Colloquium brings new perspectives to campus
Do Robert Schumann's works deviate substantially from the 18th-century classical tradition, or are they merely an extension of the tradition?
Do Robert Schumann's works deviate substantially from the 18th-century classical tradition, or are they merely an extension of the tradition?
In collaboration with two Brandeis graduates, Prof. Martin Levin (POL) published his first children's picture book this past December titled Little Cheese: The Brie that Brought Sunshine to Chicago. Levin has been a professor at the University since the 1970s and has taught a wide range of courses, including classes on political leadership, the politics of the novel and policymaking.
Imagine seeing the world through the eyes of a three-year-old girl-and not just any three-year-old girl but through the eyes of Vera Loumpet-Galitzine, a girl who has grown up in France with a father who is the nje, or prince, of the Bamun kingdom in Foumbaun, Cameroon, and with a mother who is a descendent of a royal Russian lineage.
This week, justArts had a conversation with Zuri Gordon '15, who is the president of the Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance, about an event during the group's programming for Sexual Violence Awareness Week. JustArts: Can you tell me a little about the history of the clothesline project and how [the Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance] adopted it? Zuri Gordon: This is our second Sexual Violence Awareness Week and last year was the first year that we started it, and The Clothesline Project was the last event in the [Shapiro Campus Center] Atrium so we decided to do it again this year. I know that The Clothesline Project was started in Cape Cod in the '90s.
This year marks the centennial anniversary of the birth of Irving Fine, a composer and former professor at the University.
The beat of 10 drums filled the Alumni Lounge of the Usdan Student Center on Tuesday evening as musician and educator Toussaint Liberator led a group of Brandeis students in a drum circle.
At 2 p.m., an hour before closing time, the In a Pickle Restaurant was still bustling with customers wolfing down breakfast foods and parties were still waiting to be seated.
Walking through the forest where their father, Joseph Fisher, was liberated from the concentration camp Gusen II, four siblings sit on a bench as they try to piece together and comprehend their father's life in the camps and after his liberation.
In a collaborative effort by Student Activities, the Fine Arts department, the Entrepreneurship Club and Her Campus Brandeis, the Carl and Ruth Shapiro Campus Center Atrium held the first- ever Student Vendor Arts and Crafts Fair on Friday afternoon.
Brandeis is known for its prominent arts programs, but at times, it seems like arts students are the only ones benefiting from the diverse array of arts programs that the University provides.
How did the City of Waltham vote in the 2024 Presidential Election?
Alumni circulate petition to keep official Brandeis emails
Moving forward: Lulu Ohm '25 welcomes a new era of Brandeis women's basketball
Community receives message titled “Social Justice and Free Expression”
Getting to know the Brandeis fencing team