F R I D A Y FEBRUARY 13, 2004
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD Volume CXXXIX, No. 13
An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891
www.browndailyherald.com
Legendary professor might or might not appear for Carberry Day
Hazeltine cancels classes to protest dean’s decision
BY LISA MANDLE
BY ROBBIE COREY-BOULET
Since 1955, Friday the 13th at Brown has been more about honoring a legendary professor of psychoceramics than worrying about bad luck. Today’s Carberry Day celebrations honor a decades-old University tradition that began after the University received an anonymous gift of $101.01 from the mythical Professor of Psychoceramics Josiah Stickney Carberry to establish a fund in memory of his “future late wife.” Psychoceramics is the study of cracked pots. The gift was given with the stipulation that every Friday the 13th, jugs would be placed around campus for the collection of loose change for the fund. Money collected in this manner would go towards the purchase of books that the Professor “might or might not approve of.” In the nearly 50 years since then, University libraries have placed ceramic pots around campus on Friday the 13th and Leap Day. Though Carberry Day began in May 1955, the professor himself has been around since 1929. Legend has it that Benjamin Clough, chair of the classics department at the time, discovered a flier posted on a bulletin board announcing a lecture to be given by J.S. Carberry on “Archaic Greek Architectural Revetments in Connection with Ionian Philology.” Further inquiries were directed to another professor in the department, John Spaeth, according to Pembroke Alumna magazine. Clough, as the story goes, found the
As part of an ongoing battle with administrators, Professor Emeritus of Engineering Barrett Hazeltine canceled lecture classes yesterday but made no promise of when they would begin again. Students expecting to attend EN 90: “Managerial Decision Making” were notified of the cancellation by a notice Hazeltine posted outside the classroom. “No lectures today. I do not know if or when they will resume. I am in a major (to me) dispute with the administration,” Hazeltine wrote. The dispute stems from a restriction on the number of independent study projects Hazeltine’s students can pursue, he told The Herald. Administrators imposed a limit of 20 students in April 2002, he said, leaving him with the understanding that additional sponsors would be found to take on more projects. In the past, Hazeltine had agreed to advise as many as 175 projects in one semester, according to Dean of the College Paul Armstrong. But as more students requested approval for independent study projects, Hazeltine said he became frustrated with administrators, who had not responded to his requests. “The last week or so, the situation seems to be getting worse and worse,” he said. “More than a week ago, I sent a memo to University Hall saying I really want a resolution and the students deserve a resolution,” he said. “And we just didn’t hear a thing.” Hazeltine said he hoped the class cancellations would elicit a response from the administration and eventually lead to more sponsors for his independent study candidates. But Armstrong said Hazeltine agreed to the 20-person limit in a meeting two years ago, and that the University has done its part in responding to his requests. “Twenty independent study projects is still a high number, more than most faculty would be able to handle,” Armstrong wrote. “But Professor Hazeltine is an exceptional teacher who is unusually dedicated to students.” Armstrong wrote that since the limit was imposed, his office has actively sought other sponsors for Hazeltine’s students and will “continue to work with the dean of engineering toward that end.” Sponsors have been located for a number of students, Armstrong said. Hazeltine said he believes the independent projects are an important aspect of the business curriculum at Brown. “I think that people can learn a lot dealing with real world problems,” he said. “For many students, dealing with
Philissa Cramer / Herald
This fixture in Jo’s is one of the modern relics that Professor Josiah Carberry has left behind.
see CARBERRY, page 4
Student hurt in weekend attack BY JONATHAN ELLIS
An unidentified Brown student was assaulted near the Damascus Food truck early Sunday morning, according to two eyewitnesses. A University official confirmed a student was attacked. A group of assailants punched and kneed the victim in the face, the witnesses said.
Arming implementation on schedule, administrators say BY ZACH BARTER
Two months after announcing the decision to arm campus police officers, the University remains on track with its implementation plan and will soon begin providing detailed updates to campus groups, said Vice President for Administration Walter Hunter. “We think it’s very important that this be an open process,” Hunter said. “We want the community to feel comfortable that we’re being careful, thorough and communicative.” Updates will be released as the University reaches milestones in its plan rather than on a regular basis. The first
update will come within the next month, Hunter said. Groups to receive arming updates include the Undergraduate Council of Students, Graduate Student Council, Medical Student Senate, Faculty Executive Committee, Staff Advisory Committee and Campus Community Public Safety Committee. Representatives from the Third World Center and Greek Council will also receive the updates, which will be accessible to the full Brown community on the Web, Hunter said. see ARMING, page 4
Department of Public Safety Officer Daniel Nuey refused to provide information regarding the alleged incident, calling it an “open investigation.” Mark Nickel, director of the Brown News Service, said DPS told him it did not have a police report of such an incident. But DPS did report that a student received medical assistance early Sunday morning, Nickel said. According to that report, the student had apparently been attacked, but he could not identify the assailants and did not wish to file a complaint or press charges, Nickel said. Dean for Campus Life Margaret Jablonski also had access to the report, which was filed Monday. The student, who was walking near the intersection of George and Brown streets, was “struck in the face and body by two unknown subjects,” Jablonski said. “I know the case is still open and (DPS) is investigating,” Jablonski said. According to the report, DPS and Providence Rescue responded to the incident, she said. The Office of Student Life followed up on the assault and provided assistance to the student, Jablonski added. The two witnesses said they have not yet been contacted by DPS.
I N S I D E F R I D AY, F E B RUA RY 1 3 , 2 0 0 4 Production Workshop’s “The Country Wife” has an edge, thanks to dark humor arts & culture, page 3
American Indian History Series convocation celebrates Native heritage campus news, page 5
Safewalkers to receive paychecks, and students to take over dispatching campus news, page 5
see HAZELTINE, page 6
TO D AY ’ S F O R E C A S T Yann Danis ’04 in the running to win college hockey’s highest award sports, page 12
W. water polo finds success at recent Ivy Classic, maintains national ranking sports, page 12
mostly sunny high 44 low 28
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
THIS MORNING FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004 · PAGE 2 Coup de Grace Grace Farris
W E AT H E R FRIDAY
SATURDAY
High 44 Low 28 mostly sunny
SUNDAY
High 47 Low 10 mostly sunny
MONDAY
High 27 Low 10 partly cloudy
High 16 Low -1 wind
GRAPHICS BY TED WU
Four Years Eddie Ahn
TO D AY ’ S E V E N TS WORK, CULTURE AND CLASS IDENTITY IN KOREA 4:30 - 6:30 p.m. (Salomon Center for Teaching, Lower Auditorium) — with Hagen Koo, professor of sociology, University of Hawaii.
STARGAZING WITH JOSIAH CARBERRY 9 - 11:10 p.m. (Ladd Observatory, 210 Doyle Ave.) — The good professor has an exciting announcement that will keep you wishing on a star.
MENU SHARPE REFECTORY LUNCH — Vegetarian Vegetable Soup, Rhode Island Quahog Chowder, Honey Mustard Chicken Sandwich, Apple, Rice & Raisin Casserole, Spinach with Toasted Sesame Seeds, Sugar Cookies, Chocolate Cream Pie, Honey Oatmeal Cake. DINNER — Vegetarian Vegetable Soup, Rhode Island Quahog Chowder, Fried Scallops, Cider Glazed Turkey, Manicotti Piedmontese, Cranberry Wild and White Rice Pilaf, Mashed Butternut Squash, Italian Green Beans, Pueblo Bread, Sugar Cookies, Chocolate Cream Pie.
VERNEY-WOOLLEY DINING HALL LUNCH — Vegetarian Broccoli Cheese Soup, Roasted Corn Chowder with Bacon, Chicken Fingers, Mediterranean Orzo,Whole Kernel Corn, Sugar Cookies.
DINNER — Vegetarian Broccoli Cheese Soup, Roasted Corn Chowder with Bacon, Roast Loin of Pork, Mexican Cornbread Casserole, Roasted Rosemary Potatoes, Cauliflower in Dill Mustard Sauce, Sugar Snap Peas, Pueblo Bread, Chocolate Cream Pie.
My Best Effort William Newman and Barron Youngsmith
Greg and Todd’s Awesome Comic Greg Shilling and Todd Goldstein
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ARTS & CULTURE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004 · PAGE 3
Dark humor gives “The Country Wife” edge
Professor receives Mid-Atlantic Writers’ Association award
BY DANIELLE CERNY
BY LELA SPIELBERG
A new adaptation of “The Country Wife” by Greg Shilling ’04 transforms the concepts of virtue, love and sex into their most haunting forms. The play begins with Mr. Horner, played by Austin Campion ’06, intentionally blackening his name with the rumor that he is a eunuch. At the price of his manhood, Mr. Horner buys his way into the hearts and beds of the women of London. The scheme allows Mr. Horner to avoid the watchful eyes of the women’s husbands, who practically force their wives into his arms to avoid their obnoxious company. Though the women in this play are introduced on leashes and in cages, they are far from innocent pawns in this game of sexual deviancy. The wives realize the only difference between themselves and prostitutes is that they were purchased with the promise of dowry rather than the physical exchange of money. With this knowledge, these women of wealth and “virtue” are no longer content watching their husbands gallivant with lovers while they remain unfulfilled. Thus, the same Mr. Horner whose reputation at first repulsed them now becomes their savior. Aided by the city’s ignorance, the women engage in extramarital sex with Mr. Horner without the risk of blackening their honor. While these virtuous ladies are wrongly trusted, the play’s only innocent woman, Mrs. Pinchwife, played by Diana Fithian ’04, is locked up and beaten by her jealous husband until she, too, searches for love outside her marriage.
These disturbing themes have often been omitted or glossed over in previous productions of “The Country Wife.” Shilling, a Herald comic artist, brings these sensitive issues to the forefront of the show. Whether through masked, erotic dances or faceless shadows on a silkscreen, sex is far from concealed in this interpretation of William Wycherly’s creation. The overt representation of sex and betrayal infuse this “comedy” with an undeniable dark side. Despite humorous moments — many of which come in short asides to the audience — the play is permeated with a tense and disturbing atmosphere. The purposefully flamboyant acting in “The Country Wife” only adds to the play’s strange charm. The cast is engaging, and the actors fully take on the unique roles prescribed by the production. The play is not for people who expect a typical, feel-good laugh. It is a haunting creation constructed on edgy themes and biting humor. With its atypical plot and original adaptation, “The Country Wife” promises to surprise until the final stage light fades to black. “The Country Wife,” which was produced by Production Workshop, plays in T.F. Green Hall tonight through Monday at 8 p.m., with a midnight show Saturday. Danielle Cerny ’06 edits the Arts & Culture section. She can be reached at dcerny@browndailyherald.com.
When Anthony Bogues, associate professor of Africana studies and chair of the Africana Studies Department, attended the annual Mid-Atlantic Writers’ Association Conference last October, he thought he was simply there to give a speech. “When my wife read the program and told me they were presenting me with an award, I said ‘Oh, no, I am just here to talk,’” Bogues said. Bogues received MAWA’s Distinguished Writer’s Award for his book “Black Heretics, Black Prophets: Radical Political Intellectuals,” which attempts to examine the black intellectual tradition. Despite the book’s weighty title, Bogues told The Herald he did not write it for a strictly academic audience. “I try to write for the general reading public,” he said. “I really try to encourage people to think about critical questions that face the people of this world.” Bogues published his first book, “Caliban’s Freedom: The Early Political Thought of C.L.R. James,” in 1997, but his writing career did not begin with his first book, he said. “Long before I became an academic, I considered myself a writer,” he said. Bogues began his career as a television journalist, writing and producing documentaries. In 1994, he became a professor of political science at the University of the West Indies, where he specialized in courses on radical political theory and African and Caribbean politics. In 1997, Bogues founded a biannual
Caribbean journal, “Small Axe,” an interdisciplinary publication that looks at issues concerning the Caribbean and the Caribbean diaspora. Bogues’ expertise on the Caribbean extends past his writing. He is also the associate director for the Center for Caribbean Thought, which documents Caribbean intellectual history and sponsors conferences with prominent speakers such as Sylvia Winters, C.L.R. James and Stuart Hall. Though the program is based in the Caribbean, the conferences are dually run by Brown’s Africana Studies Department, which Bogues chairs. The classes Barnes teaches in Africana Studies include AF160: “History, Nation, Popular Culture and Caribbean Politics” — which students call the “Bob Marley” class — and another about Rastafarianism. “In a strange way, my writing walks alongside my teaching,” he said. “I spend lots of time preparing for my classes, and my ideas from teaching crystallize what I write.” After receiving the MAWA Distinguished Writer’s Award, Bogues received several requests to write about “how to write.” “Writing is a fundamental part of my intellectual life,” he said. “It is a way one can think, critique, convey and interview into discussion that is important in the world.” Herald staff writer Lela Spielberg ’07 can be reached at lspielberg@browndailyherald.com.
Big Cat: I have tuna. Please come home. Love, Kansas Chicken
PAGE 4 THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004
Carberry continued from page 1 notice suspicious and changed the flier so that it read, “A lecture will not be given.” Clough credits Spaeth with creating Carberry, or at least doing “much to speed him on his erratic way.” After failing to show up for lectures on ophiology and chiromancy, Carberry’s field was narrowed to psychoceramics, he gained the title “Professor” and his wife and two daughters joined him in fame. It quickly became a game to get the Carberry name published in as many places as possible. For example, an article in “American Scientist” included a book by the professor, “Psychoceramics” (Brown University Press, 1945, 1313p.) in its footnotes, according to the Encyclopedia Brunoniana. Stories of the Carberry family’s travels and poetry by the Carberry daughters were published frequently in the Providence Journal until submissions from the family were banned, said Connie Worthington ’68. While most students today know of the Professor only from ordering a Carberry sandwich at Jo’s or searching the University’s online catalog, Josiah, his name was once known beyond the Van Wickle Gates. Carberry beat out Marco Polo and Henry Kissinger to be
named “World’s Greatest Traveler” by the New York Times in 1974. In 1975, American Express Travel Service radio advertisements featuring Carberry aired in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and Dallas, according to the New York Times. The University allowed American Express to use Carberry in return for a $500 donation to his book fund, according to an article in a 1975 issue of The Brown Alumni Magazine. For Brunonians devoted to Carberry, the professor’s bizarre character and the legend’s absurdity are part of his allure. But in his transformation to radio personality, the company decided to drop the title of professor, fearing listeners would associate it with being “absentminded or kooky,” according to the Times. Carberry was also stripped of his wife and two daughters to make it “more acceptable for the women who meet him to swoon,” the Times reported. Without Laura, Carberry was free to respond to adoring women with such lines as, “Gate Seven, the orange corridor. Give me about five minutes.” The Carberry ads were so popular that they resulted in a 109 percent increase in inquiries to American Express Travel Service and visits to its office, according to the Times. Carberry’s fame even spread to other campuses as the legend grew. Wesleyan University’s tiddly-
winks team was at one time named after him, though they claimed him as a Wesleyan professor, much to the chagrin of Carberry’s friends at Brown. The Brown Faculty Club has received mail addressed both to and from Carberry, including a bill for a subscription to “Playboy,” literature on birth control and samples of baby food, according to a 1960 article in the United Aircraft Corporation’s magazine “BeeHive.” More recently, Carberry was awarded one of the first Ig Nobel prizes in 1991 in the area of interdisciplinary research, according to the Boston Globe. The award ceremony, sponsored by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Museum and the Journal of Irreproducible Results, honored then-Vice President Dan Quayle for “demonstrating, better than anyone else, the need for science education” and Alan Kligerman, the physician who developed the anti-gas product Beano. Of the boxes of material about Josiah Carberry in the University archives, the majority of it is decades old. “I can only attribute that to traditions being more important in the past,” said Ray Butti, library associate specialist. Even Worthington, among the most dedicated to maintaining the legend, does not remember Carberry being a prominent figure in campus life.
As a Pembroke student in the late 1960s, “I don’t think anyone I knew on campus knew about Carberry then,” she said. With the strength of the anti-war movement on campus, “people wouldn’t have listened to something as light-hearted as Carberry,” she said. “We were too serious in ’68 to care about Carberry.” Worthington said she was introduced to Carberry by her father, W. Chesley Worthington ’23, who was involved with the original three-some responsible for creating and perpetuating the myth, she said. Worthington’s father was also one of the first Half-Cohorts of the Carberry Society. Today’s Half-Cohorts are Connie Worthington, Richard Ballou ’66, Nicholas Clapp ’57, Nancy Cassidy ’73 and Professor of Old World Archaeology and Art Martha Joukowsky ’58. Though cracked pots, Josiah’s and the Carberry sandwich may seem to be the only visible marks of his legend remaining on campus today, there are more subtle hints of the Professor waiting to be uncovered by the inquisitive. A search for University library books authored by Josiah Carberry yields two results. “A Journey to the East” is described as a skit set on campus. The second listing, “Sex and the College Student” purports to be a 1,313-page book, 13 cm. tall from a lecture not given on September 13, 1969. The Herald reported Carberry’s death on May 13, 1966, but it is clear that the legend continues to live and grow,
Arming continued from page 1 The University is currently preparing to meet several requirements for arming Simmons laid out in her initial announcement, including officer training, renewed background checks and psychological testing, as well as professional re-accreditation, use-of-force policy revision and diversity development efforts. In the Dec. 1 e-mail that announced the decision, Simmons wrote arming would take place “at the point in the next 12 to 18 months when we have ascertained that all appropriate safeguards, policies, procedures, training and supervision are in place” to provide the safest environment possible. Administrators are also looking into the deployment of non-lethal weapons, Hunter said. Hunter has met with representatives from TASER International to discuss the use of stun gun technology. “We’re asking them for additional information and also doing our own independent research on how the weapons have been used in university settings,” Hunter said. A team within the Department of Public Safety is leading the implementation and provides weekly progress reports to Hunter. An oversight committee composed of senior administrators throughout the University meets monthly to discuss the plan. Michelle Nuey, assistant spe-
albeit beyond the notice of most students. Today, in addition to the traditional pots, the Special Events Committee has a few other things planned to “promote Carberry awareness,” said Student Coordinator Anna Stern ’04. There will be a table in the Post Office where students can pick up fact sheets and buttons and drop their change in a cracked pot. SPEC will also be showing “Made Not Born: The Wife and Dimes of J.S. Carberry,” a film produced by the Brown Club of Rhode Island and Friends of the Library. Stern said she would like to collect $101.01 in change, the same amount that started the tradition in 1955. The Carberry Fund currently has about $16,000, providing about $1,000 worth of library purchases every year, according to a Friends of the Library brochure. The Carberry Society HalfCohorts and Full Consorts, Tufted Puffins and Passing Acquaintances are hosting a Carberry buffet dinner at the Faculty Club Friday, said Christy Blanchard, Friends of the Library coordinator. The dinner will be followed by a public event at Ladd Observatory from 9 to 11 p.m. Carberry himself is expected to make a “stellar” announcement, Blanchard said. Staff writer Lisa Mandle ’06 is the Herald’s design editor. She can be reached at lmandle@browndailyherald.co m.
cial services manager for DPS, referred all arming questions to the Brown News Service. But while Hunter said the process is designed to provide transparency for the community, Fokion Burgess ’07 said he wished it left more room for student input. “This is supposed to be for the student’s safety, and if it is, then we should be more involved in the decision process,” Burgess said. Although Burgess said the public updates will likely be helpful, he still wants more information about the top-level discussions that occurred before the decision was made. Burgess voiced his concerns to Simmons after her Presidential Address Monday night but said he was left unsatisfied by her response. “I feel like we’re walling ourselves off from the rest of Providence, and I don’t like that idea,” Burgess said. “It sends a message of distrust.” UCS President Rahim Kurji ’05 said he has not heard much about the implementation process this semester but thinks the administration has been open to student concerns. “(Simmons) has tried to be responsive in making sure that the process takes place step by step, and if students or members of the community have questions, there is someone who they can take them to,” Kurji said. Herald staff writer Zach Barter ’06 edits the Campus Watch section. He can be reached at zbarter@browndailyherald.com.
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
CAMPUS NEWS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004 · PAGE 5
Funding for Safewalkers aims to make program more effective BY MERYL ROTHSTEIN
Safewalk will pay its employees this semester for the first time, in an effort to make its services more reliable and effective, said Kelly Hall ’06, co-coordinator of the Safewalk program. Safewalk — a student-run program that is part of the Department of Public Safety — dispatches pairs of walkers to accompany students walking alone on campus, under the theory that there is safety in numbers, Hall said. The program previously ran on a volunteer basis, causing service to be “irregular” and “ineffective,” Hall said. It was difficult to recruit walkers and to guarantee a regular schedule of walkers, she said, making it “very discouraging to work in the old service.” Michael Gladstone ’07, who Safewalked last semester, said he would sometimes back out of a shift because he was too busy. Now, with the funding, there is no shortage of walkers, Hall said. More than 50 students applied to fill 28 positions, she said. “Now our goals are oriented towards getting students on campus to use the service,” rather than recruiting walkers, Hall said. Some of the funding can be used to promote the service, she said, adding, “There is no shame in getting Safewalked.” Safewalk now employs 28 walkers, paid $7 per hour, and five supervisors, who are paid more based on seniority, with shifts lasting two hours, Hall said. Previously, Safewalk could not guarantee the presence of Safewalkers on any given night, she said. Beginning on Sunday, when Safewalk service starts, there will be two Safewalkers in the front lobby of the Rockefeller Library and up to six Safewalkers around campus on any given shift, she said. Students can approach a pair of walkers or call the Safewalk dispatchers to get a walk, Hall said, and Safewalkers also can approach students to offer them a walk. see SAFEWALK, page 8
Nick Neely / Herald
Student speakers, actors and a comedian took the stage at the third annual American Indian History Series Convocation.
Convocation celebrates American Indian culture, history BY KRISTA HACHEY
The third annual American Indian History Series Convocation, cosponsored by Native Americans at Brown and the coordinators of Black History Month, represented a campus community that is alive and thriving on campus and nationwide. The Thursday night program featured comedian Drew Lacapa and theater performances from playwright and visiting lecturer in Africana Studies William S. Yellow Robe Jr. and the acting troupe No Borders Inter-Tribal Indigenous Theater Company. Student speakers Davida Delmar ’07 and Deana Wagner ’04 shared personal accounts of finding community at Brown and the strength that keeps it together. Delmar said Providence is nothing like her home reservation in Flagstaff, Ariz., and that “one must not forget the important teachings one has learned from home — to rise early to greet the sun and to respect elders.” Wagner followed Delmar’s words with a retrospective
look at her college years. “I had a rough freshman year, and there have been moments during my time at Brown when I thought about leaving,” she said. “I realized I had to stay tied to the Native American community to stay on track. We struggled together — they didn’t let me leave, and I made sure they didn’t leave me.” Program coordinator Jennifer Edwards ’04 told The Herald that since President Ruth Simmons’ arrival at Brown in 2001, Native American students feel much more at home on campus. “It was only a few years ago that there weren’t really any Native American studies courses, and there were literally three Native students on campus,” she said. “Simmons made a point to meet with our group and to make the University a more welcoming place.” In scenes from “Grandchildren of the Buffalo Soldiers” see CONVOCATION, page 6
PAGE 6 THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004
Convocation continued from page 5 and “Better-n-Indians,” Yellow Robe and local actors from the People’s Theatre and the Trinity Repertory Company explored themes dominating Native American cultural and personal identity. In “Grandchildren,” characters grappled with the uncertainty of being a “half-breed” and the shame that society teaches individuals to feel when they are part Native American and part black. The family depicted in the piece is torn apart by blame pointed at a brother who lied about not being pure Native American in order to marry “respectably.” Yellow Robe played a character who chooses to leave the reservation and later return, only to confront accusations that he “had come back white.” He states the simple problem that has caused him and his family pain: “I’m supposed to act a certain way to be Indian, but I’m trying to be like myself for myself.” Satire and social critique were
woven together in the sketches that comprised “Better-n-Indians.” In a classroom scene, a young girl with Native blood explains what it means to be a Native American by combating stereotypes and remarking on the dearth of educational focus on Native American history in schools. “A lot of what is real for my people is not in your textbook,” she informed her teacher. A later sketch of an outlandish game show entitled “Hey, you an Indian?” exposed ethnocentrism inherent in the tendency to classify people’s origins based on physical features. Stand-up comedian Drew Lacapa, who recently opened for Paul Rodriguez and Jay Leno, shared his humor, which is inspired by the Native American experience. Behind orange-tinted glasses, Lacapa told jokes about his Apache Hopi Tewa identity, which he said is infused with European blood. With humor, Lacapa described a childhood in which “my father taught us to take a bath every day so the white people didn’t think we were dirty, but brown doesn’t wash off very well.” He brought to life Native culture by making light of its idiosyncrasies, like the tendency to “point with our mouths” or create politically incorrect or phallicinspired nicknames for places. The responsive audience urged on his lively storytelling. Lacapa performed the rest of his act wearing a traditional Native American woman’s dress, symbolizing the matriarchal strength he developed during his early married years when his wife was finishing college. “In our culture, the creator made women first, women made men and men screwed it up,” he said. As he related his personal experiences learning to cook, clean and keep the family together during his early family years,
Lacapa appealed to a universal sense of devotion to one’s people, whether it was a family, tribe or community at large. Explaining the overall program’s theatrical and humorous bent, Edwards told The Herald, “Yes, terrible things have happened to our ancestry and communities in the past, but a lot of Native Americans have developed a strong sense of humor. “You can learn a lot about a culture by understanding what makes them laugh,” she said. Herald staff writer Krista Hachey ’07 can be reached at khachey@browndailyherald.com.
Hazeltine continued from page 1 the real world is a much better education than dealing with something that’s abstract.” The projects allow students to pursue their own ideas for non-profit organizations or other businesses and put together development plans. “The academic content is researching the market and researching what you have to do to start the business,” Hazeltine said. “You look at things like comparative advantage, what kind of staff you need — things like that.” He said he believes the projects encourage social responsibility, in addition to business education, but that others may undervalue the study of business in general. “Business is not entirely accepted in parts of academics,” he said. “It’s considered inferior to other subjects.” Herald staff writer Robbie Corey-Boulet can be reached at rcorey-boulet@browndailyherald.com.
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
WORLD & NATION FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004 · PAGE 7
San Francisco opens marriage to gay couples SAN FRANCISCO (L.A.Times) — The ceremony, arranged in great haste, was brief and held behind the closed doors of a dreary municipal office. Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon, a lesbian couple together for 50 years, stood facing each other and beamed when a city official pronounced them not husband and wife but “spouses for life.” They had not become domestic partners, or joined in a civil union. The couple, both pioneering activists in the gay rights movement, had signed full-fledged marriage licenses and been wed with San Francisco’s official blessing, a momentous step that city leaders said has no precedent. Word of the wedding — which took place after San Francisco’s new mayor, Gavin Newsom, defied state law earlier this week and asked city clerks to remove all references to gender on local marriage forms — spread fast. By Thursday evening, San Francisco’s ornate City Hall had begun to resemble a one-of-a-kind wedding chapel as city officials married about 80 gay couples who had rushed there to exchange vows. Newsom’s sudden move to sanction same-sex marriage, a decision that some politically conservative groups are denouncing as illegal and vow to stop through the courts, comes as national debate over the issue is rippling through statehouses, the White House and the Democratic presidential primary races. In Massachusetts, opponents of gay marriage were attempting to enact a constitutional amendment to overturn a state Supreme Court decision allowing gays to marry. Earlier this week, aides indicated that President George Bush would soon endorse a constitutional amendment that would define marriage solely as a union between a man and a woman. On Thursday, the Virginia House of Delegates gave preliminary approval to legislation that would ban the recognition of same-sex civil unions and domestic partnerships. California, and particularly liberal San Francisco, has some of the nation’s broadest protections for gay couples, but it does not sanction gay marriage. In 2000, voters backed a ballot measure that in effect banned the practice. But Newsom, a 36-year-old Democrat who was inaugurated last month, said that he decided to change San Francisco’s marriage regulations because he was convinced that they violated the state constitution, which he said “leaves no room for any form of discrimination.” He said he began thinking about making the changes after listening to Bush disparage gay marriage in his State of the Union address last month. Mark Leno, an openly gay Democratic state legislator who represents San Francisco, called the flurry of weddings “an act of civil disobedience.” Newsom didn’t participate in any of the impromptu wedding ceremonies, but he issued a statement saying, “Today a barrier to justice has been removed. A barrier removed for one person is a barrier removed for us all.”
Newsom sent a letter Tuesday to the San Francisco County clerk’s office asking that the documents local couples fill out to obtain marriage licenses be changed in all ways necessary to allow gay or lesbian couple to be legally wed. Upon hearing that opponents of the move were planning to seek a court injunction against it as early as Friday, his administration rushed in to make the changes in time for ceremonies to be held Thursday and alerted a few gay rights groups, which in turn notified prospective couples. Martin and Lyon, the first gay couple to be wed, were asked to participate in the first ceremony because of their local stature. They have been prominent activists for gay rights in San Francisco for decades and founded one of the country’s first gay advocacy groups. But other couples hurried to City Hall after hearing news reports or receiving emails about the event. City officials married some of them inside the assessor’s office and others in the middle of the building’s grand rotunda. Small groups gathered to watch and erupted in cheers after vows were exchanged. Outside City Hall, a few dozen gay rights activists rallied in support of the ceremonies and at one point began singing the Bob Dylan anthem “The Times, They Are A-Changin’.” “I’ve been trying to get married for so long, I feel like I’m dreaming,” said Molly McKay, who took part in a ceremony with her partner, Davina Kotulski. “I feel kind of giddy and proud,” said Mike Kabler, 31, a law student who married his partner, Kevin Fox, 34. But opponents of gay marriage said the couples were being fooled and derided Newsom’s step as a political stunt. “This clearly violates state law,” said state Sen. William Knight, a Republican who sponsored the 2000 ballot measure blocking gay marriage. “It’s nothing more than a sideshow. These marriages have no force of law, and I hope they’re telling these couples that. The mayor just can’t change a law because he disagrees with it.” Gay activists vowed to defend San Francisco’s action. “This is a civil rights movement from coast to coast that touches real people and will not stop until equality is achieved,” said Evan Wolfson, executive director of the group Freedom to Marry. As couples arrived to get married and other lined up for marriage license papers, Martin, 83, and Lyon, 79, avoided the celebrations around City Hall and went home after their private ceremony. Afterward, Lyon said that she was sure the ceremonies would be challenged in court and was uncertain if they would be upheld. “God knows what’s going to happen,” she said. But she said that she and Martin, who will celebrate their 51st anniversary together on Valentine’s Day, were proud — and amazed — by what they’d been at last allowed to do. “Things are happening that we never dreamed of,” Lyon said.
Inspectors uncover Iranian plans for nuclear device WASHINGTON, D.C. (Washington Post) — International inspectors have discovered that Iran hid blueprints for a powerful device to enrich uranium, in an apparent breach of Tehran’s promise last year to disclose all of its nuclear activities, officials in Austria and Washington said Thursday. The discovery of the concealed blueprints for a stateof-the art centrifuge, which can be used to enrich uranium for civilian reactors or nuclear bombs, raised questions about whether Tehran also has bought designs for a nuclear weapon from the same black market sources, the officials said. Even if bomb blueprints are not found, Washington will discuss with its allies whether to ask the International Atomic Energy Agency to refer Iran’s nuclear activities to the United Nations Security Council for debate, U.S. officials said. Washington has not yet decided whether to advocate international sanctions against Iran, and will await a report from the IAEA next week before deciding what course to take, they said. The IAEA Board of Governors is scheduled to meet in Vienna, Austria, March 8-10. “This is the smoking gun,”said Henry Sokolski, executive director of the Washington-based Nonproliferation Policy Education Center. “They lied — again.” Iran has maintained that its nuclear program has been strictly for civilian purposes. But Gregg Sullivan, spokesman for the U.S. State Department’s Near Eastern
Affairs Bureau, said the American “policy and our sentiments are based on suspicion” of the existence of an Iranian nuclear weapons program. Although the IAEA declared last year that Iran must make a complete declaration of all its nuclear activities, the United States thinks Iran continues to operate a secret effort to build nuclear weapons. John Bolton, the U.S. undersecretary of State for arms control, renewed the U.S. accusation Thursday at a security conference in Berlin. “There’s no doubt in our mind that Iran continues to pursue a nuclear weapons program,”Bolton said. Over the next three weeks, Washington will discuss the severity of the Iranian issues with IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei and European Union partners, Sullivan said. “It also gives the Iranians three weeks to come up with some accounting for their behavior,”he said. “There’s time for some diplomacy here.”But a decision to seek sanctions could follow. “I can’t say we’re going to charge in and go to the Security Council, but that’s always a possibility if the behavior of the Iranians isn’t demonstrating respect for the IAEA’s authority,”Sullivan said. Independent analysts said the finding of a newer type of gas centrifuge design, called a G-2, was significant evidence of Iranian pursuit of a nuclear weapons program. Discovery of the blueprints was first reported Thursday in The Financial Times.
Senate panel expands probe of Iraq intelligence Washington, D.C. (Washington Post) — The Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence voted Thursday night to expand its investigation into the prewar intelligence on Iraq by probing whether President Bush and other top administration officials exaggerated intelligence information to make a case for war, a move Republicans on the panel had resisted for months. The decision “illustrates the commitment of all members to a thorough review, to learning the necessary lessons from our experience with Iraq, and to ensuring that our armed forces and policy-makers benefit from the best and most reliable intelligence that can be collected,” Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), chairman of the committee, said in a statement. Sen. John Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.), the vice chairman, said in the statement that the “agreement reflects a difficult and lengthy process, but in the end, we were able to reach consensus on the need to expand the investigation into several key areas.” He was referring to the closed-door struggle between Republicans, who sought to keep the focus of the panel’s inquiry on the CIA and other intelligence agencies, and Democrats, who wanted to add a thorough probe into administration actions leading up to the war. The decision, said members of both parties, represents half a loaf for each side. Republicans succeeded in limiting the probe of the administration to a review of public statements, reports and testimony given by administration officials. The committee’s decision follows three weeks of dramatic disclosures by U.S. officials indicating lapses by the U.S. intelligence community, which concluded before the war that Iraq had chemical and biological weapons, as well as an advanced nuclear program. None of those conclusions has been substantiated. Democrats and others also accuse top administration officials of exaggerating the Iraqi threat and of dropping the qualifiers and caveats included in intelligence reports. Last month, former chief U.S. weapons inspector David Kay told a Senate panel that the intelligence estimates on Iraq were “almost all wrong.” Last week, CIA Director George Tenet took responsibility for some of the intelligence failures. President Bush last week reversed his opposition to an independent inquiry into prewar intelligence and named a commission to review U.S. intelligence on weapons proliferation involving Iraq and other countries. On Thursday, Bush named the final two members of the nine-member commission: Charles Vest, president of Massachusetts Institute of Technology since 1990, and Henry Rowen, who chaired the Department of Energy Task Force on the Future of Science Programs from 2002 to 2003. The Senate committee’s vote will allow the panel to review two Pentagon offices, the Office of Special Plans and the Policy Counterterrorism Evaluation Group. Defense officials have said that the OSP was a policy office and that the evaluation group was a two-man intelligence cell that analyzed only existing intelligence community information. Democrats say they were set up to circumvent the CIA and to influence decisionmakers on Iraq. The new mandate limits the inquiry into the Office of Special Plans to “any intelligence activities” it conducted; it does not permit an investigation into whether the OSP influenced top policy-makers’ judgments on Iraq. Thursday’s vote doesn’t authorize the committee to use its subpoena power to probe whether Bush and his top officials relied on other, as yet undisclosed, intelligence when they made statements about Iraq’s weapons — a line of inquiry that Democrats had sought. “It’s progress, but there’s no reason why we shouldn’t have a full inquiry,” said Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.). For the past eight months, the committee has been investigating the underlying judgments that went into the intelligence assessments on Iraq. That part of the probe is to be completed by the end of March. The new findings will be contained in a second report to be released months later.
PAGE 8 THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004
Water polo continued from page 12 Heggie noted that while the team was never really challenged during the tournament, the league itself will hopefully benefit from the event. “It was good to get the other Ivy League (teams) involved. In the future, we can have an Ivy League tournament where all teams are varsity rather than club,” she said. This weekend, the team goes to Princeton University for the Princeton Invitational, a tournament at which the level of play should be much higher. Brown will play the University of Michigan, ranked ninth in the country. The Bears
beat Michigan in the first round of last year’s Eastern Championships. The game is important to everyone on the squad, Clapper said. “There are only a few big games we focus on this year, and this Saturday is one of them,” he said. “Ultimately, there’s one tourney that counts, and that’s the Easterns, the auto-qualifier for the Final Four. But (each tournament) is a good opportunity to show the voters.” Herald staff writer Eric Perlmutter ’06 is an assistant sports editor and covers women’s water polo. He can be reached at eperlmutter@browndailyherald.com.
Danis continued from page 12 “Brown has done a great job promoting this award for me,” placing radio and newspaper advertisements on Danis’ behalf and creating a Web site, he said. “Yann is easily the best goalie I have ever seen,” said teammate Les Haggett ’05. “It is extremely tough for goalies to be considered for the Hobey Baker award, so the fact that he is a finalist is quite an accomplishment in itself. I think a lot of whether or not he wins will depend on how far we go in the tournament.” But getting to where he and the team are now has not been easy. Danis’ first year, the Bears won
Tennis Safewalk continued from page 5 In another change to the system, the dispatchers are now Safewalk’s own student supervisors, rather than the the shuttle and escort service smployee. C.J. Fahey ’05 will begin as a Safewalk employee for the first time this semester. He said he would not have started were it not for the pay. Gladstone said he would have continued to do Safewalk even without the pay, but the new funding “helped us make the jump ... to a really professional service,” he said. “We’re very excited about the fact that Safewalk has the opportunity to be a viable and effective program,” Hall said. It will “make our campus feel safer and actually be safer,” she said. After receiving a statement of support from the Undergraduate Council of Students, Safewalk Co-coordinator Josh Champagne ’05 appealed to Vice President for Administration Walter Hunter for funding at the end of last semester. According to an e-mail from
“We’re very excited about the fact that Safewalk has the opportunity to be a viable and effective program,” Hall said. Hunter, Champagne’s presentation and UCS Campus Life Chair Ari Savitzky ’06 suggested that paying Safewalkers would increase use by students, which was consistent with a recommendation made by campus safety consultants the Bratton Group LLC on the same topic. Safewalk will receive $10,000 this semester, Hall said, and future funding depends on the program’s success during the semester. Under the new system, Safewalkers will be available Sunday through Thursday from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Herald staff writer Meryl Rothstein ’06 edits the Arts and Culture section. She can be reached at mrothstein@browndailyherald.com.
continued from page 12 Sunday saw few highlights for the team, with Falconi securing the only point for Brown in a straight-set singles victory. Amanda Saiontz ’07 played competitively in her No. 5 singles match but lost the third set 6-2. “We pretty much started out playing two of the toughest teams we’ll be playing all season,” Singer said. The weekend was “a good learning experience that showed us our weak points,” she added. Taylor said weak doubles performances compromised the team’s chances. “We were very competitive in
Skiing continued from page 12 The team has proved to be tough to contend with on the slopes this season. At Ascutney over the weekend, the women finished with four racers in the top 15 in the giant slalom. In the slalom, three women finished in the top 15. Hilary Swaffield ’06 placed third overall in the giant slalom with a time of 1:45.34 and 11th in the slalom.
just four games and, last year, suffered a letdown shortly before winter break. These disappointments inspired Danis to focus on playing consistent hockey throughout the season, he said. “Last summer I stayed at Brown to improve my strength. The additional time I have put in has made me a much more confident player,” he said. The team owes much of its success to a new sense of unity, players said. “The team has turned into a family this year. We owe a lot of credit to our captain (Scott Ford ’04) and coaches for bringing us together,” Haggett said. Beyond his stellar statistics, Danis has also been a great leader on the team. Even with his incred-
ible resume, no one ever says he is anything but modest. “On the ice Yann always finds ways to win. Off the ice, he is very humble and leads by example. He is such a likeable guy because he isn’t arrogant,” Brian Ihnacak ’07 said. With all the excitement about this year’s team, Danis admits there is pressure to do well every night. But he said the past four years have been a great ride, and that he has much to look forward to. “I’m going to look to play in the NHL next year,” Danis said. “I will hopefully have some options.”
singles but not very competitive in doubles,” she said. “Our doubles is going to have to improve to win the close matches.” Beck said she agreed that doubles play needs to improve in order to compete with Ivy League competition. “The Ivies are really tough right now,” Beck said. While the majority of the league plays at about the level of Virginia Tech, matches against powerhouses Harvard University and the University of Pennsylvania will pose challenges similar to Virginia. Beck said she was pleased with the results, given the circumstances of both matches. “I think we did pretty well, although we could have done better,” Beck said.
“The whole team needs to be more confident and go for our shots, but that goes along with having more match play,” she said. Both Virginia and Virginia Tech came into the match off of three consecutive victories to open the season, leaving the Bears at a psychological disadvantage, according to Beck. But despite these latest results, Taylor expressed optimism for the remainder of the season. “We started practicing Jan. 28, and these were our first matches,” she said. “It’s still early.”
“Hilary and the freshmen girls have performed better than expected and surpassed expectations every single weekend,” said Captain Molly Sheinberg ’04. Caitlin Stanton ’06 rounded out the top 15 in the giant slalom with her best finish of the season, a time of 1:49.51. Stanton finished in 26th place in the slalom. S t e p h a n i e Breakstone ’06 finished 16th in the giant slalom and 20th in the slalom,
Herald staff writer Robby Klaber ’07 can be reached at rklaber@browndailyherald.com
Herald staff writer Robbie CoreyBoulet ’07 covers women’s tennis. He can be reached at rcoreyboulet@browndailyherald.com.
with times of 1:49.85 and 1:57.33, respectively. “To have four (racers) place in the top 15 in this tight field is remarkable. It shows how strong this team is,” Finocchio said. “It was such a strong weekend for us, and it’s a lead into the last carnival of the season before we go onto postseason play.” Janet Marley-Mauzy ’07 finished 32nd overall in the slalom, while Rhode Island native Jamie Johnson ’05 placed 50th in the giant
slalom. Johnson had her best slalom race to date, finishing in 24th place with a time of 2:00.00. “It was freezing on Sunday, but everyone held on and finished,” Sheinberg said. “The whole weekend was a very impressive team performance.” The women beat second-place University of Massachusetts-Amherst by four seconds in the giant slalom, a great feat in ski racing, Sheinberg said. “It’s cool to be part of a team like ours, where one of our top five girls could win the race on any given day,” O’Hear said. The Bears will wrap up the regular season at the Colby-Sawyer/St. Anselm Carnival this weekend before heading into the post-season. Dibona, like all of her teammates, is all business in 2004. “I truly believe that we are the strongest team in our league,” Dibona said. “While UMass poses somewhat of a threat qualifying for Regionals in a higher standing than us, we have proven that when all of our racers finish and ski to their full capability, we are the top team,” she said.
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
OPINIONS EXTRA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004 · PAGE 9
Going to Mars is worth the stratospheric price GUEST COLUMN BY DAVID SHEAN
Ask a group of 8-year-olds what they want to be when they grow up, and at least half will enthusiastically blurt out “an astronaut!” The reason is simple — to an 8-yearold, space is really cool. It always amazes me to see news clips from the heyday of the U.S. space program, when astronauts were revered by all Americans (not just 8-year-olds) and parades were thrown upon their safe return. The chances of that happening today are nil. While there are many reasons for the public loss of interest, the National Aeronautics and Space Adminstration is not exempt from blame. For the past decade, the human exploration division of NASA hasn’t done much except put another few million miles on the space shuttle odometers during construction of the International Space Station. NASA has lacked vision and a destination. Then, seemingly out of nowhere, came the White House space initiative. The initiative calls for an $866 million increase in NASA’s 2005 budget (totaling $16.2 billion) with an additional $1 billion distributed over the next five years. In addition, major internal restructuring will take place, with funds reallocated within the current NASA budget to fund human exploration missions. The aging shuttle fleet will be retired by 2010, with the development of a new reusable space vehicle by 2013 that will carry humans back to the Moon and eventually Mars. Although it may sound overly ambitious, the initiative is a positive step for NASA, an organization still recovering from the Columbia tragedy just over a year ago. It will provide the NASA human spaceflight division with a realistic challenge, hopefully ending the stagnation and lack of results they faced with the ISS. The initiative will also serve to rejuvenate public interest in space exploration and inspire students to pursue the disciplines of science and engineering, ensuring that the dream of space exploration will continue in future generations. The White House initiative has been subject to harsh criticism from both political parties since its unveiling.
Many analysts have accused President Bush of using the initiative to draw media attention away from Iraq and other shortcomings of the administration. Other critics claim that the initiative is simply election-year fluff to improve Bush’s image. As it turns out, deliberations between NASA officials and the Bush administration began nearly a year ago in response to the Columbia disaster. In other words, this is not simply a diversion that Bush’s advisors cooked up overnight. It was clear that there were many problems within NASA and significant efforts to correct these shortcomings were necessary. Critics from both parties also agree that with the most recent forecasts for the 2004 federal deficit — the
Funding the space program is an investment in this country’s future. largest in history — the last thing we need to do is throw another billion dollars at NASA. But when you put these figures into perspective, another billion becomes pocket change, considering it will be stretched over the next five years. Hell, we just spent another $87 billion in just one year for continued occupation of Iraq! If you take a close look at the proposed 2005 federal budget, you’ll also notice other questionable expenditures, such as $9 billion of the astounding $380 billion dumped into the Department of Defense that will provide funding for continued development of Dick Cheney’s dream — a working space-based missile defense system. The practical commercial and industrial applications of NASA research and development projects are also often overlooked — something to consider the next time you use your Dustbuster.
So why should we explore space in the first place? The most fundamental argument is that humans are born with an inherent desire to explore. Exploration and science are intrinsically related, and the science return of further space exploration is truly unimaginable. For instance, by studying other planets, we can learn a great deal about the history and future of our own. In addition, the question of the existence of life on other worlds is justification alone for future exploration. The other issue that often surfaces during discussions of the future of space exploration is one of human versus robotic exploration. While the mechanical and reasoning abilities of a human being will never be reproduced with circuits, the requirements for a human mission are significantly more challenging and costly than for a robotic mission. In addition, the risks involved with human spaceflight are always present — a harsh reality that became immediately apparent once again with Columbia. While a robotic mission may be much cheaper and safer, the science return may be minimal and the capabilities to remotely assess and repair problems are limited. In the future, robotic and human explorers will have to work together to ensure mission success. As the wealthiest and most scientifically advanced nation in the world, we must continue to explore the universe in this endeavor. While I often find myself criticizing the policies of the Bush administration, I believe that the new space initiative is a step in the right direction. I see it as investment in a positive enterprise that will benefit all of us in ways that we can only speculate about today. Now it is up to NASA to make these ambitious plans a reality. David Shean ’04 is a geophysics major currently working on a research project studying glaciers on Mars. He has also conducted experiments in microgravity with other Brown students on NASA's zero-g airplane (a.k.a. the vomit comet).
SEAN SIPERSTEIN
Knock the Reverend off his pulpit An influential individual in the Democratic Party has made what can only be seen as a deal with the devil and needs to be run out of the public spotlight. He dismisses this, of course, as just another attempt by his presidential rivals and the media to distort his courageous questioning of the party’s untenable status quo. Yet while his platform and campaign seek to appeal to communities of color, he undeniably associates and maintains friendships with right-wingers responsible for the disenfranchisement of minority voters, and actively receives their help in perpetuating specious attacks on his fellow Democrats. The most distressing part of all of this is that in betraying his core principles to seek personal political capital, the Rev. Al Sharpton is passing up a strong opportunity to steer the Democratic Party towards a genuine internal dialogue on its insufficient efforts to not take African American voters, who are at the core of its base and ideals, for granted. Conventional wisdom has held that Sharpton’s campaign was at least partly driven by selfish motives to secure a prominent speaking role at this summer’s convention. Nevertheless, many chose to engage him seriously despite his long-shot status, along with the barely contained glee of conservative pundits glad to see the controversial minister exposed as the true heart and soul of how “liberals” think. As he emerged as the field’s most incisive and entertaining debater, Sharpton became an unlikely force for unity amidst the other candidates’ sniping. After registering new voters in urban areas and South Carolina, it seemed that such optimism had been rewarded. But then something happened to the campaign. Namely, Sharpton saw that he nevertheless wasn’t gaining any momentum and key African-American leaders
weren’t rallying around him like he had hoped—heck, some of them were even endorsing his opponents, the final straw being when Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-IL) got behind Howard Dean. As the Village Voice revealed last week in an article titled “Sleeping With the GOP,” Sharpton fired his old staff (previously headed up by respected Jesse Jackson, Sr. associate Frank Watkins), started going negative on Dean and the others, and hired the operation run by Roger Stone to staff and finance both his campaign and his organization, the National Action Network. Stone, in case you don’t know, is a Republican dirty tricks operative trained by Nixon’s team of scumbags. He i s
The Democrats need to make Al Sharpton the pariah of the party.
notorious for instigating some of the dirtiest campaigns New York has seen, and, most significantly, the man responsible for the GOP mob which shut down the Miami-Dade County recounting of votes in 2000. And while Rev. Al called the Voice inquiry’s mere attempt to question this decision “phony liberal paternalism,” I somehow get the feeling that if this had been out in the open, even the paltry electoral support Sharpton has received might have become non-existent. Stone’s involvement simply shows that, stated agenda aside, this is very much still the “old” Al Sharpton, a man historically willing to demagogue a racial controversy for self-promotion and sabotage the advancement
of progressive politics due to personal spite. His 1986 endorsement of conservative Republican Senator Al D’Amato over Democrat Mark Green and quieter aid to current Mayor Michael Bloomberg in his 2001 victory come to mind. He now seems dangerously convinced that people of color in America need a single national spokesman in the Democratic Party and that he is the only one qualified to do it. Anything he does towards that aim, then, is justified. To that end, I do believe that the party must give Sharpton part of what he wants — a primetime speaking slot at this summer’s convention to address urban issues and issues of concern to African Americans, including a frank analysis of what the Party needs to do in order to not take them for granted and in the process be truer to its progressive ideals. But it obviously shouldn’t be Al himself — his machinations aside, the notion that such a task must only fall to a single leader of his generation is outdated and patronizing. Instead, I suggest choosing from an emerging pool of fresher faces in Congress — equally progressive, in-touch, ambitious African American politicians destined for bigger things, such as popular freshman Rep. Kendrick Meek (D-FL), already a national leader on education reform issues before coming to the House. Meek, fittingly enough, represents most of the Miami black community whose votes were potentially disenfranchised due to the actions of Roger Stone. Sean Siperstein ’05 optimistically predicts that the 2020 presidential election will see the first race between two candidates of color, Rep. Harold Ford (D-TN) and soonto-be-Rep. Bobby Jindal ’92 (R-LA).
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
EDITORIAL/LETTERS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004 · PAGE 10 S T A F F
E D I T O R I A L
Diamonds and coal A diamond to Carberry Day, among the last of Brown’s traditions. As an alternate for the elusive professor, may we suggest Barrett Hazeltine? Speaking of which, coal to professors who protest students getting screwed by screwing over their own students. Talk about a bad deal. A rock of a diamond to gay marriages in San Francisco and Massachusetts. But a cubic zirconium to the holiday we love to hate to love. A diamond to paid Safewalk positions. Take it from the professionals: “There’s no shame in getting Safewalked.” Coal to Morning Mail, which never comes in the morning, constitutes mail only in the supermarket circular sense of the word and has all the content of the latest issue of the Brown Events Magazine. A diamond in the rough to the New Jersey Coalition. Can we borrow your hair iron? Coal to the Rouse Company, for commodifying historic urban sites like South Street Seaport, Faneuil Hall and ye olde Providence Place.
ANDREW SHEETS
LETTERS A Brown view from the West Bank To the Editor:
A diamond to MCK and all the Mr. Brown contestants. The objectification of women may be offensive, but men in spandex are simply a delight. Coal to late-night judgment calls. Experience has shown us they never look as good the next morning. And a coal to Drudge Report internships. You want us to do what with that stapler?
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD EDITORIAL Juliette Wallack, Editor-in-Chief Carla Blumenkranz, Executive Editor Philissa Cramer, Executive Editor Julia Zuckerman, Senior Editor Danielle Cerny, Arts & Culture Editor Meryl Rothstein, Arts & Culture Editor Zachary Barter, Campus Watch Editor Monique Meneses, Features Editor Sara Perkins, Metro Editor Dana Goldstein, RISD News Editor Alex Carnevale, Opinions Editor Ben Yaster, Opinions Editor Christopher Hatfield, Sports Editor
BUSINESS Jack Carrere, General Manager Lawrence Hester, General Manager Anastasia Ali, Executive Manager Zoe Ripple, Executive Manager Elias Roman, Senior Project Manager In Young Park, Project Manager Peter Schermerhorn, Project Manager Laird Bennion, Project Manager Eugene Cho, Project Manager William Louis, Senior Financial Officer Laurie-Ann Paliotti, Sr. Advertising Rep. Elyse Major, Advertising Rep. Kate Sparaco, Office Manager
PRODUCTION Lisa Mandle, Design Editor George Haws, Copy Desk Chief Eddie Ahn, Graphics Editor Judy He, Photo Editor Nick Neely, Photo Editor
POST- MAGAZINE Ellen Wernecke, Editor-in-Chief Jason Ng, Executive Editor Micah Salkind, Executive Editor Abigail Newman, Theater Editor Josh Cohen, Design Editor Allison Lombardo, Features Editor Jeremy Beck, Film Editor Jessica Weisberg, Film Editor Ray Sylvester, Music Editor Josiah Carberry, Night Editor George Haws, Copy Editor
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Thanks goes to the Brown community for hosting several events in the last couple weeks dealing with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Emotions, my own included, run high on this subject. I am currently working in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and see the occupation on a daily basis. While my language will offend some, I wish to communicate one message to the Brown community: Think and learn before you
Panel organizers misrepresent the facts of their own panel To the Editor: For the sake of readers who did not attend the Israeli-Palestinian panel “Democracy and Peace,” (“Where did this panel go wrong?”, Feb. 12) I will fill in some of the facts. The event was organized to have two speakers on the subject of Israeli democracy and two speakers on the subject of Palestinian democracy. The first speaker was a professor from Emory University whose central thesis was that Israel, among its Jewish population, is a democratic state with strong democratic roots. At the same time, he didn’t condone the occupation of Palestine and argued that Israel’s exclusionary policies towards its Arab citizens are due to a mindset Jews developed during the long period they were a scattered minority. The second speaker was from Tel Aviv University and spoke in favor of a one-state solu-
decide. All too often with this conflict, people hold strong opinions and stop listening when new voices enter the fray. I find myself having knee-jerk reactions, veering between condemning Israelis for killing unarmed Palestinians or forcing Palestinian mothers to give birth at checkpoints and condemning suicide bombings that take Israeli lives younger than mine. I obviously don't have any solutions. I just ask that before we make snap judgments, we listen to other points of view. The longer we refuse to recognize the humanity of all parties in this dreadful situation, the longer the killing will continue. Landon Schmitt ’03.5 Feb. 12
tion to the conflict (a view other panelists disagreed with) and argued that Israel faces an inherent contradiction because it cannot be simultaneously a Jewish state that favors one ethnic group over all others and a truly democratic state that represents all of its citizens. He also pointed out that Palestinian terrorism is undermining democracy in Israel. The third speaker was from Brown and spoke — perhaps a little too passionately — on how the Israeli occupation is stifling prospects for democracy among Palestinians, though he also pointed out that “Yasser Arafat is no Nelson Mandela.” The final speaker believed very strongly that Palestinian Arabs have the potential for democracy, though he also argued that there’s no use talking about the success or failure of democracy in Palestine until a Palestinian State becomes reality. Were the above arguments representative of “anger, bitter blaming, polarized presenters and all of the usual arguments about the unambiguous evil of suicide bombers or settlers,” as the authors of yesterday’s column suggest? I’m just reporting. You decide. Michal Zapendowski '07 Feb. 12
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THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
OPINIONS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2004 · PAGE 11
NATE GORALNIK
Halt the red menace It seems like almost anything can pass as legitimate opinion in academia in this age of identity politics, as universities shell out the big bucks to attract scholars representing schools of thought from Marxism to Queer Theory in the names of “academic freedom.” Of course, academic freedom has its limits. Suppose my hypothetical German friends Fritz, Hans and Adolf started an amnesty movement for ex-Nazi doctors, or say my study buddy Osama organized a campus chapter of al Qaeda. I’m guessing that wouldn’t go over well. Celebrating difference flies out the window the moment student organizations start looking to torture and kill innocent people. So, understandably, it was with sober expectations that my former unitmates Stalin, Pol Pot and Mao sought university support for their conspiracy to impose a homicidal communist dictatorship over the globe. They figured that Brown students, all too aware of the hundreds of thousands of corpses that litter the Cambodian killing fields, would hesitate before funding the party of Kim Jong-Il, the KGB and the gulag. They were wrong. As it turned out, a commie cabal already exists on campus. It’s called the International Socialist Organization and Brown actually provides an annual budget for its maniacal plot to stamp out economic freedom. This funding should be revoked immediately. We’ve all seen the annoying posters, the offensive lectures and the cranky Herald columns. The reason the ISO should lose its funding is that they are part of the greatest threat to human goodness the world has ever known. Like all ideological cults, the ISO appears benign. Commuists promise that by quashing greedy businessmen, we will enter an epoch free from poverty, discrimination, and pollution. Of course, history teaches us to know better. Far from inaugurating a utopia, national socialism, even in its softer forms in India and Iraq, has brought with it misery, mass murder, and environmental devastation of proportions unmatched by any society in history. While American children trembled under the shadow of nuclear annihilation, communists were busy enslaving and slaughtering millions of innocent people in the death camps and purges of Russia, China, North Korea and Cambodia. In India, Iran, Iraq, Cuba and else-
Brown should stop funding our comrades in the ISO. where, socialists stamped out thriving middle classes, bringing unseen depths of deprivation to the world’s poor. Meanwhile, communists in America were organizing to ensure that the communist butchers would win. This heartbreaking legacy is no accident. It forms the essence of socialism: the surrender of man to atheistic slavery. When an individual no longer controls his economic destiny, he loses the freedom that makes him human. He becomes a slave, forced to work at gunpoint. Communism steals his autonomy and gives it to the state, where it is easily usurped by frothy-mouthed Gollums eager to force entire nations into ideological servitude. Forget your fantasies of benevolent Trotskyism — the Stalinist megalomaniac always wins when the object is to claim dictatorship over other people’s lives. Communism is not a figment of our academic imagination. Like al Qaeda terrorism, its practitioners continue to plague the world with shocking crimes against humanity in China, North Korea and Cuba. Disturbingly, socialism’s patriarchs — Mao Zedong, Ho Chi Minh, Pol Pot — were all introduced to communism by socialist clubs at Western universities. The mere chance that Brown’s support might contribute in even the slightest way to the continued existence of communism on this planet should be more than enough reason to justify the immediate revocation of the ISO’s funding. F. A. Hayek noted in his classic work “The Road to Serfdom” that thousands of students returned from college in the 1930s “uncertain whether they were communists or Nazis and certain only that they hated Western liberal civilization.” But as Max Eastman, a friend of Lenin, reported in “Stalin’s Russia and the Crisis of Socialism,” socialism turned out to be “worse than fascism, more ruthless, barbarous, unjust, immoral, anti-democratic, unredeemed by any hope or scruple.” With a more extreme global vision and a perfect disregard for the rights and traditions of man, the tenets of the ISO best described as “superfascist.” Today, the salient difference between Nazism and communism is that we only have the confidence to rid ourselves of the former. By what sick twist of history have we forgotten the massive threat posed by communism? Freedom-loving people must have the courage to stand up for what is good in this world. The party of the Tiananmen Square massacre has the right to free speech just like the party of Auschwitz. But that doesn’t mean we should fund them. Nate Goralnik ’06 wishes everyone a frisky Valentine’s Day.
ROB SAND
Metered and stamped WASHINGTON — The discovery of ricin in Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist’s office closed the Senate office buildings for four days earlier this month, renewing concern about the safety of receiving “outside” mail, or mail originating outside of any Washington, D.C., government office. Outside mail service to senators’ offices has been suspended for the time being, creating problems because some constituents’ letters will never reach their destination. The suspension of outside mail delivery is disappointing, though, for it severs a crucial link between the senators and their constituents. (And in this age of voter apathy, another faltering in the government’s responsiveness is the last thing we need.) The crux of a democratic republic hinges on the ability of constituents to express their concerns to their elected officials so that their interests are fairly represented. If they are unable to do so, then they have a voice only on Election Day and cannot practically pronounce changes in their interests. The lack of outside mail delivery creates issues beyond symbolic rhetoric. Within congressional offices, each and every letter is sorted, read, and answered. A large-enough mail volume about a certain issue can influence a senator’s decision. Personal stories and requests for help are placed in a special folder and receive timely attention. Requests for meetings and tours arrive daily. Without outside mail delivery, none of these make it to a senator’s office, and constituents’ requests go unheard. In turn, constituents may assume that their representative is ignoring his or her constituents. This is detrimental to the career and image of politicians who are concerned about their constituency, and can frustrate an individual’s attempts at political participation. There is a simple solution to this issue: Someone must make it clear to the public that mail service has stopped. This can be done in print, radio or television, by any press service. Yet this fact is not even mentioned on the Senate’s website, nor on the websites of most senators. While this may not be
the most pressing issue for many, there are some people who write letters to their senators simply to state that they did not receive a reply on their last one. As snail mail hits a roadblock, new technologies have increased correspondence levels in government offices. Lately, PACs, PIRGs and other interest groups routinely send their supporter mailing lists an email explaining a certain issue and asking them to support it by visiting a Web page. At that Web page, individuals can enter their name and address and have a pre-written note sent off to their representatives. While this has increased communication, it has also swamped correspondence aides with hundreds of identical e-mails and faxes. As a result, they are forced to practice a sort of communication triage. As the volume is simply too high to respond to each piece, those who take the time to write their own correspondence are responded to, while identical "blast faxes" are usually just recycled. While it is wonderful that new technologies have increased political participation, this is the best that busy Senate staffs can manage. For those of you who do sign on to these mass email and fax campaigns, be sure to give your piece a substantial personal touch if you want to ensure that it is responded to. It may seem odd that I first expressed disappointment with a lack of notification about mail service disruption, and then note that many pieces of correspondence are somewhat ignored. No one is happy that myriad "blast faxes" cannot receive the attention that other correspondence does. I wish each office had sufficient staffers to respond to each identical fax, but they do not. Despite this, making the connection between constituent and representative as strong as possible should be a priority, and that includes notifying people of a mail service suspension. Rob Sand ’05.5 is currently interning for Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) in Washington, D.C.
In defense of our special president GUEST COLUMN BY MORGAN CLENDANIEL AND ALEX CARNEVALE
It’s a sad day in America when our president is not happy. Alas, for George W. a Karl Rove backrub just won’t do the trick anymore. And that’s a shame, because there is nothing like a backrub to cheer you up after realizing that you looked like a mutant on the hit reality show “Meet the Press.” It’s OK, though, because Bush proved that even though he may be mildly retarded, he can still talk circles around “hard-hitting” reporter Tim Russert. When Russert asked Bush why he thought he was such a divisive figure in America, Bush replied that it was because he was trying to “unite the country.” Russert, looking as if Bush had just told him he had just appointed Monica Lewinsky Secretary of the Skin Flute, sheepishly moved on. Now I don’t like politicians, but I have a soft spot for George W. Bush. A soft spot like the one on a baby’s head. Just don’t press it too hard. Sure, he has gone a little overboard with spending, but believe you me, that’s nothing. I just spent $10 of my parents’ money on toilet paper because I thought it was paper towels. That is what’s called running a deficit. One of George W.’s biggest image problems is with the state of the reconstruction of Iraq. Privately, the White House line on this is that civilization in Iraq peaked about 3,000 years ago, and it’s all been downhill since then. But really, that criticism is ridiculous — find me a person who can reconstruct an Arab country freed from tyranny and I will show you someone with too much time on his hands. His name — Saddam Hussein. Then there is the little matter of Bush’s National Guard service. Put yourself in this country at the
time of the Vietnam War. You’ve just gone to Yale and all of sudden the kids from the wrong side of the town are being shipped overseas. You are on your family’s private golf course, drunk, basically presented with three choices. You can a) ship out to Vietnam, b) serve in the National Guard, or c) do body shots off Dick Cheney’s lesbian daughter. Do the math. Dick Cheney’s daughter was still in the closet then. But now that you mention it, she did always seem a little light in the loafers. Speaking of lesbian relatives of prominent conservatives, Bush also wants to defend the sanctity of marriage. This sounds well and good to me. And the best way to do that is to pass a constitutional amendment. Because if an amendment can solve the country’s alcohol problems, it sure as hell can solve the homosexuality problem. I’m also incredibly jealous of Bush. I mean, he went to Yale, I go to Brown. I got a rejection letter from Yale that wasn’t too flattering. When I did the on-campus interview, I think I mistakenly called the interviewer Ms. Chong when her name was Ms. Wong, so that’s probably what did it there. And that’s where George Bush and I are alike — we both suck at interviews. Bush went to business school, too. To me, that’s impressive. I don’t think I would be very good at business school. The last business idea I had was antibiotics wrapped in peanuts. That’s a stupid idea — a lot of people are allergic to peanuts. Morgan Clendaniel ’04 and Alex Carnevale ’05 are considering a move to Massachusetts.
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
SPORTS FRIDAY FEBRUARY 13, 2004 · PAGE 12
W. water polo beats Harvard, takes Ivy Classic
BC meet brings big success for women’s skiers
BY ERIC PERLMUTTER
BY DANIEL MURRAY
In what looks like a good omen for the remainder of the season, the women’s water polo team won the Ivy Classic last weekend at Yale University, beating three club teams before soundly defeating Harvard University 8-1 in the final game. The win helped Brown maintain its rank as No. 17 in the nation. Led by two goals from Lauren McGeoch ’04, the Bears had the Crimson beaten almost from the get-go. The team took a 1-0 lead in the first quarter and outpaced Harvard for the rest of the match. Six other players besides McGeoch scored goals for the Bears, and with goaltender and tournament MVP Keira Heggie ’04 making seven saves, the team won by a comfortable margin. Naturally, the entire squad was upbeat about the match. “We wanted to come out really strong, because they’re usually tough competitors, and we did,” said Sonia Lamel ’05. “Our counter-attack was working really well, and we just kept playing strong. After the first couple of quarters, they couldn’t really keep up with us anymore.” Head Coach Todd Clapper said the team played a strong game, although the Yale pool is not suited to its style. “The pool was (small), and I think our style of play is much better suited to a big pool,” said Clapper. “There is more time to develop a counter-attack in a big pool. But I was really pleased with the way our team played throughout.” On the day prior to the Harvard game, Brown beat three club-team opponents by a combined score of 56-7, which came as a surprise to no one. Several of the older players on the team stayed home for those games to let the first-years gain experience. Elizabeth Balassone ’07 scored 20 goals in the games, in addition to drawing several ejections. “We’d only been practicing for a week and a half, so getting that consistency to carry over into games is sometimes difficult, especially for the young players,” Clapper said. “The freshmen did a great job.”
The women’s ski team dominated the competition last weekend at the Boston College Carnival at Ascutney Mountain in Brownsville, Vt., cruising to a first-place victory in the giant slalom and a secondplace showing in the slalom event. Kelly O’Hear ’07 continued her stellar season for the Bears, placing second in both the giant slalom and slalom with times of 1:44.63 and 1:43.89, respectively. O’Hear, a native of Port Colborne, Ontario, has been Brown’s top female skier throughout the season. O’Hear attended Stratton Mountain School in Stratton, Vt., where she had the opportunity to ski and train every winter morning for four years. But O’Hear said she enjoys the Brown ski season’s less intense schedule. “College skiing is a lot like what I expected — more laid-back and fun than what I was used to skiing on the Eastern Cup Circuit in high school,” she said. “Many of my friends from SMS ski in our league, so I am having a great time spending time with them and catching up.” Despite a more leisurely league atmosphere and fewer weekly practices, O’Hear has not lost her competitive edge. “I think the competition makes the races more eventful. Besides just skiing technically well, you really have to attack every run,” she said. Another Brown skier attacking the slopes in her first college season is firstyear star Nina Dibona ’07, whose sisters Elizabeth ’02 and Doria ’03 were former captains of the women’s squad. She finished sixth in the giant slalom, with a time of 1:46.57, and 13th in the slalom at 1:53.06. DiBona attended the Holderness School in New Hampshire, a prep school with a winter sports schedule similar to Sutton’s. “It wasn’t about how much fun you had on the hill, it was about who skied the fastest — it was very cutthroat among teammates,” Dibona said. “Because of that, I almost fell out of love with skiing, and that’s why I chose to attend Brown. I knew it would be more of a ‘team sport’ than individual competition.”
see WATER POLO, page 8
dspics
Athlete of the Week Yann Danis ’04 leads the nation in save percentage (.951) and is second in goals against average (1.52). The men’s ice hockey team currently leads the ECAC with a record of 12-3-1 (14 -5-4 overall).
Danis ’04 leading men’s icers to top of ECAC, No. 11 ranking BY ROBBY KLABER
Yann Danis ’04, in contention for hockey’s Hobey Baker Award, might be one of the best college players in the country, but he remains modest and a quintessential team player, teammates say. Danis has lead the Bears to their 14-54 overall record, putting them in first place in their conference and 11th in the country. “One of the most important things that we have to do for the remainder of the season is continue to be consistent,” Danis said. “It is crucial that we play well, especially when we are expected to win. We’ve been playing good hockey, but it’s been a while since the team played really hard for the complete 60 minutes.” Danis helped Bruno beat both
Princeton and Yale universities last weekend, netting a total of 57 saves. As a result of his stellar performances, he was named ECAC Goalie of the Week. In addition to holding a number of Brown records, including career shutouts (12), single-season saves (1,043) and save percentages in one season, Danis is in the running for the Hobey Baker Award, given to the player considered the best in college hockey. “It is a great honor to be considered for this award. Guys who won it in past years have all been great hockey players in the NHL. However, I try to block it out of my mind and just focus on winning,” Danis said.
see SKIING, page 8
see DANIS, page 8 Brown Sports Weekend
Tough Virginia swing for women’s tennis leads to two losses to open 2004 season BY ROBBIE COREY-BOULET
Injuries and inexperience led to two opening losses for the women’s tennis team, which resumed play this past weekend with road matches against Virginia Tech and the University of Virginia. Brown, ranked No. 65 in the preseason poll, lost a close match by a score of 4-3 against No. 67 Virginia Tech on Saturday. The Bears were outmatched against a strong No. 31 Virginia team on Sunday, losing 6-1. Two of Brown’s starters were unable to compete during the weekend, forcing the team to reshuffle its line-up. Kerry Meath ’05 was sidelined with an illness on Saturday, while a back strain kept
Michelle Pautler ’07 out of both matches, Head Coach Norma Taylor said. Stephanie Falconi ’06 said the injuries greatly affected the weekend’s results. “We would’ve definitely won the Virginia Tech match” if Meath and Pautler had competed, she said. Virginia Tech swept all three doubles matches to secure a point early on. The teams then split the six singles matches, with two of them going to three sets. Captain Victoria Beck ’04 pulled out a third-set tie breaker against Felice Lam at the No. 4 singles position, winning 6-2, 57, 7-6 (4). Alex Arlak ’05 beat Carolyn Kramer 64, 6-2 to gain the No. 2 point and Kim Singer ’06 also posted a straight set victo-
ry in the No. 3 contest with a 7-5, 6-4 victory over Ginger Lowdermilk. Playing the No. 1 slot, Falconi struggled with a recurring tendonitis injury in a three-set match against Anat Elazari, losing 4-6, 6-3, 6-3. “The shoulder was acting up again, and I couldn’t really move or react to the ball,” Falconi said. The injury affected Falconi’s movement, which is usually one of her strengths. Because Falconi is now playing at the No. 1 position, “every match of hers is going to be really tough,” Beck said. “She had a bit of bad luck here and there that cost her the match.” see TENNIS, page 8
Friday, Feb. 13 Men’s Ice Hockey: vs. Union, 7 p.m., Meehan Auditorium Women’s Basketball: vs. Harvard, 7 p.m., Pizzitola Sports Center Skiing: at Colby-Sawyer/St Anslem, Mount Sunapee, N.H. Wrestling: at Columbia, New York, N.Y. Men’s Basketball: at Harvard, Cambridge, Mass. Women’s Track: Fast Track Invitational, Boston, Mass. Saturday, Feb. 14 Men’s Tennis: vs. Rutgers, 11 a.m.; vs. URI, 3:30 p.m., Pizzitola Sports Center Women’s Ice Hockey: vs. Harvard, 2 p.m., Meehan Auditorium Women’s Basketball: vs. Dartmouth, 7 p.m., Pizzitola Sports Center Men’s Ice Hockey: vs. Rensselaer, 7 p.m., Meehan Auditorium Skiing: at Colby-Sawyer/St Anslem, Pat’s Peak, N.H. Men’s Swimming: at Cornell, Ithaca, N.Y. Wrestling: at Cornell, Ithaca, N.Y. Men’s Basketball: at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H. Men’s Track: Fast Track Invitational, Boston, Mass. Women’s Water Polo: Princeton Invitational, Princeton, N.J. Sunday, Feb. 15 Gymnastics: vs. Springfield, 1 p.m., Pizzitola Sports Center Women’s Ice Hockey: at Harvard, Cambridge, Mass. Women’s Water Polo: Princeton Invitational, Princeton, N.J.