Adagio's spring show gets crowd moving
Adagio Dance Company, Brandeis' largest student-run dance group, presented its annual spring show, "Dance For Your Life," last Wednesday and Saturday nights in Levin Ballroom.
Adagio Dance Company, Brandeis' largest student-run dance group, presented its annual spring show, "Dance For Your Life," last Wednesday and Saturday nights in Levin Ballroom.
If a male version of Spring Breakers was made, sans the dark-tanning oil and big-budget panache, it might look something like The Convenient Job. The student-created film, produced by one of Brandeis' own, Ethan Stein '15, was played on the big screen for the first time ever in Wasserman Cinematheque last Wednesday. The storyline is familiar enough: three film students strapped for cash need to raise money for their next movie.
"Information is control," American author Joan Didion wrote in one of her memoirs, The Year of Magical Thinking. She was referring to her daughter's hospitalization for pneumonia, which later developed into septic shock.
Louisiana does two things very well: music and prison. Georgetown University professor ethnomusicologist Benjamin Harbert explores their intersection in his documentary, Follow Me Down: Portraits of Louisiana Prison Musicians, which played in the Wasserman Cinematheque on Tuesday. Unlike the other 49 American states, Louisiana's legal system is based on French law rather than English common law.
Buffalo, the snowy steel town up near Lake Erie most known for its chicken wings, has one of the most vibrant arts communities of the Rust Belt cities.
* At some point, every moment becomes a memory. It will be the ordinary moment of serving soup to your father.
In a local caf?(c), a girl sits diligently reading her book, until she notices the boy sitting behind her.
The Rose Art Museum promised some of college students' favorite pastimes this past Thursday: art and alcohol.
There's hardly any feeling more elusive than d?(c)j?* vu. It's a dreamy sensation that stops you in your tracks, making you question the very nature of time and space.
It's official: the awkward Brandeisian stereotype has made its way into fiction. If you've ever pondered what would happen if a Brandeis kid stumbled onto an American Pie film set, look no further than David H.
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