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THE BIG IDEA: Ben Segal ’20 conceived of the idea for EcoSort by observing how often Brandeis students incorrectly dispose of waste.
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THE BIG IDEA: Ben Segal ’20 conceived of the idea for EcoSort by observing how often Brandeis students incorrectly dispose of waste.
PROOF OF CONCEPT: Ben Segal ’20 and his team utilized various software, hardware and prototyping hacks to create EcoSort, a smart waste-disposal container.
Not long ago, domestic violence was regarded as a family issue. When police responded to a domestic disturbance call, they often told abusers to just take a walk. With the passage of the Violence Against Women Act of 1991, domestic violence shifted from being a “family” matter to a national, political issue. However, the criminalization of domestic violence did not solve the problem. And as people are increasingly entering and being abused in romantic relationships that are not heteronormative, the perceptions and discourse surrounding domestic violence have to change, according to a domestic violence panel.
“Hey, I’ll see you around,” Robert Singer ’19 said on his way out of his politics class. “I gotta go buy a banana so I don’t die.”
PURE SPORT: In 1978, former TRON member, Mike Banks ’29 told the Boston Globe that Ultimate Frisbee is the “purest sport.”
SPEAKING UP: The panelists discussed the lack of support systems available to members of the LGBTQIA community who experience domestic abuse.
What did it mean for Germany when Angela Merkel’s sister party, the Christian Social Union, got clobbered in last month’s Bavarian parliamentary election? Are trade wars good for Americans? And how can the first chapter of an economics textbook help Trump understand global trade?
If you were wondering what an oasis of greenery was doing in the middle of the Shapiro Campus Center on Oct. 17 and 18, or why people were leaving with tiny plants, wonder no longer. It was just Randy Skolnick, Brandeis’s friendly neighborhood plantsman.
COUPLE GOALS: Now that his wife June is retired and he only works six months a year, Randy often brings June along with him to sell plants across the northeast.
A HAPPY PLACE: Randy Skolnick is at home among plants. He said, “I just love plants. I like ’em better than people. I give ’em what they need and they don’t talk back.”
When Max LeBlanc ’22 was a freshman in high school, he began working in a local ice cream store. In his hometown, the tourism-driven community of Kennebunk, Maine, LeBlanc was just looking to earn some extra money for college. As a 14-year-old, he had no idea that in less than four years, he would be the founder of his own dessert shop.
At the entrance of the Shapiro Campus Center atrium last Thursday, two long, gray tables were stretched out, filled with candy, snacks and boxes of white envelopes. At the end of the tables, a blue, red, and white-checkered sign read, “Register to Vote!”
GET ENFRANCHISED: “I think it’s always important to vote, regardless of what the political climate is,” said Lauren Komer ’21.
CIVIC DUTY: Over 60 students came to the voter-registration drive to claim their absentee ballots.
While waiting for physical therapy, a group of student athletes noticed Marci McPhee’s sweatshirt and asked what sport she coached. “Uh...” McPhee responded. “It’s a social justice thing — ’DEIS Impact.”
With the words “I remember…” magnified on an otherwise blank slide behind her, Dr. Beverly Daniel Tatum asked the audience of faculty members before her to take a moment to think about their earliest race-related moment. When she asked at what age these memories occurred, many faculty members shouted out, “five.” She then asked them to raise their hands if they had any recollection of having a conversation about these moments with an adult. Only a few hands went up.
RACE BARRIER: Dr. Tatum asks the question: How do we get students from various backrounds to talk about race relations?
HAPPY MEMORIES: Marci McPhee’s father, Bunnie E. Gregory attended Middlesex College of Medicine and Surgery. McPhee recalls her father enjoying returning to campus to visit her and see the old buildings.
HER LEGACY: Marci McPhee (left) and Lyn Gregory wear ’DEIS Impact shirts celebrating the festival of social justice McPhee championed at Brandeis.
The story of trivia begins in the Ancient World. Trivia, meaning “unimportant matters,” derived as a back-formation of trivialis, which meant “found everywhere, commonplace” or “vulgar.” An online column from Merriam-Webster, shedding light on the etymology of trivia, noted that the term — and the titular game — “sometimes gets a bad rap” because of a related word, trivial, meaning “of little worth or importance.” When used in a singular construction, it means “a quizzing game involving obscure facts.” The lay meaning of the trivia, according to Merriam-Webster, is “obscure facts and details that aren’t applicable to one’s day-to-day life.”