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

Hannah Kirsch


Articles

Fortune's wheel favors BSO

The average reader of this newspaper is probably not a great fan of classical music, but I would almost guarantee that the average reader of this newspaper has heard a certain section of Carl Orff's choral masterpiece Carmina Burana.I am of course talking about "O Fortuna," the movement that opens and closes Orff's massive setting of medieval poetry.


Revisiting the short story

Hey, Brandeis. Do you read on a regular basis?"I would, but I don't have time." "I'm a science major-what do you think?" "Yeah, right." "By the time I'm finished reading for class, there's no way I'm going to look at anything else."Excuses, excuses, harried Brandesians.


Swedes declare war on American literature

Economists who think they know how to bolster our economy consistently exhort us with that well-worn phrase "buy American." But the experts who think they know how to look after our intellect apparently won't give a second look at American literature from across the pond.Before choosing French author Jean-Marie Gustave Le Cl


Students learn from masters

At 4 on a Friday afternoon, a group of about 10 barefoot people, composed of students, staff and family, is seated on a patterned rug that has been laid on the main stage of the Slosberg Music Center.


BSO's program promises to delight

Bostonians and Brandeisians, mark your concert calendars now, for the Boston Symphony Orchestra continues to prosper under James Levine's directorship, and the first half of the 2008 to 2009 season promises further intriguing delights.For me, one of the hallmarks of a truly great symphony season is the ingenuity of the programming, especially when it comes to the ensembles at the zenith of the musical hierarchy.


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