New Voices Magazine - September '08 Issue

Hillel Suspends JCSC Fellowship
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Written by Sarah Schoenholtz   
Tuesday, 23 September 2008

Says Program for Young Hillel Professionals is Outdated 
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The Campus Entrepeneurs Initiative gives the Jewish Campus Service Corps the boot.
In what Hillel is describing as a sign of an increased institutional emphasis on engaging uninvolved Jewish students, Hillel has discontinued its Jewish Campus Service Corps Fellowship, a 14-year-old program that sent recent college graduates to join the staffs of local Hillels across the country. An early experiment in alternative engagement, the JCSC Fellowship tasked fellows with interacting with students outside of the Hillel environment. Today, according to Hillel, increased institutional emphasis on engaging unengaged students has made the JCSC Fellowship redundant.

Founded with a grant from philanthropist Michael Steinhardt's foundation in 1994, the Fellowship paid 70 to 80 fellows each year to work full-time at local Hillels. Tasked with reaching out to unaffiliated Jewish students, Fellows held office hours at the local Jamba Juice, staffed tables advertising Hillel activities in the student center, and organized events.

The Fellowship also served as a means of attracting young professionals to careers at Hillel. Says Simon Amiel, who served as Director of the JCSC Fellowship, "[The JCSC program] was a feeder not only for Hillel, but also the worldwide Jewish community."

According to Amiel, Hillel simply outgrew the JCSC program. "At the time that it was crafted, Hillel wasn't focusing on students who were under engaged. Now we're really emphasizing that. Everyone's doing it at Hillel now.  Hillel has changed too much to have [them as] sole practitioners of engagement."

Former JCSC fellows have reported that at some campuses, the local staff did not allow the JCSC fellows to focus on outreach to uninvolved students.  "I think that a lot of schools don't use their fellows the way they were created [to be used] 14 years ago," says Erin Searle, a JCSC fellow at the Denver Hillel in 2007.

Despite Hillel's position that the JCSC program had become redundant, two initiatives have been positioned to replace the JCSC. In 2006, Hillel introduced the Campus Entrepreneur Initiative, which now employs undergraduates on over 30 campuses. The Initiative pays students with minimal Jewish backgrounds approximately $10 per hour to bring other students to Hillel activities on campus. Mike Sabes, a senior at UCLA and a CEI intern, says that at an orientation at the beginning of the program, interns were taught how to approach students on campus about events. Sabes says that JCSC fellows were not perceived to be "as cool as CEI interns." While a JCSC fellow was seen by students as a "Hillel poster-child." he says, CEI interns "are more like undercover students."

In addition to CEI, Hillel International announced on August 7th that Hillels across the country hired a batch of Engagement Professionals for the 2008-2009 school year. A Hillel website had previously recommended that students who had been planning to apply to the JCSC program apply to be Engagement Professionals. Amiel described the Engagement Professionals as full-time positions created by individual Hillels, as opposed to an administered program like the JCSC.

Many former JCSC fellows are unhappy with the discontinuation of the Fellowship.  "I think that it's important to have a younger engagement professional on staff, closer to the age of the students," says Casey Topol, a JCSC fellow at the University of Florida in 2007. "We're the same age, we know what it's like to be in college.

"I know what's going on in their everyday lives," says Rachel Williams, a JCSC fellow at Indiana University in 2007. "A year ago, I was a student myself. I would just say, be cautious if you're hiring someone to do this work who is 25, 26. [They're] a bit more removed from college life."

 
LV Sees Better Voter Turnout for Primaries

http://www.theleaderonline.com/2007/LVSeesBetterVoterTurnoutforPrimaries.htm

On Tuesday, February 5, 2008, Super Tuesday, the Locust Valley Library was open to voters for the primary elections. Despite rainy weather, voters slowly made their way to the community room of the library. For a while, there was almost no one in the parking lot, however, cars began to clog the driveway mid-day.

 

Voting at the beginning of Election Day was busy, said library patrons, however at around ten o'clock in the morning, the election officers were watching the Giants' parade on a television in the polling room.

 

Carol Cashman, an election officer said that "only four voters" showed up to the last primary election, on the Republican side, at the Locust Valley Library. However, this time, 61 Republican and 57 Democratic voters showed up as of 11:30 AM. The Democrats had seen 15% of their expected voter turnout so far. Cashman commented that voter turnout seemed much better than last election and that "it shows more people are interested this year."

 

Paul Long, chairman for the Board of Elections district 1514, was reading the guidelines book for Super Tuesday. Long mentioned, "the youth voters should start [to arrive] later, after they get out of work and school." Long recruited his college student son, who seemed more interested in helping voters get checked in rather than the parade, to help work at the polls.

 

Mid-morning to late afternoon, many voters and library patrons were discussing the voting process and choosing between "some very compelling candidates."

 

Margaret and Neal Bergano of Locust Valley are registered Democrats. They declined say for which they were voting, saying it would take "a half hour." They did say they were interested in the two strong Democratic candidates.

 

Another Locust Valley voter, said that she voted "for Hillary Clinton, because she will make the best president...she's very smart, she has a lot of experience, and I like her"

 

Buenaventura Mora, of Glen Cove, is a professor of nursing at Long Island University, Brooklyn as well as an RN. She was not at the Locust Valley Library to vote, but was there to pick up a book for her daughter. She is heavily interested in the health care system and her vote leaned towards the candidate who expressed strong concern for health care reform.

 

Despite the rain, Larry Glenn, of Locust Valley, held up his umbrella as he walked from his car to vote for McCain. "I'm very happy and proud to vote for John McCain…he's a good senator and candidate, I think he's a very good man."

 

Beth Catanzano and Carolyn Olgesby, two circulation desk clerks from the library stepped outside during a break and agreed that voter turnout was much better than expected. Catanozano is a registered Independent, and was annoyed that she was unable to vote on Super Tuesday. Olgesby, a Democrat, said that for the November election, she will vote for who she feels would do the best job, rather than letting party boundaries limit her vote.

 

The voters have spoken and one week after Super Tuesday, McCain, Huckabee, Clinton and Obama are still in tight debate and discussion amongst the residents of Locust Valley.