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            (03/20/18 10:00am)
            
            As Emily Bryson ’19 ran past the finish line in the final event for Brandeis at the 2018 NCAA Division III Indoor Championships on Saturday, March 10, tears began streaming down her face. Finishing first in her 3,000-meter event, Bryson claimed her second All-America honor of the meet after her first in the distance medley relay. “Yeah, I was crying,” Bryson laughed, “It’s just when I was a freshman in college, that was my goal. I wanted to be a NCAA champion and I wrote it down in my journal as something I always wanted to do. I trained up to this moment for that moment and I put a lot of work in. I just feel like as an athlete you sacrifice so much for these moments, and then to kind of watch it all unfold right before you is surreal. It was watching a lot of hard work pay off and watching a moment I had dreamed of for a really long time. It was a lot of emotions.”
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/20/18 10:00am)
            
            Before he became a “nobody,” Robert Fuller was an accomplished physicist, author and civil rights advocate who was the youngest college president in the United States. After a four-year stint as the president of Oberlin College, Fuller resigned, saying he believed his mission had been accomplished and that it was time to move on. Following his resignation, Fuller found that his status as a public figure had vanished and that his rise, and sudden fall from status was a phenomena as equally deserving of academic exploration as the cosmos. Curious and searching for answers, he embarked on a mission to form a social movement to “advance human dignity.”
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/20/18 10:00am)
            
                 
            
            OTHER “ISMS”: The panel of Brandeis faculty come to the consensus that other “isms” including racism and sexism, contribute to "rankism."
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/20/18 10:00am)
            
                 
            
            DREAMING OF GOLD: Ever since she was a college first-year, Emily Bryson has dreamed of becoming an NCAA champion.
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/13/18 10:00am)
            
            Getting a B + on a history paper is precisely how former Features editor of the Justice  Elliot Maggin ’72 began his writing career with DC Comics. The paper included a comic book to illustrate how comics could be used to convey ideologies. Maggin went to the section leader regarding the grade, saying, “You write a comic book as part of a history paper, you either get an A or an F. What’s the B + about?” The section leader shrugged and responded, “I thought you were going to draw it, too.” Unsatisfied with his grade and feeling his work was underappreciated, Maggin sent the comic to Carmine Infantino, the head of DC Comics. 
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/13/18 10:00am)
            
                 
            
            BREAKING POINT: Elliot Maggin ’72 got his big break when he sent an essay he turned into with a comic book to DC comics.
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/13/18 10:00am)
            
                 
            
            PANNED: Burt Lancaster’s portrayal of the prince of Salina was harshly criticized upon the film’s release. 
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/13/18 10:00am)
            
                 
            
            LAST DANCE: As Burt Lancaster dances in the final scene of “The Leopard,” he acknowledges a paradigm shift, meaning an end to his era.
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/13/18 10:00am)
            
            Leopards are sly, fast and endangered — so too is Burt Lancaster as Don Fabrizio Corbera in Luchino Visconti’s classic 1963 film “The Leopard.” Projected in a classroom at the Mandel Center for the Humanities on Thursday, March 8, this film — about a ruthlessly honest aristocrat fighting to preserve his way of life while his country is in political turmoil — created a calm in the room filled with students chewing popcorn and eating candy.
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/06/18 11:00am)
            
            Being a college student is stressful, which is why it is important for Brandeis to have quality mental health services, a forum of students agreed last Thursday. The Brandeis Counseling Center, in conjunction with the Student Union, held an open forum in the Napoli Room, the goal of which was to facilitate understanding and discussion between Brandeis students and the BCC. Students, or anyone in attendance at the forum, could ask questions regarding issues related to the BCC, and the panelists would respond, educating the audience members on a variety of topics. The topics included the services provided by the BCC, the BCC staff, present and future endeavours and what the BCC hopes to achieve. In addition, audience members could make comments and suggestions for the panelists to consider and discuss. The forum was recorded and posted online for anyone wishing to watch it.
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/06/18 11:00am)
            
            “I recorded almost all of this in my basement,” Mathias Boyar ’20 said in an interview with the Justice. Still slightly uncomfortable with self-promotion, he sat back onto the black leather couch in Farber Library and admitted, “Normally I write a song and just show it to a couple people and then it ends up on a file somewhere on my computer where it’s archived.” Now, for the first time ever, Boyar’s music is accessible to anyone with internet access.
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/06/18 11:00am)
            
                 
            
            ANXIOUS RAPPING: In a song called “Coy” Mathias Boyar ’20 raps about the anxiety he felt when releasing his music to the public.
            
        
        
            
            
            (03/06/18 11:00am)
            
                 
            
            USER UPTICK: Over the past five years, the BCC has seen a thirty percent increase in demand for individual appointments.
            
        
        
            
            
            (02/13/18 4:30pm)
            
            Sara Fulton ’20 — “The most romantic place in Waltham is definitely the river walk on Moody Street. In the summer, the light glistens on the water just right at sunset, and when you walk with your partner, it’s almost like you’re walking into the sunset. There’s plenty of places to stop and stare and great opportunities for great photos. It’s pretty much what I feel like is a clip from a romantic film in real life.”
            
        
        
            
            
            (02/13/18 4:30pm)
            
            AMY and DAN
            
        
        
            
            
            (02/13/18 4:51pm)
            
                 
            
            A FORMAL INTRODUCTION: Pictured at the mods for a celebration of David’s senior formal, David and Marci were first introduced by David’s roommate. They married 6 years later.
            
        
        
            
            
            (02/14/18 3:00am)
            
                 
            
            TOWER VIEWS: Despite construction, some students continue to enjoy the view of Usen Castle. 
            
        
        
            
            
            (02/13/18 4:21pm)
            
                 
            
            LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT: From the moment she saw him in class, Amy knew there was something special about Dan. They married 15 years after meeting and 6 months after their first date.
            
        
        
            
            
            (02/06/18 11:00am)
            
            Six years ago, Nadia Alawa was a full-time mother whose days were spent driving her eight children to sports games and homeschooling them for exams. In 2011, her quiet life in the sleepy town of East Hempstead, New Hampshire ended with the eruption of a devastating civil war in Syria, her father’s homeland.
            
        
        
            
            
            (02/06/18 11:00am)
            
            There is a famous expression which goes, “Those who don’t learn about history are bound to repeat it.” Today, 73 years later, it is important not to  forget the atrocities that occurred during the Holocaust. With many of the survivors already having passed and the remaining survivors continuing to get older, remembering the events of the time becomes a task for a new generation. This is why the United Nations General Assembly established International Holocaust Remembrance Day, on Jan. 27. Coinciding with this day, Brandeis University had an Internation Holocaust Remembrance Panel of members from the Women’s Studies Research Center, to share the unique experiences of their relatives who remember the Holocaust in the most vivid way possible — they lived through it.