The second 'Final' is gorier than the first
Imagine what it would feel like if you had a vision of something bad happening to you or to someone else, and then tried to stop it.
Imagine what it would feel like if you had a vision of something bad happening to you or to someone else, and then tried to stop it.
A Jew, a Christian and a Muslim are all accused of killing the Sultan's hunchbacked storyteller. Don't worry, this is not "some sad, ethnic joke" as the Sultan himself first thinks.
Last Wednesday night, the Class of 2003 hosted the Senior Spirit coffeehouse at Cholmondeley's. Gregg Leppo '03, president of the Senior Spirit club, and Aziz Nekoukar '03, vice president and treasurer, emceed of the event.
On Friday, Brandeis' False Advertising, Skidmore College's Sketchies, Brown University's Beasts of Funny and Boris' Kitchen performed at the Third Annual Sketch Comedy Festival, hosted by Brandeis' own Boris' Kitchen.
On Thursday night in Sherman Function Hall, J. M. Coetzee, two-time winner of the Booker Prize, read from his most recent book, "Youth," and from one of his previous books, "Disgrace." Coetzee has written more than eight novels including "Age of Iron," "Boyhood," "Giving Offense" and "Stranger Shores." Coetzee, a tall, skinny man, was physically unassuming.
On Wednesday night in Pearlman Lounge, former Brandeis English professor Allen Grossman read from his new book, "Sweet Youth: Poems by a Young Man and an Old Man," as well as from two of his previous books, "How to do Things with Tears" and "The Ether Dome and Other Poems."Grossman called his poems a "conversation, loving almost erotic, between the old man and the young man." He began with his poetry from "How to do Things with Tears," reading the title poem and "Flora's ABC." The 30-some odd people present were then treated to a surprise.
"Stripping first, reading rules, then de-virginization." This was the interesting order on Friday night as the Rocky Horror Picture Show Fan Club put on its annual performance of the "Rocky Horror Picture Show." As the huge crowd of more than 150 people filed in to watch, the feeling that most of them had never seen the show live filled the room.
Thursday night at Cholmondeley's, Students for Environmental Action (SEA) hosted a coffee house to help support Brandeis' wetlands.
Would you tell anybody if you had a fountain of youth in your backyard? Patriarch of the Tuck family, Angus, (William Hurt of "Changing Lanes") says "No."Disney's new movie, "Tuck Everlasting," is based on the book of the same name by Natalie Babbit.
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