Scholar shares the history of Jerusalem’s reunification
Elan Ezrachi spoke to students about his research to better understand the historical division and unification of Jerusalem.
Elan Ezrachi spoke to students about his research to better understand the historical division and unification of Jerusalem.
The Office of the President awarded Kimberlé Crenshaw the Joseph B. and Toby Gittler Prize for change-making ideas.
The University administration founded a new library corner to honor Richman and Gittler prize recipients and their works.
After protests from the community, the Theater Dept.cancelled a production of Michael Weller’65.
The Task Force on Free Expression held the last open community forum for the finalization of its draft.
Manager of Electronic Resources Katherine Collins spoke about the library’s involvements in open access.
Miriam Offer spoke about the overlooked role of women healthcare professionals during World War II.
Sam Vaghar ’08 spoke about his work with the White House and the United Nations to support youth leadership.
Biographer and journalist John Farrell spoke to students about Nixon’s relationship with the press.
Community to honor Prof. John Lisman ’s (BIOL) life and influential contributions to national brain research.
Faculty members passed a divestment resolution and round one of general education changes.
Student volunteers helped artist Tony Lewis install his latest work, “Plunder.”
Teams provided potential green initiatives after a day-long brainstorming challenge for campus sustainability ideas.
Prof. Marcelle Soares-Santos (PHYS) spoke on the official panel announcing an unprecedented cosmic event.
Over 180,000 people rally in Boston Common for March 28 "No Kings" protest
Brandeis Public Safety dispels circulating ICE vehicle rumors
A seat at the table: inside the ICC's "Be Curious Dinner"
Professors discuss possibility of nuclear disarmament amid high political tensions
“Who Owns the News?”: Former Washington Post editors warn that billionaire owners are eroding media integrity