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament for the sixth year in a row and reached the Final Four for the second straight year It was the fourth straight year they finished ranked a top ten team in the country Also earning national rankings in 13 14 were women s cross country 142 and men s and women s tennis 143 144 Brandeis also sponsors 20 club sports Among them ultimate frisbee crew archery and women s rugby have had success on a national level The program s many intramural sports are open to students faculty and staff Research EditBrandeis is classified among R1 Doctoral Universities Very High Research Activity 145 In FY 2017 Brandeis spent 68 4 million on research and was ranked 174 in the nation by total R amp D expenditure 146 147 These include sponsored research funds from sources including the National Institutes of Health the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Health and Human Services as well as a range of foundations 148 The university s Division of Science encompasses seven departments Biochemistry Biology Chemistry Computer Science Mathematics Physics and Psychology five interdepartmental programs Biochemistry amp Biophysics Biological Physics Biotechnology Genetic Counseling Molecular amp Cell Biology and Neuroscience six science centers Ashton Graybiel Spatial Orientation Laboratory National Center for Behavioral Genomics Rosenstiel Basic Medical Sciences Research Center Sloan Swartz Center for Theoretical Neurobiology Benjamin and Mae Volen National Center for Complex Systems and W M Keck Institute for Cellular Visualization and more than 50 laboratories 149 that investigate fundamental life processes ranging from the structure and function of individual macromolecules to the mechanisms that control the behavior of whole organisms Faculty postdoctoral fellows graduate students and undergraduates investigate areas such as neuronal development and plasticity signal transduction immunology the molecular basis of genetic recombination and the three dimensional structure of macromolecular assemblies Brandeis science faculty include 12 National Academy of Science members 150 three Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigators 151 two Howard Hughes Medical Institute professors 151 two MacArthur Foundation Fellows 152 and 15 American Association for the Advancement of Sciences Fellows 153 Brandeis undergraduate students have the opportunity to work with faculty postdoctoral students and graduate students to conduct original laboratory research 154 Brandeis also offers a number of funding resources to support independent undergraduate research projects In 2008 Brandeis established a Science Posse program a merit based scholarship program that admits students based on their academic leadership and communication skills and their interests in studying science Founded by Irving Epstein the Henry F Fischbach Professor of Chemistry and supported by a Howard Hughes Medical Institute grant the Science Posse program is focused on increasing the recruitment and retention of students from traditionally underrepresented groups in the sciences The program recruits trains and provides mentoring and other services for 10 inner city Atlanta students each year who are interested in studying science at the undergraduate level 155 In 2014 the National Science Foundation renewed funding for Brandeis Materials Research Science and Engineering Center MRSEC which was established in 2008 This center supports interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary materials research and education that address fundamental problems in science and engineering that are important to society 156 In particular the center uses simplified components to create new materials that have some of the functionalities found in living organisms Student life EditStudent body composition as of May 2 2022 Race and ethnicity 157 TotalWhite 44 44 Foreign national 20 20 Asian 15 15 Hispanic 8 8 Other a 7 7 Black 6 6 Economic diversityLow income b 16 16 Affluent c 84 84 Undergraduate Admissions Center Shapiro Campus Center The university has an active student government the Brandeis Student Union 158 as well as more than 270 student organizations 159 Fraternities and sororities aren t officially recognized by Brandeis University as they are contrary to a central tenet of the university namely that student organizations be open to all students with membership determined by competency or interest According to an official handbook exclusive or secret societies are inconsistent with the principles of openness to which the University is committed 160 Brandeis has 11 a cappella groups six undergraduate run theater companies one sketch comedy troupe Boris Kitchen founded in 1987 161 four improv comedy groups and many other cultural and arts clubs as well as student activism groups that advocate for causes including environmentalism immigration reform LGBTQ rights feminism and anti racism Brandeis is also home to what has been cited as one of the country s few undergraduate run law publications 162 Of particular note is the Brandeis Academic Debate and Speech Society B A D A S S which consistently ranks as one of the top 10 debate teams in the United States and participates across the globe in the World Universities Debating Championships each year During the 2012 2013 school year B A D A S S was the second most successful team overall on the American Parliamentary Debate Association Circuit 163 Cholmondeley s coffeehouse commonly referred to as Chums is located in Brandeis Usen Castle Chums is a popular site for student performances and concerts including Tracy Chapman Bob Dylan Joan Baez Matt Pond PA and Genesis notable as their first American performance Early footage of Chums appears in the short documentary film Coffee House Rendezvous 164 Cholmondley s is named after a notoriously ill tempered Basset hound that was the on campus pet for Ralph Norman the campus photographer during the first years of Brandeis The dog roamed the campus after dark growling at students often nipping at their cuffs and making a general nuisance of himself After his death the coffee house was named for him not so much in remembrance but in celebration 165 In 2015 in an email to student workers of the coffee house Brandeis administration announced the immediate closure of Chums Coffeehouse leaving said student workers unemployed After significant pushback from the student body and alumni alike the administration determined to make the closure temporary while the space underwent renovations 166 Brandeis University s Campus Sustainability Initiative seeks to reduce the university s environmental and climate change impact The university s accomplishments in the arena of sustainability include the creation of a student organized on campus Farmers Market the implementation of a single stream recycling program and the transition to GreenE certified wind power for 15 of the school s electricity needs 167 Brandeis also offers an environmental studies academic program which includes courses such as Greening the Ivory Tower Improving Sustainability of Brandeis and Community which serves as an incubator for student led sustainability projects 168 Student projects have included greening campus offices running after school environmental education programs for children in the Waltham schools and cleaning up local streams and ponds 169 In addition a student led project in 2014 established a rooftop farm atop the Gerstenzang science building consisting of 1 500 potted milk crates 170 Students also have the option of taking courses with a Community Engaged Learning CEL aspect Community engaged learning is an aspect of the university s broad based commitment to experiential learning Emergency medical services are provided by the Brandeis Emergency Medical Corps nicknamed BEMCO a Massachusetts certified EMT Basic volunteer student organization 171 which does not charge a fee for any of its emergency services 172 Security escort services are provided around the campus and into Waltham by the student run Branvan which runs on a daily schedule from 4 00 pm to 2 30 am on weekdays and from 12 00 pm to 2 30 am on weekends The university is 9 miles 14 km west of Boston and is accessible through Brandeis Roberts station on the Fitchburg Commuter Rail Line a free shuttle that services Boston and Cambridge Harvard Square Thursday through Sunday 173 the nearby Riverside subway station above ground on the Green Line and the 553 MBTA bus 174 Wien International Scholarship EditThe Wien International Scholarship Program 175 was instituted by Brandeis University for international undergraduate students It was established in 1958 by Lawrence A and Mae Wien The family had three objectives to further international understanding to provide foreign students an opportunity to study in the United States and to enrich the intellectual and cultural life at Brandeis The Wien Scholarship offers full or partial tuition awards these awards are need based and require the applicants to present outstanding academic and personal achievement Each year the recipients of the scholarship take a week long tour of a destination in the United States In previous years the students have visited the United Nations in New York City and did relief work in New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina In April 2008 the university hosted a three day long celebration for the 50th anniversary of the program See also Edit United States portal Schools portalList of Brandeis University people List of Jewish universities and colleges in the United States National Center for Jewish Film Rosenstiel Award Our Generation SpeaksNotes Edit Other consists of Multiracial Americans amp those who prefer to not say The percentage of students who received an income based federal Pell grant intended for low income students The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum References Edit Academic Integrity Brandeis edu Brandeis University Archived from the original on August 19 2011 Retrieved March 9 2012 Summers Eileen May 27 1954 University Clocks Rapid Growth The Washington Post p 55 ProQuest 148628712 NAICU Member Directory Archived November 9 2015 at the Wayback Machine As of June 2022 Office of Investment Management Report Brandeis University June 2022 Archived from the original on December 2 2022 Retrieved December 25 2022 a b c d e f Overview Brandeis University Archived from the original on June 20 2021 Retrieved June 21 2021 College Navigator Brandeis University nces ed gov Archived from the original on 2021 11 07 Retrieved 2021 11 07 The University Color www brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2021 10 18 Retrieved 2021 10 18 a b Brandeis University Forbes Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved February 20 2016 Brandeis University Indiana University 2021 Archived from the original on January 27 2022 Retrieved December 16 2021 Boston Area Consortia Cross Registration Office of the University Registrar www bu edu Archived from the original on February 14 2016 Retrieved February 20 2016 The Boston Consortium www boston consortium org Archived from the original on April 14 2010 Retrieved February 20 2016 Brandeis University The Colleges with the Best Jewish Life College Transitions Archived from the original on 20 January 2022 Retrieved 20 January 2022 Pell Grant Recipients in Selective Colleges and Universities PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2020 11 12 Retrieved 2018 08 13 Most International Students National Universities U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on 2021 03 17 Retrieved 2018 08 13 Brandeis University Fast Facts Brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2012 05 04 Retrieved 2018 08 13 Notable Alumni About Brandeis University www brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2016 03 13 Retrieved 2016 02 20 Massachusetts Institutions NECHE New England Commission of Higher Education archived from the original on October 9 2021 retrieved May 26 2021 a b Gardner R H May 29 1952 A School Of The Spirit Graduates Its First The Baltimore Sun p 14 ProQuest 541745484 a b Reis Arthur H Jr The Founding PDF Brandeis Review 50th Anniversary Edition pp 42 43 Archived PDF from the original on May 23 2006 Retrieved May 17 2006 Founder s son C Ruggles Smith quoted From its inception Middlesex was ruthlessly attacked by the American Medical Association which at that time was dedicated to restricting the production of physicians and to maintaining an inflexible policy of discrimination in the admission of medical students Middlesex alone among medical schools selected its students on the basis of merit and refused to establish any racial quotas a b George Alpert 90 was a Founder and First Chairman of Brandeis The Boston Globe September 13 1988 p 82 Lyall Sarah September 13 1988 George Alpert 90 Ex President Of New Haven Line and a Lawyer The New York Times p D26 Ram Dass Ram Dass Tapes Archived from the original on 23 June 2003 Retrieved 26 April 2009 Stevens Jay 1988 Storming Heaven LSD and the American Dream Grove Press ISBN 0 8021 3587 0 p 152 Lattin Don 2004 Following Our Bliss How the Spiritual Ideals of the Sixties Shape Our Lives Today HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 073063 3 p 161 a b Reis Arthur H Jr The Albert Einstein Involvement PDF Brandeis Publications 50th review pp 60 61 Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Retrieved May 4 2006 Source for Einstein agreeing to establishment of the foundation Feb 5th 1946 foundation incorporated Feb 25 for Alpert quotation a man utterly alien to American principles of democracy tarred with the Communist brush for Einstein s refusal to accept an honorary degree in 1953 a b Liberal University to Be Set Up by Jewish Body The Baltimore Afro American August 31 1946 p 10 ProQuest 531588568 College Sought by Jewish Group The New York Times March 19 1946 p 19 ProQuest 107465002 a b New Jewish Unit Plans University The New York Times August 20 1946 p 10 ProQuest 107605957 Reis Arthur H Jr Naming the University PDF Brandeis Review 50th Anniversary Edition pp 66 67 Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Retrieved May 3 2006 a b c d Dr Einstein Quits University Plan Withdraws Support of Brandeis and Bars Use of His Name by Einstein Foundation The New York Times June 22 1947 p 16 ProQuest 107904030 a b Goldstein Quits Einstein Agency The New York Times September 26 1946 p 27 ProQuest 107727508 a b c d Sachar Abram L 1995 Brandeis University A Host at Last Brandeis University Press distributed by University Press of New England pp 18 22 ISBN 0 87451 585 8 Disclose Plans for New College The New York Times November 7 1946 p 28 ProQuest 107542398 Brandeis Fund Growing The New York Times Dec 19 1946 p 37 ProQuest 107429813 a b Brandeis University to Open in Fall of 48 The New York Times February 11 1947 p 25 ProQuest 107822860 Einstein Gives Up Support of New College The Baltimore Sun Associated Press June 22 1947 p A2 ProQuest 542673850 Einstein Severs Relations With University Fund The Washington Post June 22 1947 p M1 ProQuest 151982804 Brandeis University to Open As Planned The New York Times June 25 1947 p 6 ProQuest 107894324 a b Left Bias Charged in University Row The New York Times June 23 1947 p 24 ProQuest 107902395 Einstein Backs Two Who Quit University The New York Times June 30 1947 p 9 ProQuest 107893714 a b Sachar Heads University The New York Times April 27 1948 p 3 ProQuest 108194770 Brandeis University Pledged to His Ideals The New York Times June 15 1948 p 34 ProQuest 108183254 a b Fenton John H October 8 1948 Sachar Installed As Brandeis Head The New York Times p 22 ProQuest 108273404 Pearson Drew October 17 1948 Brandeis University The Washington Post p M15 ProQuest 152041623 Brandeis Inaugural University in Waltham Mass Establishes Four Schools The New York Times October 3 1948 p E7 ProQuest 108268080 a b Fine Benjamin May 13 1951 Brandeis Expanding The New York Times p B9 ProQuest 112215962 a b Brandeis to Hold First Graduation Pilot Class of 101 to Receive Degrees Mrs Roosevelt Will Deliver Address The New York Times June 15 1952 p 64 ProQuest 112280587 a b c Brandeis Builds Facilities Will Be Provided for Graduate Science Studies The New York Times January 31 1954 p E9 ProQuest 113152034 Interracial Award Established At Brandeis University Atlanta Daily World August 8 1950 p 2 ProQuest 490919935 Slater Elinor Slater Robert 1999 Great Moments in Jewish History Jonathan David Company Inc pp 121 123 ISBN 0 8246 0408 3 Mrs Roosevelt Joins Board of Brandeis U The New York Times June 18 1949 p 15 ProQuest 105958940 Proskauer on Brandeis Board The New York Times February 17 1950 p 20 ProQuest 111518559 Brandeis U to Expand President Announces Plans to Build Student Dormitories The New York Times February 20 1950 p 26 ProQuest 111518559 Brandeis Starts Athletic Field The New York Times May 29 1950 p 13 ProQuest 111645250 Brandeis Freshmen on Top The New York Times October 1 1950 p 162 ProQuest 111395437 Brandeis Loses Opener 33 20 The New York Times September 30 1951 p 128 ProQuest 112140418 Brandeis Wins 25 7 The Washington Post October 14 1951 p C5 ProQuest 152355750 Brandeis U Starts Its Amphitheatre The New York Times February 24 1952 p 74 ProQuest 112534800 a b c Taubman Howard June 13 1952 Brandeis U Begins Festival of Arts The New York Times p 20 ProQuest 112247624 Taubman Howard June 14 1952 Bernstein Opera Has Its Premiere The New York Times p 12 ProQuest 112268443 Brandeis Graduates 101 in Its First Class The New York Times June 17 1952 p 25 ProQuest 112287529 Sachar Abram L 1995 Brandeis University A Host At Last Brandeis University Press p 38 ISBN 9780874515855 Douglas Gets Degree Senator Honored at Brandeis Urges Values in Red Fight The New York Times June 15 1953 p 27 ProQuest 112720176 Brandeis Dedicates Its Graduate School The New York Times January 15 1954 p 21 ProQuest 113153688 a b c Brandeis to Build Interfaith Center The New York Times May 13 1954 p 26 ProQuest 112935577 Fenton John H September 10 1955 Catholic Chapel at Brandeis Open Cushing at Dedication on Campus Lauds University for Aid to Religion The New York Times p 19 ProQuest 113254552 a b 3 Brandeis Chapels will be Dedicated The New York Times October 23 1955 p 111 ProQuest 113339821 Izler Solomon Named Symphony Head in 1956 Indianapolis The National Jewish Post 31 August 1956 p 32 Archived from the original on 3 November 2018 Retrieved 3 November 2018 It was learned this month that former Indianapolis resident Jack Goldfarb of New York City gave a million dollar gift to build a library at Brandeis university in Waltham Mass The library will be named in his honor a b c Brandeis University Gets Gift of 1 000 000 for Library The New York Times April 12 1956 p 49 ProQuest 113609504 Memorial to Brandeis 9 Foot Statue of Justice to Be Unveiled Nov 13 The New York Times April 15 1956 p 39 ProQuest 113897312 a b Cardillo Julian 28 April 2016 Louis Brandeis statue enlivens campus Brandeis University Archived from the original on 2 July 2016 Retrieved 3 November 2018 Spiegel Irving Mar 10 1960 Ben Gurion Cites Spirit of Israel Receiving Honorary Degree at Brandeis He Stresses Philosophy and Science The New York Times p 9 ProQuest 115037889 Jordan Boycotts Brandeis U The New York Times July 5 1960 p 63 ProQuest 115192047 Schottland to Head Social Welfare School at Brandeis University Jewish Telegraphic Agency December 1 1958 Archived from the original on July 1 2016 Retrieved May 10 2016 a b Brandeis Quits College Gridiron The Baltimore Sun May 17 1960 p S23 ProQuest 542277219 a b c Lipsyte Robert M May 17 1960 Team Also Cited Brandeis Athletic Director Says Football Expenses Outweighed Returns The New York Times p 47 ProQuest 114978291 UF Invited Into Prestigious Association of Universities The Gainesville Sun July 9 1985 Archived from the original on November 18 2021 Retrieved November 5 2015 a b c d Bronner Ethan 1998 10 17 Brandeis at 50 Is Still Searching Still Jewish and Still Not Harvard The New York Times Archived from the original on 2022 01 02 Retrieved 2022 01 02 The Student Occupation of Ford Hall January 1969 Brandeis University Archives Remembering Ford amp Sydeman Halls Archived from the original on 2013 01 27 Retrieved 2013 02 09 a b 70 Seize Hall at Brandeis Faculty Condemns Action By Negro Students The Baltimore Sun January 9 1969 p A8 ProQuest 539247176 a b Fenton John H January 11 1969 Students Resume Brandeis Classes Protest by Negroes Goes On as Negotiations Continue The New York Times p 17 ProQuest 118533415 Negro Students Accuse Brandeis Of Racist Policies Seize Building The Washington Post January 9 1969 p A3 ProQuest 147744840 a b c Brandeis U Head Suspends 65 in Campus Protest Offers to Resign Escalate Demands The Washington Post January 12 1969 p 10 ProQuest 143655739 a b 64 Black Students End Occupation at Brandeis The Washington Post January 19 1969 p 3 ProQuest 147736439 Hevesi Dennis September 14 2010 Ronald Walters Rights Leader and Scholar Dies at 72 The New York Times Archived from the original on February 3 2017 Retrieved February 24 2017 Rahman Nashrah 11 November 2008 Research facility dedicated to donors The Justice Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2019 Lee Morgan April 9 2014 Brandeis University Rescinds Honorary Degree From Ayaan Hirsi Ali Over Criticism of Islam The Christian Post Archived from the original on May 22 2014 Retrieved May 21 2014 van Bakel Rogier November 2007 The Trouble Is the West Ayaan Hirsi Ali on Islam immigration civil liberties and the fate of the West Reason com Reason Foundation Archived from the original on 2014 04 27 Retrieved 2014 06 01 Perez Pena Richard Vega Tanzina April 8 2014 Brandeis Cancels Plan to Give Honorary Degree to Ayaan Hirsi Ali a Critic of Islam The New York Times Archived from the original on April 14 2014 Retrieved April 14 2014 Statement from Brandeis University Brandeis University April 8 2014 Archived from the original on June 15 2014 Stott Emily April 11 2014 Students outcry prompts Brandeis to reconsider award The Brandeis Hoot Archived from the original on March 4 2016 a b Kelly Megyn April 9 2014 Ayaan Hirsi Ali on withdrawal of honorary degree The Kelly File Fox News Archived from the original transcript on 2014 05 12 Retrieved 2014 05 24 Ayaan Hirsi Ali They Simply Wanted Me to be Silenced Time April 9 2014 Archived from the original on June 10 2014 Antepli Abdullah April 10 2014 Hats off to Brandeis University The Chronicle Duke Student Publishing Company Archived from the original on 2014 07 08 Retrieved April 16 2014 Coyne Jerry A April 9 2014 Brandeis University cancels plans to give Ayaan Hirsi Ali an honorary degree Why Evolution Is True Archived from the original on June 19 2014 Retrieved April 16 2014 Bernstein David 2014 04 10 More on the Brandeis Hirsi Ali controversy The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2017 05 17 Retrieved 2014 04 16 Fenton John H October 7 1968 Abram Pledging Student Role Is Installed as 2d Brandeis Head The New York Times p 30 ProQuest 118336604 Brandeis U Names Third President The New York Times December 19 1970 p 24 ProQuest 118743887 Reinhold Robert December 18 1971 Loses Fourth President Bernstein Political Scientist at Princeton Is Named The New York Times p 33 ProQuest 119211061 Brandeis Installs Its 5th President The New York Times October 10 1983 p A15 ProQuest 424806105 Interim President Chosen At Brandeis University Orlando Sentinel September 6 1990 Archived from the original on May 13 2015 Brandeis University Selects Samuel Thier As Its New President The New York Times May 5 1991 ProQuest 428082753 Sinert Michael L March 3 1994 Professor to lead Brandeis Reinharz to be named president March 2 Jewish Advocate p 1 ProQuest 205204310 Bruss Andrew October 15 2010 New Brandeis head campuses are fertile ground for hate speech Jewish Advocate p 4 ProQuest 759966789 The Heller School For Social Policy and Management An Overview heller brandeis edu Archived from the original on 24 September 2014 Retrieved 15 September 2014 4 000 Students a Year www brandeis edu Archived from the original on 29 May 2014 Retrieved 5 June 2014 Boston Library Consortium www blc org Archived from the original on 13 December 2013 Retrieved 5 June 2014 Library Brandeis Library 27 September 2018 Archived from the original on 13 September 2018 Retrieved 27 September 2018 ShanghaiRanking s Academic Ranking of World Universities Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved September 13 2022 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2022 Forbes Retrieved September 13 2022 Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022 The Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 2022 2023 Best National Universities U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 13 2022 2022 National University Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved September 13 2022 ShanghaiRanking s Academic Ranking of World Universities Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved February 25 2023 QS World University Rankings 2023 Top global universities Quacquarelli Symonds Retrieved February 25 2023 World University Rankings 2023 Times Higher Education Retrieved February 25 2023 2022 23 Best Global Universities Rankings U S News amp World Report Retrieved February 25 2023 Colleges Where Students Are The Most Engaged In Community Service The Huffington Post 5 August 2015 Archived from the original on 2015 09 08 Retrieved 2015 08 30 Brandeis University Best College US News colleges usnews rankingsandreviews com Archived from the original on 2011 09 23 Retrieved 2015 09 09 Healy Meaghan 3 September 2014 The 10 Most Progressive Campuses College Magazine College Magazine Archived from the original on 2017 04 03 Retrieved 2015 08 30 Kiplinger s Best College Values 2016 Kiplinger s Personal Finance December 2015 Archived from the original on 2013 08 05 Retrieved 2013 08 03 Doctoral Programs by the Numbers The Chronicle of Higher Education 2010 09 30 ISSN 0009 5982 Archived from the original on 2015 09 05 Retrieved 2015 08 30 America s Top Colleges Forbes Dec 29 2017 Archived from the original on December 30 2017 Retrieved August 25 2017 Rankings Fast Facts Archived from the original on 3 May 2009 Retrieved 4 May 2009 Unigo Top 10 Colleges with the Happiest Students Huffingtonpost com 30 August 2012 Archived from the original on 2013 12 18 Retrieved 2013 12 09 Business school ranked No 1 by Financial Times BrandeisNOW BrandeisNOW Archived from the original on 2015 09 08 Retrieved 2015 08 30 About the Heller School heller brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2014 04 16 Retrieved 2014 04 16 Master of Arts in Teaching Program MAT brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2014 04 15 Retrieved 2014 04 16 Maurice amp Marilyn Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies Brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2014 04 10 Retrieved 2014 04 16 a b Lynch Lisa 20 December 2018 Wind Down of the Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism Waltham Massachusetts Brandeis University Archived from the original on 17 February 2023 Retrieved 12 January 2019 the Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism will be closing at the end of December The Elaine and Gerald Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism Brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2014 04 20 Retrieved 2014 04 16 Steinhardt Social Research Institute brandeis edu 2013 09 30 Archived from the original on 2014 04 10 Retrieved 2014 04 16 Paulson Michael 2006 11 10 Jewish population in region rises The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2020 02 20 Karen V Hansen Brandeis University www brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2022 07 04 Retrieved 2022 05 20 Leonard Bernstein Music Faculty Member Brandeis University Music Department Brandeis University Archived from the original on 28 July 2021 Retrieved 28 July 2021 Jon Landau 68 Brandeis Magazine Brandeis Magazine Archived from the original on 2015 09 05 Retrieved 2015 09 05 Eliot Wilczek The Barrister Archives and Special Collections Brandeis University Lts brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2012 03 04 Retrieved 2013 12 09 Brandeis University Law Journal Archived from the original on 2021 11 15 Retrieved 2021 07 07 D3soccer com Men s Top 25 Week 3 www d3soccer com Archived from the original on 26 June 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 NSCAA Continental Tire NCAA Division III Women s National Poll 3 September 17 2013 www nscaatv com Archived from the original on 25 June 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 D3hoops com men s Top 25 Week 3 www d3hoops com Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 USTFCCCA NCAA Division III National Coaches Poll PDF www ustfccca org Archived PDF from the original on 11 April 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 Division III Men s National Rankings March 27 www itatennis com Archived from the original on 3 April 2014 Division III Women s National Rankings Administered by the ITA www itatennis com Archived from the original on 20 April 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 Carnegie Classifications Institution Profile Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research Archived from the original on January 27 2022 Retrieved March 30 2020 Rankings by total R amp D expenditures nsf gov National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics Archived from the original on 13 January 2017 Retrieved 18 July 2020 NSF NCSES Academic Institution Profiles Brandeis University Total R amp D expenditures by source of funds and R amp D field 2017 ncsesdata nsf gov Archived from the original on 18 July 2020 Retrieved 18 July 2020 Brandeis University www brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2015 11 17 Retrieved 2015 11 16 Life Sciences Website www bio brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2015 11 12 Retrieved 2015 11 16 National Academy Members http www brandeis edu about faculty national html Archived 2015 11 17 at the Wayback Machine a b Howard Hughes Medical Institute HHMI Investigators and Professors http www hhmi org scientists browse kw brandeis amp sort by field scientist last name amp sort order ASC Archived 2015 11 17 at the Wayback Machine MacArthur Fellows https www macfound org fellows 650 Archived 2015 11 17 at the Wayback Machine Distinguished Faculty www brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2015 11 17 Retrieved 2015 11 16 Student Research www brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2016 01 01 Retrieved 2015 11 16 Broadening Access to Science Science Posse Howard Hughes Medical Institute May 2014 Archived from the original on September 15 2014 MRSEC Program Overview Archived 2020 07 23 at the Wayback Machine Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers College Scorecard Brandeis University United States Department of Education Archived from the original on June 30 2022 Retrieved May 8 2022 Brandeis University Student Union union brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2014 04 17 Retrieved 2014 04 16 Club Center My Brandeis Archived from the original on 4 May 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2009 2007 2008 Rights amp Responsibilities Handbook Appendix B University Policy on Fraternities and Sororities Brandeis University Archived from the original on 2008 07 06 Retrieved 2008 03 17 Boris Kitchen Boris Kitchen Archived from the original on 2015 02 09 Retrieved 2022 01 02 Q amp A with ALDF Staff Attorney about Pursuing a Career in Animal Law Animal Legal Defense Fund Archived from the original on 2010 11 19 Retrieved 2011 01 07 Standings 2013 2014 Apdaweb Archived from the original on 2014 01 03 Retrieved 2013 12 09 Steeg Ted 1969 Coffee House Rendezvous Coffee Information Service Event occurs at 5 10 Archived from the original on 2014 06 25 Retrieved 2014 01 13 Elcik Catherine 18 October 2007 Oppenheimer at Brandeis Globe Newspaper Company Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2009 Charlotte Aaron March 20 2015 Student coffeehouse undergoes sudden reorganization brandeishoot com Archived from the original on May 21 2022 Retrieved January 26 2021 Sustainability Accomplishments Brandeis University Archived from the original on 2011 06 15 Retrieved 2009 06 08 Greening Class Environmental Studies Program Brandeis University www brandeis edu Archived from the original on 2019 05 02 Retrieved 2019 05 02 Greening Class Projects 2008 Brandeis University Retrieved 2009 06 08 dead link Mael Jon 12 August 2015 Barren Brandeis rooftop transformed into feast for senses The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 2019 05 02 Retrieved 2019 05 02 Brandeis Emergency Medical Corps 2008 BEMCo 25th Anniversary Gala Order of Ceremonies Waltham MA Brandeis University p 2 Article VIII Union Accredited Organizations Brandeis University Student Union Archived from the original on July 3 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 08 Van and Shuttle Service Department of Public Safety Brandeis University Archived from the original on 15 December 2008 Retrieved 6 December 2008 553 Roberts Downtown Boston via Newton Corner amp Central Sq Waltham MBTA Archived from the original on 13 July 2017 Retrieved 6 December 2008 Wien International Scholarship Program Brandeis University Archived from the original on March 19 2012 Further reading EditPasternack Susan and Ralph Norman From the Beginning A Picture History of the First Four Decades of Brandeis University 1988 Sachar Abram L Brandeis University A Host at Last 1995 Scholarly history of the school Whitfield Stephen J and Jonathan B Krasner Jewish Liberalism and Racial Grievance in the Sixties The Ordeal of Brandeis University Modern Judaism Feb 2015 35 1 pp 18 41 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brandeis University Official website Official athletics website Website of The Justice campus newspaperCoordinates 42 21 56 N 71 15 35 W 42 365664 N 71 259742 W 42 365664 71 259742 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brandeis University amp oldid 1148261267, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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