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

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Press release on the Fernald Developmental Center

(04/02/24 10:00am)

On the morning of March 27, a press release titled “After Months of Scandals, Waltham City Council to Hold Community Hearing on the Fernald Developmental Center” was distributed by Jonathan Paz, a founding member of “The People’s Fernald Working Group” and former Waltham City Councilor. Paz publicized this announcement before the citizen input hearing on March 27 regarding “the future of the former Walter E. Fernald Development Center property,” hosted by the Waltham City Council.




Brandeis’ financial state remains uncertain, amid budget cuts

(04/02/24 10:00am)

On Thursday, March 14, students received an email from University President Ronald Liebowitz which detailed the recent financial situation that Brandeis has found itself in. Liebowitz, along with Provost Carol Fierke and Vice President of Finance and Administration Stew Uretsky wrote that Brandeis is facing short and long term financial shortfall, so they must address the unanticipated budget cuts. The University is making four specific changes: temporarily increasing spending from Brandeis’ endowment, delaying merit increases until Fall 2024, pausing Science 2A construction to build a new dormitory, and more carefully considering filling staff and faculty positions that are not externally funded. Deans and Vice Presidents are making their academic decisions based on the financial updates.


Student Union proposes significant changes following recent constitutional review

(03/26/24 10:00am)

On March 25, Student Union Secretary Carol S. Kornworcel ’26 sent an email to the Brandeis undergraduate student body to announce the upcoming Student Union constitutional review, a process that only occurs once every three years. The Student Union evaluated their current constitution and bylaws to “make changes to reflect the current needs of Brandeis students,” Kornworcel wrote. Last week, the Student Union voted to approve proposed updates to the Constitution. On Wednesday, March 27, all Brandeis undergraduate students will receive a ballot in their email to vote on the proposed changes.


Tiziana Dearing and Harleen Singh explore the power of conversation and community

(03/26/24 10:00am)

Tiziana Dearing lent her unique perspective as a former professor, non-profit executive and current radio host to the Brandeis community on Wednesday, March 20 in an event sponsored by the Women's Studies Research Center. She was joined in discussion by Prof. Harleen Singh (WGS), a Brandeis professor of Literature and Women’s, Gender, and Sexality Studies as well as the Director of the Women Studies Research Center. Singh introduced Dearing as a “public voice for good” and a “lifelong student” of the world, while Dearing jokingly described her own career path as “Forrest Gumping” her way through life. Their discussion, while structured as a profile on Dearing’s professional career, found substance in evaluating the role of religious faith in her work and assessing the current climate of the American education system. 


Professor Chris Suh explains how American geopolitics inform Asian race-relations

(03/26/24 10:00am)

On March 22, the University welcomed Chris Suh, an assistant professor of history at Emory University, to give a talk about his research and findings for his 2023 book: "The Allure of Empire: American Encounters with Asians in the Age of Transpacific Expansion and Exclusion.” The lecture was called “Between the ‘American Century’ and the ‘Asian Century’: Toward a New Paradigm for Understanding Racial Inequality,” with Jenny Factor and Sungkyung Cho co-hosting the meeting on Zoom. Factor and Cho are both candidates for doctorates in philosophy at Brandeis.






‘Dialogue & Action’: War, Law and Civilians

(03/26/24 10:00am)

What role does international law play in how states conduct themselves in times of war? Is international law respected or even an authentic reflection of human morality? Questions like these were discussed in the fourth installment of the Dialogue & Action series, titled War, Law, and Civilians. The talk was hosted by Northeastern University and took place virtually on March 13. Dialogue & Action is a series made to model constructive dialogue and is a collaboration between nine universities including Brandeis. 


Students call for the charges of “Brandeis seven” to be dropped

(03/26/24 10:00am)

On March 22 at 4:00 p.m., the de-chartered Brandeis chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine and the Revolutionary Student Organization rallied on campus. According to a collaborative post on the SJP and RSO Instagram profiles, the rally’s main goals were to call on Brandeis to: “1. Request that the Middlesex County District Attorney’s Office drop all charges against the seven people arrested while dispersing from the Nov. 10 rally,” “2. Provide financial transparency on all its expenditures and investments” and “3. Stop supporting the genocide of the Palestinian people by engaging with the Zionist occupation’s economy and institutions, and representing dissent on campus.” Additionally, during the rally, members of the organizations presented a “Petition to End Brandeis University’s Attacks on Free Speech.”



‘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.