Campus gears up for a wet, yet wild, Spring Weekend
By Allissa Wickham | April 18Campus flowers may be merely buds, but as Friday night's Roots concert draws near, preparations for Spring Weekend are in full bloom.
Campus flowers may be merely buds, but as Friday night's Roots concert draws near, preparations for Spring Weekend are in full bloom.
During a single, paint-splattered evening, an enthusiastic group of musicians, designers and volunteers sacrificed the luxury of sleep and built the Technicolor stage now residing in a corner of Production Workshop's downstairs space.
The phones at Problem Pregnancy rarely fall silent for more than a few minutes at a time.
Alternative rock band Mission of Burma has been added to the Spring Weekend lineup, the Brown Concert Agency announced last night. The band will open for The Roots and Soulive on Thursday, April 19.
With groups drawing from sources as diverse as Oscar Wilde, haiku, urban street culture and Bollywood, Ashamu Dance Studio was enlivened by a wide range of dance styles and rhythms at the Fall Dance Concert last night.
From their perch on the top floor of Alumnae Hall, employees at the Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women have a perfect view of the former all-women's campus.
When coping with the chaos of modern life, some people take weekly yoga classes or unwind with an hour of "American Idol." Others, like Charlie Custer '08, spin their frustration into original rap music.
Hip-hop group The Roots and indie rockers The Flaming Lips will headline the two Spring Weekend concerts this year, the Brown Concert Agency will announce today.
Ship horns bellowed throughout the Orwig Music Building last Friday afternoon as experimental composer Alvin Curran '60 played sound clips during his talk on "Music Outside the Concert Halls." The lecture was part of the Department of Music's ongoing "Music, Culture and Technology" speaker series, and ...
The speeches of Elizabeth I and a book on the "art of midwifery" are among the works of early women's literature that the Brown University Women Writers Project has worked for nearly two decades to make more accessible through transcription into digital text.