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

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‘Then and Now’ exhibit features eight alumni artists

(03/19/24 10:00am)

Last semester, the Brandeis community celebrated its 75th anniversary, which included the official grand opening of the Alumni Art Gallery in the Wien Faculty Center. “Sponsored by the Brandeis Alumni Association, the Office of the President, and the Division of Creative Arts,” the Gallery’s website states, “the exhibition features a different group of alumni artists every six months.” The current exhibit, which opened in October 2023 and runs until the end of March, is titled “Then and Now,” featuring eight alumni artists of each decade since the university's founding. 


USC professor delivers literary lecture on the characteristics of water

(03/19/24 10:00am)

The Mandel Center for the Humanities held a series of three lectures with Jackie Wang, who is the assistant professor of American Studies and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California. The lectures centered around “ocean ecologies and liquid aesthetics,” the first and third called “The Deep Sea as the New Frontier of Accumulation” and “Oceanic Feeling and the Politics of Mysticism” respectively. The second lecture “Poetry and Tidalectics” was held on March 12. It focused on water and material imagination and was divided into two of Wang’s essays.




Senate considers chartering five clubs, hearing proposals from potential club leaders

(03/19/24 10:00am)

The Student Union meeting on March 17 consisted of multiple club presentations. Five clubs presented their case as to why they should be chartered or moved to probationary status and the Student Union voted on whether or not to accredit them. Four out of the five clubs passed the presentations. The fifth club, Business for Dummies, was not accredited by the Senate due to its resemblance to other clubs already established on the Brandeis campus.


Commencement Ceremony Brief

(03/19/24 10:00am)

On March 12, University President Ronald Liebowitz sent an email to community members outlining the keynote speakers and honorary degree recipients chosen for the 73rd Commencement ceremony on May 19. Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns and academic administrator Ruth Simmons will be delivering addresses and receiving honorary doctorates alongside women’s rights advocate Ruth Halperin-Kaddari and civil rights leader Roy DeBerry ’70, GSAS MA ’78, Ph.D ’79. 


Crown Seminar: Narges Bajoghli and Vali Nasr discuss book

(03/19/24 10:00am)

Sanctions have become “the tool of choice” for the United States in the 21st century regarding foreign policy. The U.S. government first imposed sanctions, defined as commercial and financial restrictions applied against states, groups or individuals, on Iran in the early 1980s after the country was designated as a state sponsor of international terrorism. The U.S. has increased sanction usage worldwide by 900% in the last 24 years. Narges Bajoghli and Vali Nasr’s new book, “How Sanctions Work: Iran and the Impact of Economic Warfare,” published by the Stanford University Press in February., explains how these sanctions have “permanently changed” Iran. In an online seminar on Wednesday, March 13 hosted by Prof. Naghmeh Sohrabi (HIST), director for research at the Crown Center for Middle East Studies and the Charles Goodman Professor of Middle East History at Brandeis, the co-authors took attendees on a deep dive into how sanctions have historically affected Iran and how they will continue to shape Iranian policy. 


The Brandeis Food Pantry finds a new home in the Shapiro Campus Center

(03/19/24 10:00am)

The Brandeis Food Pantry, formerly known as the FRESH Food Pantry, was founded in June 2018. Though its doors are open to any member of the Brandeis community facing food insecurity, the pantry was originally oriented toward graduate students. Since its founding, the BFP has moved from the Office of Graduate Affairs, to the Usdan Game Room and finally, to room 316 in the Shapiro Campus Center. Additionally, the BFP partnered with Healthy Waltham, a local food pantry from which it receives donations, shortly after its founding.




Senate discusses potential constitutional amendments, hears Senate Money Resolutions

(03/12/24 10:00am)

In its March 10 meeting, the Student Union Senate observed a presentation from Secretary Carol Kornworcel ’26, who had been working on updating and revising the official Student Union Constitution. These amendments include changes to the composition of the Senate, Allocations Board, Judiciary and Executive Board, along with revisions to the elections process. All of these proposed changes will be publicly available in the future, presented to clearly demonstrate both the changes made to the current set-ups and the reasoning behind these changes. 




Disability Inclusion, Equity and Accessibility Month

(03/12/24 10:00am)

On Feb. 29, Vice President of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Dr. LeManuel Lee Bitsóí sent an email to the Brandeis community about celebrating “the contributions and achievements of people with disabilities” in March. The email wrote that over 20% of undergraduate students at Brandeis identify as having a disability, and over 25% of Americans have a disability. Dr. Bitsóí states that the practice of dedicating March to Disability Inclusion, Equity and Accessibility at Brandeis began last year. 


Alumni share their experiences for International Women’s Day

(03/12/24 10:00am)

In celebration of International Women's Month, the Business Department partnered with the Hiatt Career Center's Rise Together Mentor Network and Forté Foundation, a female leadership program, came together to present a Women In Leadership Alumni Panel on March 7 at the International Business School. Six influential female alumni joined students to share their experiences in leadership positions and how to navigate male-dominated fields. 


The results of Super Tuesday

(03/12/24 10:00am)

March 5 was Super Tuesday, with voters in 15 states and one U.S. territory choosing the candidates they wished to run for president. This particular day sees the highest number of primary elections nationwide until Election Day in November, according to The Associated Press. The votes accumulated from Super Tuesday are then tallied and awarded delegates, who then represent their respective communities at the presidential nominating convention, to select which presidential candidate will represent their party on the official election ballot. For a presidential candidate to win their party’s nomination, they must win the majority of delegates. 


Boston Globe project sheds light on a notorious crime

(03/12/24 10:00am)

On March 7, the Journalism program hosted a discussion with Boston Globe Associate Editor Adrian Walker and former Boston Globe reporter Evan Allen to discuss their multimedia project “Murder in Boston.” The project included three parts released in December 2023: A nine-part podcast, an eight-part narrative series and a three-part HBO documentary. Both Walker and Allen had lead roles in the project: Walker, who was part of the Pulitzer-Finalist Spotlight team that examined race in Boston, headed the podcast portion, and Allen, who was part of the team that won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for the narrative portion, also participated in the creation of the project. Profs. Ann Silvio (JOUR) and Neil Swidey (JOUR) moderated the discussion. 



‘Dialogue & Action in an Age of Divides’: Beyond our differences

(03/05/24 11:00am)

On Feb. 13, scholars from Massachusetts-based universities convened online for the second installment of the recently developed discussion series titled “Dialogue and Action in an Age of Divides.” The first session, which took place on Jan. 29, featured panelists from the University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston College Law School and Boston University School of Law, and delved into the contentious topics of hate speech and the boundaries of free expression. Moderated by Layli Maparyan — the executive director of the Wellesley Centers for Women and professor of Africana studies at Wellesley College — the second session, titled “Coming Together Across Difference,” emphasized a crucial message: despite differences and disagreements, individuals are fundamentally interconnected, and true progress stems from unity rather than division. Panelists provided insight drawn from research and personal experience and shared ways for audience members to work toward bridging together differences.