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Brandeis University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1949 | Waltham, MA

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Making an impact

(01/26/15 6:24pm)

’DEIS Impact is a festival of social justice taking place Friday through Feb 9. This week-long festival will consist of more than 40 events hosted by clubs, students and academic departments. The International Center for Ethics, Justice and Public Life and the Student Union sponsor this annual event. Just Features sat down with Heather Spector ’17, the vice chair of ’DEIS Impact.


A Timeless Quest

(01/20/15 4:32am)

The Homeric textual tradition recognizes that no one person is responsible for the Iliad or the Odyssey. Rather, these texts evolved for well over a thousand years, from the pre-Classical era into the Middle Ages, as the result of intergenerational intellectual collaboration. Similarly, the Homer Multitext Project, which aims to increase digital accessibility to these texts, relies on intergenerational intellectual collaboration between undergraduates and professors and across multiple institutions.





A mind of one's own

(01/13/15 2:35am)

Schools such as Brown University or Bennington College champion the right of the student to design an individualized course of study within a strong advising network of faculty and student advisors. The Independent Interdisciplinary Major program at Brandeis aims to create an academic space for a similar type of individual creativity; however, this is a space which also must exist within the structure of a more academically traditional university. 






Wordplay

(12/09/14 5:35am)

During his senior year, Jesse Appell ’12 was awarded a Fulbright fellowship, that sent him to China to study Chinese comedy. He describes his research as discovering “what Chinese people think is funny,” and does this through writing satire in Chinese, performing on Chinese television, and performing Xiangsheng—a traditional form of Chinese comedy. While in China, Appell produced a viral video, “Laowai Style,” a parody of the K-Pop sensation “Gangam Style,” which received millions of views and prompted interview requests from multiple news outlets, including The Economist and TEDxBeijing. Appell returned to campus in November to perform his newest show “The Great LOL Tour of China” at International Culture Week. He spoke with justFeatures to discuss his False Advertising past, the burgeoning international future of the University, and what he has learned about cultural assimilation through the mediums of comedy and language.


Purple peers

(12/09/14 5:31am)

Aaron Fischer ’15 writes, acts and directs for the Undergraduate Theatre Collective and loves watching Woody Allen films. He has participated in a handful of Brandeis clubs, ranging from Swing Club to Debate Society. He often wears a purple shirt. 





Innovate, develop, repeat

(11/25/14 4:23am)

The Hassenfeld family name is one that Brandeis students are quite familiar with. It can be found written in silver lacquer on the front of a handful of buildings around campus. The name Hassenfeld refers to two brothers from Providence, Rhode Island, Henry and Hillel, who, in 1923, founded a company that sold textile remnants: rolls of fabric that are left over from the textile production process. They named the company Hassenfeld Brothers. 




To the Netherlands, from Rabb

(11/25/14 3:48am)

In spring 2015, Brandeis English Prof. Dawn Skorczewski (ENG) will teach an innovative class that combines her interest in Holocaust writing and passion for collaborative learning in a course titled “The International Legacy of Anne Frank.” The course is designed to allow Brandeis students to interact directly with students and faculty in the Netherlands. Skorczewski believes that an international perspective is crucial for coming to a complete understanding of the diary. She is determined to take digital learning to a whole new level using weekly video conferences with Dutch students and professors, Skype tours of relevant Holocaust historical sites and a chance to travel to Amsterdam.