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Brandeis University's Community Newspaper — Waltham, Mass.

March 2010 Issue

Screenwriter Kashua discusses identity roles in Middle East

Sayed Kashua, screenwriter for the popular Israeli television show “Arab Labor,” and columnist for the Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz, answered questions after a screening of an episode from the first season of the show Tuesday evening. Much of the first season of “Arab Labor” centers on the beginning romance between an Israeli man and an Arab […]


‘Dido’ hits the right notes

The first performance of Henry Purcell’s definitive work, the opera “Dido and Aeneas,” occurred in 1689 at a London girl’s school. Three hundred and twenty-one years later, it can still sound fresh and lively if it’s presented by an organization with as much talent as the Brandeis University Department of Music. Last Sunday’s staging of […]


Liquid Latex lays bare annual show

Unsurprisingly, the Levin Ballroom was packed to capacity on Thursday night, with all seats filled and numerous people standing in the back of the room, all in anticipation of Liquid Latex’s 10th annual show. Every year, students get on stage and prance about with nothing on but latex and a lot of creativity, which always […]


Why do we love naked golden men?

An ungodly runtime, hosts with mediocre jokes, long clip montages with no apparent purpose and sometimes dubious winners. Every year, critics and viewers alike lodge these complaints against the annual Academy Awards, yet tens of millions still watch the ceremony every year—and that’s just in the United States alone. Why? I asked myself this question […]


Following the players: FTP’s traveling ‘Guildenstern’ amuses

Clever stage direction and stellar acting made the Free Play Theatre Cooperative’s production “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead” an enjoyable experience. However, Tom Stoppard’s uneven and muddled script left the audience feeling dissatisfied. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, the often forgotten minor characters from William Shakespeare’s “Hamlet,” take center stage in Stoppard’s script. In Shakespeare’s mammoth play, […]


Little wonder in ‘Wonderland’: Quirk for quirk’s sake?

The experience of watching “Alice in Wonderland,” the newest film from zany director Tim Burton, in 3-D was like falling down a rabbit hole and being bored by the fall. Sure, the situation itself is odd enough, but there are no significant surprises. My attitude may be a result of overly high expectations and my […]


While abroad, Brandeisian finds hope amid Chilean disaster

As she slept in her hotel room on the last night of her study abroad orientation in Valparaiso and Vina del Mar, Chile on Feb. 28, Quinn Lockwood ’11 felt the shocks of one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded. “We certainly felt the shaking. [It was] very scary, and the hotel sustained some damage, […]


Constitutional Review Report

Proposed Amendment 1: Student Union Government restructuring •  Part one would replace the legislative powers of the Union Senate into an Assembly and Club Support Board. •  Under the committee’s proposal, the Vice President would be internally elected by the Assembly—merging the             position with executiv    senator. •  The Union Judiciary would become […]


Jargon no substitute for historically ‘under-discussed’ position

In April 2009 the Student Union Judiciary (UJ) was unable to come to a majority opinion in a case that questioned the legality of the Racial Minority Senator position.  The UJ instead ruled that the fate of the Union position created in the early 1990s should be decided by the Union’s Constitutional Review Committee this […]


We stand against hate

This board was disturbed and hurt by the vandalism to the Muslim Student Association (MSA) suite this week.  We were equally disturbed and hurt by the suggestion that such actions could be blamed on “the Jews” as one individual wrote on the wall of a Facebook event created to show support for the MSA. The […]