Booksmart
The most recent literary event in Waltham began with a barbeque. At a casual backyard gathering last September, Alex Green '04 proposed opening a bookstore in Waltham to his friend Ezra Sternstein '04.
The most recent literary event in Waltham began with a barbeque. At a casual backyard gathering last September, Alex Green '04 proposed opening a bookstore in Waltham to his friend Ezra Sternstein '04.
There are few things as immeasurably beautiful as the human form. For many artists, the smooth, rounded curves of a naked body speak a kind of poetry.
It isn't a crime to offend people in print... at least it shouldn't be. Yet two Sundays ago, Lies Magazine had to go before the Union senate to defend our right to publish an article titled, "Lies Guide to Banging Sorority Girls," because the article offended some students.
Who would have guessed that only three miles from campus lies a seven-acre community farm dedicated to hunger relief, agricultural education and farm preservation?
If Musiq's newest album Soulstar is any indication, the neo-soul musical movement may be dying. More than just dying, the bland beats and uninspired lyrics on Soulstar make it appear as if the genre is dead and decaying.
What do you call a theater production about two low-quality cabaret singers who die of exposure at the North Pole while searching for the mythical Yeti?
"Fact: Asparagus is just really tall grass." Erroneous statements about pee-altering vegetables are hard to come by at Brandeis.
As the heavy metal door at the back of Kutz opened slowly, the four of us were immediately hit with a blast of hot air infused with the crisp scent of pastries taken straight from an oven.Unbeknownst to most students, the sweets eaten in every caf and cafeteria on campus are baked at Brandeis' own bakery in the basement of Kutz.
As a chilly rain fell outside, interspersed with blankets of rolling fog, the music of a long dead 18th-century composer worked its magic inside the Goldfarb Library.
Grammy award winning Jamaican reggae legend Burning Spear (real name Winston Rodney) has been producing roots reggae for more than three decades now.
Justice Editors & Staff — Not Pictured