11.12.2003
Jawsblog: 4K Copies of Brandeis Justice Stolen
Jawsblog's Josh: "The Justice wasn't on campus this evening (as it usually is)--and according to one source: 'Between 3 and 4 p.m. today 4,000 copies of the justice were stolen'..."
It doesn't appear to be race-related, he says.
They always forget that there's an online version. So they're not smart thieves, whoever they are.
MORE: Dahlia of Sporadic Thoughts confirms it as well.
Of notable things this week, there's a Brandeis staff member (and a former student newspaper staffer) commenting on the Justice controversy.
A forum on the n-word was held.
Yana Litovsky, who penned an good peice last issue (or was it the issue before?) on the controversy, has something this week, too, indirectly mentioning it: "Be it a Senate meeting or politically-charged strife between a student group and a newspaper, we are bound to get carried away with highfalutin' words and overzealous actions. And while we have an investment in the integrity of our organizations and their contribution to the community, so much of the political minutia that trips us up is only practice for a much more convoluted and political world than the one we've engendered. So in this petri dish of budding bureaucracy, let's indulge in an occasional disembodiment from our self-important selves: We can all use a good laugh..."
It doesn't appear to be race-related, he says.
They always forget that there's an online version. So they're not smart thieves, whoever they are.
MORE: Dahlia of Sporadic Thoughts confirms it as well.
Of notable things this week, there's a Brandeis staff member (and a former student newspaper staffer) commenting on the Justice controversy.
A forum on the n-word was held.
Yana Litovsky, who penned an good peice last issue (or was it the issue before?) on the controversy, has something this week, too, indirectly mentioning it: "Be it a Senate meeting or politically-charged strife between a student group and a newspaper, we are bound to get carried away with highfalutin' words and overzealous actions. And while we have an investment in the integrity of our organizations and their contribution to the community, so much of the political minutia that trips us up is only practice for a much more convoluted and political world than the one we've engendered. So in this petri dish of budding bureaucracy, let's indulge in an occasional disembodiment from our self-important selves: We can all use a good laugh..."
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