THE BROWN DAILY HERALD T HURSDAY
Volume CXLII, No. 40
22, 2007 20 07
Mocha ‘2.0’ launches
J. Walter Wilson to house student support services
A new and updated version of Mocha, the student-run alternative to the old Brown Online Course Announcement, will be released this morning, according to co-creator Daniel Leventhal ’07. The new program is intended as an alternative for the recently launched Banner Catalog and Course Schedule, which replaced BOCA when they went live on Monday. Leventhal said a “quick and dirty” version of Mocha would be released first, followed by a more polished and feature-rich version in the weeks following spring break. “The first version will allow you to do course searches and basic operations, but we hope to develop some more interesting features later on,” he said. Among the new features Leventhal and his team plan to introduce is a course registration for Mocha users that bypasses Banner’s controversial user interface. Leventhal said the course registration feature is possible but will require a few “HTML tricks.” Leventhal said the delay in developing new features is due to the way Banner organizes information, which differs greatly from the BOCA did. “We’ve got to change the way our whole infrastructure works,” he said. But Leventhal said Mocha users should expect the new site to look and feel much like the old version. — Chaz Firestone
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
BY CAMERON LEE CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Eunice Hong / Herald
The J. Walter Wilson building will be converted into a student services center by the end of summer 2008.
The J. Walter Wilson building — located across Waterman Street from Faunce House — will be converted into a student services center by the end of summer 2008 as part of the University’s plan to make Faunce and its neighbors a central hub for student life. By the Fall 2008 semester, the former biology laboratory facility will become home to such student services as the Office of the Chaplains and Religious Life, the Office of International Programs, the Writing Center, the Writing Fellows Program, the Brown Card Office and the curricular resource and academic support centers, said Associate Provost Pamela O’Neil PhD’91. “One of the things we’ve needed on campus for a long time is a building for student support and student services,” she said. “Right now they’re spread all over campus.” As the project is still in the planning stages, the offices that will move into J. Walter Wilson have not been finalized, said Russell Carey ’91 MA’06, interim vice president for campus life and student services. The plans for J. Walter Wilson will take advantage of the building’s “centrality” on campus and “significant amount of space,” Carey said. The renovated building is also
intended to complement Faunce, which will become the Robert Campus Center, and to “provide a vibrant center of activity that will serve students much better,” Carey said. “Its location near Hillel and the (planned) Creative Arts Building will make the area a vibrant and attractive area for students.” “It’s an overarching plan for the area,” O’Neil said. She said J. Walter Wilson’s proximity to Faunce House makes it conducive as both a place for student services and a “place where students can gather.” By centralizing various student services, efficiency and collaboration can be maximized, O’Neil said. “Two things that make sense to be located near each other but haven’t been are the Writing Fellows Program, located in Rhode Island Hall, and the Writing Center, located in the library,” she said. “The two actually share staff but are located in different buildings. In J. Walter Wilson, the staff can work together as a cohesive unit.” “I’m frankly delighted by the proposition we’ll have more space,” said Douglas Brown, director of the Writing Center, which is currently located in the Rockefeller Library. He also said he thought it was “an intelligent move” and that the only minor drawback would be losing “a continued on page 6
4 fail program house review Campaign nears $1 billion ahead of schedule BY MEHA VERGHESE CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Four houses failed the Residential Council’s spring program house review, and four more houses receiving warnings. While 12 houses passed, reasons for warnings and failure included low membership, lack of a faculty adviser, failure to hold regular meetings and problems submitting spring review materials. Delta Phi, Sigma Chi, Phi Kappa Psi and Cooking House were the four houses that failed the semiannual review. Alpha Chi Omega was placed on warning for not having a faculty adviser. Brown’s other on-campus sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta, was also warned about not having a faculty adviser, but it is in the process of acquiring one. Kappa Alpha Theta has struggled with membership numbers for some time, failing last semester’s review, but expects to have ample members next year. If it does not, ResCouncil said the sorority will fail the fall review. Buxton International House received a warning for holding significantly fewer mandatory meetings than any other house. Buxton had already been warned about its failure to hold regular meetings in the fall review. This semester it remains on notice and has been ad-
INSIDE:
3 METRO
vised to turn its Sunday brunches into informal meetings. Another house placed on warning was Theta Delta Chi because of its absence of bylaws. All houses are required to have a set of regulations on file with the Office of Residential Life. “We never really had a set copy of our laws, we always assumed that this is how we had always done things so it was just a matter of my typing up the bylaws, and I was lazy, and I forgot,” said Thete President Matthew Mullenax ’08. Mullenax said he had just submitted the bylaws to ResCouncil, “I’m pretty confident that from the fall we should be okay,” he said, though he noted that the fraternity “has a problem with damage sometimes.” Thete was also placed on notice during the fall review for issues of “cleanliness, party management and property damage,” according to the Official Recommendation of Fall Review published by ResCouncil. Cooking House, in its first year of existence, failed the review for falling short of membership requirements. The house has only 20 in-house members instead of the required 22 and only two instead of the requisite five returning members.
Now more than halfway to completion, the Campaign for Academic Enrichment is ahead of pace. As of March 21, the campaign had raised over $960 million — 68 percent of its $1.4 billion goal — with 54 percent of the campaign time elapsed. Campaign officials say they are pleased with the results so far and hope to surpass $1 billion in commitments by the end of June. That is a goal they “fully expect” to reach, Neil Steinberg ’75, vice president for development and campaign di-
rector, told The Herald, adding that they also “fully expect to meet and exceed” the campaign’s ultimate $1.4 billion goal. “There’s nothing automatic about this stuff,” Steinberg said. “But the momentum is good.” The Campaign for Academic Enrichment — publicized under the tagline “Boldly Brown” — went public in October 2005 after a twoyear “quiet phase” during which the University raised a “nucleus fund” of $575 million from key donors. The seven-year campaign currently aims to raise at least $660 million to bolster Brown’s endow-
ment, $540 million for immediate support and $200 million for facilities projects by the end of 2010. Donors to the campaign are encouraged to give money for a series of specific projects laid out in a “Table of Needs” designed to reflect the objectives of President Ruth Simmons’ Plan for Academic Enrichment. Ronald Vanden Dorpel, senior vice president for University advancement, said he and his staff are “enormously pleased” with the campaign’s progress to date. The continued on page 6
‘Accidental President’ Cardoso returns to Brazil BY TAYLOR BARNES STAFF WRITER
FEATURE
While studying for political science exams, students may turn to textbooks to brush up on dependency theory, a framework of international relations which argues that poorer developing nations are economically exploited by wealthier developed nations. But more resourceful students could arrange office hours with the man who helped develop the theory, Professor-atLarge Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who spends a month each year on College Hill.
continued on page 4
LATE-NIGHT LIQUOR A coalition is seeking an earlier closing time for Spats’ bar — which now serves alcohol until 2 a.m. — so that drinks would cut off at 12 a.m.
www.browndailyherald.com
BY MICHAEL SKOCPOL SENIOR STAFF WRITER
4 CAMPUS NEWS
QUIET AND SUB-FREE ResLife moved sub-free and quiet housing due to noise complaints and class years of applicants, but some students disliked the change
Students too intimidated to visit the former president of Brazil could instead read his memoirs, “The Accidental President of Brazil,” released in 2006. Brazilians chose Cardoso, who served as president from 1995 to 2003, as the best president in the nation’s history in a poll conducted just before he left office. Cardoso had previously served as finance minister for President Itamar Fran-
11 OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
continued on page 9 REVIEW OF THE TASK FORCE Campus Issues Columnist Ben Bernstein ‘09 argues that the Task Force on Undergraduate Education should have more student input
Eunice Hong / Herald
Professor-at-Large Fernando Henrique Cardoso, former president of Brazil, spends a month each year on College Hill.
EDITOR’S NOTE
This is the last issue of The Herald prior to spring break. Publication resumes April 2. News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com
TODAY THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
PAGE 2
WE A
T H E R
Chocolate Covered Cotton | Mark Brinker
TODAY
TOMORROW
showers / wind 54 / 44
mostly sunny 54 / 35
MEN SHARPE REFECTORY
U VERNEY-WOOLLEY DINING HALL
LUNCH — Hot Ham on Bulky Roll, Green Peas, Hyonnaise Potatoes, Kielbasa Hard Boiled Eggs, Jelly Roll, Swiss Fudge Cookies
LUNCH — Vegetarian Mexican Bean Soup, Lobster Bisque, Pulled Pork Sandwich, Shoepeg Corn Casserole, Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies
DINNER — Spice Rubbed Pork Chops, Oven Browned Potatoes, Cajun Corn and Tomatoes, Broccoli, Garlic Bread, Ice Cream Sundae Bar
DINNER — Vegetarian Mexican Bean Soup, Lobster Bisque, Roast Turkey, Vegan Roasted Vegetable Stew, Mashed Potatoes, Chocolate Sundae Cake
SU
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
WBF | Matt Vascellaro
D O K U
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Hi, How Are You | Alison Naturale
Deo | Daniel Perez �������������������
RELEASE DATE– Thursday, March 22, 2007
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
C
R Norris O S SandW O Nichols R D Lewis Edited by Rich Joyce
ACROSS 1 Yellow jacket, for one 5 Old underworld boss? 11 Puncture opening 14 Away illegally, in a way 15 Works 16 12-Down ingredient 17 SPRING 19 Abate 20 Words of fiction written in currants 21 Couples on a course 22 TV talk pioneer 23 Mole, maybe 24 Louvre Pyramid architect 26 THRUSH adversary of 60s TV 27 SPRING 31 Australian gal 34 Director Preminger 35 One of T. Speaker s 792, a career record 36 Go in different directions 37 “Cars” studio 39 Day s “will be” 40 Show 41 Futuristic knight 42 Rubs out 44 SPRING 47 Neutral colors 48 Retired boomer 49 H.S. elite 52 Auditioner s goal 53 Letters in lieu of a lipstick mark 56 Milo of “Ulysses” 58 Pub provision 59 SPRING 61 Trig. ratio 62 Besides Davis, only person to receive five consecutive Best Actress nominations 63 Sea that s getting smaller 64 Hosp. areas 65 Animal en la corrida 66 Bantam
DOWN 1 W-2 information 2 “That s __!”: director s cry 3 Flue-stricken? 4 Horner s treasure 5 Told too many times 6 Deemed appropriate 7 Construction piece 8 Mechanical method 9 Angry 10 Georgia, once: Abbr. 11 256 and 512, e.g. 12 Cola cocktail 13 Some insurance policies 18 Sherpa s turf 22 __ Park: Pirates field 25 Military camps 26 G.I. morale booster 27 “Good Will Hunting” setting 28 “Funny Honey” singer, in “Chicago” 29 LAX datum
30 Emphasize 31 Sputnik started it 32 Witness s observation 33 Perfect 38 Bar requests 39 Juan preceder 41 French dip dip 43 Helicopter part 45 “The Color of Money” prop 46 Try to get, in negotiations
49 Lewis who voiced Lamb Chop 50 Showed anew 51 With regret 53 Navy commando 54 Skin blemish 55 Lhasa __ 57 Smack 59 Not sm. or med. 60 Benefactor of Central Park s Strawberry Fields memorial
Deep Fried Kittens | Cara FitzGibbon
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
Cloudy Side Up | Mike Lauritano
xwordeditor@aol.com
3/22/07
T HE B ROWN D AILY H ERALD Editorial Phone: 401.351.3372 Business Phone: 401.351.3260
University community since 1891. It is published Monday through Friday during the aca-
Eric Beck, President
once in July by The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. POSTMASTER please send corrections to
Mary-Catherine Lader, Vice President Ally Ouh, Treasurer Mandeep Gill, Secretary By Donna S. Levin (c)2007 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
3/22/07
The Brown Daily Herald (USPS 067.740) is an independent newspaper serving the Brown demic year, excluding vacations, once during Commencement, once during Orientation and P.O. Box 2538, Providence, RI 02906. Periodicals postage paid at Providence, R.I. Offices are located at 195 Angell St., Providence, R.I. E-mail herald@browndailyherald.com. World Wide Web: http://www.browndailyherald.com. Subscription prices: $319 one year daily, $139 one semester daily. Copyright 2007 by The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. All rights reserved.
METRO THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
PAGE 3
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
India Point Park bridge slated to open in September BY NANDINI JAYAKRISHNA C ONTRIBUTING WRITER
A pedestrian bridge connecting India Point Park, an 18-acre waterfront park, with the Wickenden business district will likely reopen this fall after closing for construction during the relocation of Interstate 195. The 8-foot-wide bridge spanning I-195 was built in the 1970s and closed on Sept. 12, 2005, said Lambri Zerva, design project manager for the Rhode Island Department of Transportation. The bridge, which is being rebuilt, is tentatively expected to open in September, two years after its closure. Zerva said the highway relocation required that a new bridge be built because the old bridge’s piers would have obstructed the new road links. “The new bridge took up space where the old bridge was, so we couldn’t keep the old one and build the new one at the same time. Unfortunately, (taking down the old bridge) was a necessary evil,” he added. Zerva said he estimates rebuilding the bridge will cost around $10 million. When completed, the new “pedestrian-friendly” bridge will be 48 feet wide, with fencing and plants along the sides, Zerva said. David Riley, co-director of Friends of India Point Park, said the old bridge was worn-out and slippery. “It was like a cage surrounded by a chain-link fence, like a tunnel and treacherously slippery especially during the winter. It was horrible,” he said. Riley said the bridge is mostly used April through October. He said it would be “a shame” if people are not able to use it before the coming winter. Marjorie Powning, also co-director of Friends of India Point Park, said residents of the neighborhood and others who frequent the park will be “excited” to have the bridge back. “The park was badly impacted
by construction and the neighborhood didn’t have convenient access to it,” she said. Powning said she hopes the landscaping of the bridge will be completed soon. “Landscaping is a very important phase of the project for more than just aesthetic value,” she said. Landscaping will make the bridge “more hospitable” because it will help settle sand and dirt from construction, she said. Brown students who used the bridge before it was closed are eager to have it back. “The bridge would just give us a more direct route to the boathouse,” wrote Ariana Cannavo ’08, a member of the women’s crew team, in an e-mail to The Herald, referring to the Marston Boathouse located next to the park. Cannavo also wrote that she missed running over the bridge. “I personally used the bridge in the summers of ’02 and ’03 when I was a Summer@Brown Summer@Brow high school student. So being able to run over it once again will remind me of the days when I dreamed that I would one day be an actual Brown student,” she wrote. Ben Liotta ’07 said the park used to be “a great place” to walk, run and study. “The closing of the bridge and the highway project ruined the park. The old bridge was really old and narrow. It’d be nice to have a big bridge, but in my opinion it is more important to return the park to the way it was,” he said. Powning said Friends of India Point Park is planning to organize an event celebrating the bridge’s reopening. “We are planning to have a celebration in the fall around the end of September,” she said. Riley said the celebration might be postponed until next spring if too much construction work is left after the bridge reopens. “We really want them to open it as close to Sept. 12. We may put off our celebration until the spring if it’s really ugly down there,” he said.
Rahul Keerthi / Herald
The College Hill Neighborhood Association, the University and several local property owners are trying to force Spats to stop serving alcohol after midnight.
One year old, Spats fights to serve liquor late BY NICK WERLE C ONTRIBUTING WRITER
Last April, Spats Restaurant opened at 182 Angell St. after months of opposition from the College Hill Neighborhood Association to its application for a liquor license. Though Spats was then granted a Class BX liquor license, which allows the establishment to serve alcohol until 2 a.m., a coalition composed of CHNA, the University and several property owners is appealing that decision by the City of Providence Board of Licenses. The group hopes to force Spats to stop serving alcohol at midnight. While applying for the license, Spats co-owner Andy Mitrelis ar-
gued that Spats is “100 percent restaurant with a small bar.” Spats’ bar has fewer than ten stools, out of almost 80 seats in the establishment. Opponents of Spats’ Class BX liquor license disagree that Spats can reasonably be called a restaurant. Although Mitrelis said the kitchen closes at 10:30 p.m., the bar continues to serve alcohol until 2 a.m. The period after the kitchen closes has become a key part of the appellants’ case against Spats. “Our basic policy is not to oppose every new liquor license on Thayer Street as long as the license is part of a fully functioning restaurant. We did not oppose (Spats’) original liquor license application because our understanding was
that this would be a full-fledged restaurant,” said Michael Chapman, Brown’s vice president for public affairs and University relations. “That they are closing the kitchen before 2 a.m. leads to our understanding that this was a bar and so we joined … the appeal.” CHNA President Chris Tompkins denied comment on “this pending regulatory matter” in an e-mail to The Herald beyond verifying that CHNA, Brown and several abutting property owners are currently challenging the license. Barbara Harris, a former CHNA president who lives off of Thayer Street on Bowen Street, said the apcontinued on page 6
Rhody Fresh milk available at Whole Foods BY STEPHANIE BERNHARD F EATURES EDITOR
Chris Bennett / Herald
Both Whole Foods locations in Providence began stocking Rhody Fresh milk last month.
Fans of Rhody Fresh milk can now get their dairy fix at both Whole Foods locations in Providence. The chain, which sells only organic and natural foods, has in the past refused to stock Rhody Fresh milk. The five farmers who comprise the Rhode Island Dairy Farmers Cooperative could not guarantee that the milk did not contain traces of recombinant bovine somatotropin, or rBST, an artificial protein some dairy farmers inject into their cows to stimulate milk production. Whole Foods began stocking the product in late February. “We have the highest quality standards,” said Jewel Gregson, a marketing team leader at Whole Foods’ University Heights location. Rhody Fresh Executive Director Jim Hines said none of the farmers
ever injected their cows with rBST. But when they sent their milk to Guida’s processing plant in New Britain, Conn., their product mixed with the milk of other Rhode Island farmers — and they couldn’t confirm whether those farmers used rBST. “It was basically a labeling issue,” Hines said. The farmers have not changed how they produce their milk, but earlier this year, Hines and the members of the cooperative worked with local farmers whose silos they shared to help them achieve rBST-free certification. Hines said rBST is more often used on large milk factories than on small dairy farms like those in Rhode Island. “It’s not good for the cows — it kind of stretches them out,” Hines said. continued on page 13
PAGE 4
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
DPhi, Sigma Chi, Phi Psi and Cooking House fail spring review continued from page 1 Jason Leung ’09, president of Cooking House, said the problem with membership was not due to a lack of interest in Cooking House. “It seemed that there was a good level of interest amongst Brown students,” he said, adding that the problem occurred because “there are a lot of people who expressed interest after or close to the deadline.” Interfaith House President Liz Schibuk ’08 said her house faced similar problems. Interfaith House passed the review with enough members this semester but doesn’t have the required number of residential members for the fall. “We had the interest of enough people, but at the last minute, people decided to go abroad or take leave,”
she said. She also said many people were unaware of Super Deadline Day. Delta Phi failed the review due to an anticipated low membership of 21 in-house residents and low returning membership. The fraternity also submitted its spring review materials a day late to ResCouncil. “We had a confusion issue where we didn’t know who was taking care of the housing,” said Chester Hall ’08, vice president of DPhi. Membership numbers have been an ongoing problem for DPhi, but ResCouncil “applaud(s) their increased recruitment efforts this year, which have resulted in less-weak inhouse membership anticipated for next year,” according to the Spring Review Recommendations posted on ResCouncil’s Web site.
Fraternity Phi Kappa Psi was four days late turning in its spring review materials to ResCouncil. The materials were also incomplete, leading to Phi Psi’s failure. All program houses are required to sponsor two community service events each year, and ResCouncil was not sure Phi Psi’s sale of “Thayer Street” discount cards was “sufficient service and commitment.” Sigma Chi also failed because it did not show up at the review and did not provide information and documentation regarding their campus-wide events. Its absence at the review meant the fraternity was unable to explain why their independent liaison had not complied with ResCouncil rules by contacting all of the non-fraternity residents living in their building.
Sub-free and quiet housing relocate, leaving some residents upset BY JOY CHUA C ONTRIBUTING WRITER
A change in the composition of applicants and noise complaints have prompted the Office of Residential Life to move substance-free and quiet housing locations for next year. These special interest housing blocs will join the all-female and 21-plus housing on Pembroke campus, consolidating all special-interest housing to one campus area. But some substance-free residents say the location has led them to decline their spaces in sub-free housing. Quiet housing will be on the first floor of Miller Hall and fourth floor of Metcalf Hall as of September, due to complaints about noise from residents in its current location in New Dorm. Substance-free housing will move from Champlin and Barbour halls, where it was located this year, to New Pembroke 2 and the third floor of Metcalf Hall in the fall. Allfemale and 21-plus housing will remain unchanged — all-female housing will be located in Andrews Hall and on the fourth floor of New Pembroke 4, and Miller will house 21plus. In a new ResLife policy implemented last year, students interest-
ed in special-interest housing apply in a pre-lottery process and are given the option to either accept the assigned housing or enter the lottery. Previously, rooms designated for special-interest housing were available to students in the housing lottery — New Pembroke 1 had historically been reserved for quiet housing, while New Pembroke 2 was designated as substance-free housing. New Pembroke 1 will be offered in the lottery as sophomore-only housing. “The most important criteria for ResLife and (Residential Council) this year was keeping communities together,” said Justin Glavis-Bloom ’07, chair of ResCouncil. “Last year, we were forced to split up substancefree and heard from many students that they were dissatisfied with the community being fractured.” ResCouncil determined specialinterest housing locations based on which houses could accommodate the total number of applicants. Students had mixed reviews about the relocation. Of the 61 applicants for substance-free housing tthis year, 21 students confirmed placement in either the third floor of Metcalf or New Pembroke 2, while the remaining 40 opted to try
their luck in the housing lottery. This year, ResLife received 28 applications for quiet housing and nine requests for female-only housing. Grace Yuen ’10 lived in all-female housing in Andrews Hall this year and decided to re-apply for all-female housing. “I did it this year because my parents wanted me to,” she said. “But I applied this year in hopes of getting a single, and I did.” Eric Gastfriend ’10 opted for substance-free housing as a firstyear because he does not drink or smoke. “I feel more comfortable around other people who are also not into that,” he said. “It’s nice to live in a place where drinking and smoking are not part of the culture, not to mention (it’s) cleaner and quieter.” Gastfriend re-applied for substance-free housing this year but decided to not take the room when he found out it would be located in New Pembroke. “They’re basically the worst dorms on campus, so my chances for better housing only improve by going into the lottery,” he said. “I think it’s a shame that sub-free gets the bottom of the barrel when program houses get the same nice dorms year after year.” Gastfriend said he wants the University to put more resources into substance-free housing. When the University is investing in alcohol-free activities through the Late Night Fund, he said substance-free housing deserves more support — “If they really value sobriety, why can’t they make a commitment to sub-free?” he asked. Putzer Hung ’10 said he wasn’t sure whether he wanted to live in substance-free housing using last summer when he requested to live in the substance-free hall for first-years in Perkins Hall. But he said it turned out to be a good choice because residents there are more homogeneous than at any other unit. Glavis-Bloom also attributed the popularity of substance-free housing to the community it fosters. “It has become more popular, primarily because the University began offering substance-free housing to firstyears,” he said. “First-years create a community that stays together as they become sophomores, juniors and seniors.” But Hung said the new locations will hinder the community dynamic. “We feel we can’t have the same sense of community here at Perkins in New Pembroke next year,” he said. “It’s not only nly me, but most of the sub-free residents this year are dissatisfied with the dorm we got placed in, so many of us are willing to try out the lottery instead.”
C AMPUS N EWS THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
www.browndailyherald.com
BY FRANKLIN KANIN S TAFF WRITER
582 2006 - 2007
433
2005 - 2006
411
2004 - 2005
525
2003 - 2004
The number of undergraduates taking graduate-level courses has substantially increased in recent years — 582 undergraduate students enrolled in graduate-level classes in the 20062007 academic year, compared to 411 in 2002-2003. Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron said much of the increase is due to the University’s Plan for Academic Enrichment, which she said has added 177 new faculty members, increasing course offerings both at the undergraduate and the graduate levels. Additionally, she said, there have been new graduate programs in which undergraduates have been able to participate. “Advanced undergraduates in those departments have benefited from the flowering of course offerings at both levels,” Bergeron said. “It also says a lot about our undergraduates
644
2002 - 2003
Members of Brown Model United Nations will travel to Geneva, Switzerland, tomorrow to participate in the annual World Model United Nations Conference hosted by Harvard University and the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne. At conferences, students assume the roles of foreign diplomats and participate in simulated sessions of intergovernmental organizations such as the Economic and Social Council or the Executive Committee of UNICEF. Twelve Brown students will attend this year’s WorldMUN, where 1,500 students from over 35 countries will meet to debate topics from their assigned country’s perspective. Teams are often given one country to represent, but this year Brown will represent a number of smaller countries, including Cuba and the Gambia. The team has spent this week busily researching these countries’ perspectives on the issues to be discussed in Geneva. “It’s like a simulation of the United Nations — the students are divided into different committees, and each committee has topics chosen ahead of time that you have to research, and then you try and create resolutions to deal with those issues,” said Brown MUN President Geoffrey D’Cruz ’07. These issues include historical situations or current global social problems such as human trafficking or global warming. The Brown MUN members attend three conferences each year at Harvard, Yale and McGill universities in addition to the world conference. “We run a laid-back version of it compared to other schools,” said Ingrid O’Brien ’07, the group’s vice president of internal affairs. “For us it’s more of a so-
cial thing as well as a chance to travel and, you know, talk about really interesting topics with other people — but not something to stress about,” O’Brien said. Unlike many other teams, Brown sends freshmen and students without previous MUN experiences to conferences. “Because of that we tend to get countries like ... Fiji and Equatorial Guinea. We don’t get the hardcore countries,” O’Brien said. Rather than experience, enthusiasm and involvement are the criteria for team members’ selection. “It’s a really strong team, and we always choose people to go who are always very involved in the club,” D’Cruz said. “It’s sort of a reward for them to go on this international trip.” In addition to attending conferences, Brown MUN hosts an annual conference on campus for high school students. Last year’s conference saw the participation of 650 students “running around in suits and nice clothes on a weekend,” D’Cruz said. The funds generated from the high school conference are used to subsidize Brown MUN’s trip to the WorldMUN and a short vacation during spring break. “We always take a side trip after the conference because the conference runs like four days, and then we use our last weekend to go someplace else,” O’Brien said. This year, after Geneva, the Brown MUN team will take a trip to Barcelona and return to Providence April 1. The team members have to balance their MUN research with midterms but are looking forward to their upcoming trip. “It should be a really fun trip. Geneva is supposed to be an amazing city, and it’s going to be exciting to be in a place that is known for all these diplomatic things and is one of the world centers,” D’Cruz said.
More undergrads opt for grad-level classes STUDENTS ENROLLED
Brown MUN heads to Switzerland for spring break BY MEHA VERGHESE C ONTRIBUTING WRITER
PAGE 5
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
ACADEMIC YEAR
— that they’re capable of keeping up in these advanced classes.” Undergraduates taking graduatelevel courses say they value the experience. Adam Merberg ’08 — who is taking both MA 252: “Algebra” and MA 211: “Introduction to Manifolds” — said he was drawn to the graduate-level courses because they were a chal-
lenging supplement to his undergraduate courses. Bob Beddor ’07, who is taking CO 282, Sec. 07: “Of Monuments and Documents, Or How To Do Things With (Images and) Words,” said he enjoyed the upper-level undergraduate seminars he took in the past, motivating continued on page 9
Study abroad proves challenging for science students BY RACHEL ARNDT S ENIOR S TAFF WRITER
About 500 Brown students study abroad every year — but for many who are studying sciences, arranging a semester or year abroad can be a complicated task, since science students have more rigid requirements and often have to take courses in sequence. “We consider science students underrepresented” in study abroad programs, said Samantha Brandauer, assistant director of the Office of International Programs. That shortage of science students is “always a topic of discussion,” she said, adding that the OIP works with science professors to iron out details for students. English-speaking study abroad programs are the most popular programs for science students, who tend to go to Britain, Australia, New Zealand and Denmark, Brandauer said. “They need to have a pretty full curriculum open to them,” she said. “Of the 567 students who studied abroad in 2005-2006, 14 (percent) were in physical and health sciences and 1 (percent) were engineering,” Brandauer wrote in an e-mail to The Herald. Biology concentrators make up most of the science students who study abroad. Over the past three years, 40 biology concentrators stud-
ied abroad, according to data from the OIP. Over the same period, only two physics concentrators studied abroad. Ashley Pariser ’08, a biology concentrator, spent the fall semester studying in Paris. Planning the semester “definitely took some organization,” she said — for instance, she had to rearrange her organic chemistry sequence to go, taking CH 35: “Organic Chemistry” last spring and waiting until next fall to take CH 36: “Organic Chemistry,” the next course in the required sequence. To find a university that fit her interest in science, Pariser said she talked to a Brown in France adviser who recommended a science university in Paris. Brandauer said the OIP would like to give “faculty the tools” to enable students to go abroad. Science faculty “can let us know what programs are a good fit for their students,” she said. The office has a guide for science students explaining their options for studying abroad, but the information hasn’t been updated in several years, Brandauer said. The office is currently working with a student to get an updated guide published by the end of the summer. Brandauer said the OIP would like to organize its online database of study abroad programs by concentration to make it easier for students
to know what their options are. In addition to adding resources for science students, the OIP is also working to dispel the myth that science students — particularly engineers — can’t go abroad. “That kind of stuff is hard to control,” Brandauer said. One way OIP can battle that myth is by encouraging students to start looking at study abroad programs early in their time at Brown, she said. With studying abroad in mind, students can take courses at the right time so their schedules are flexible enough to allow for studying abroad. The “earlier they start looking at (studying abroad), the better,” Brandauer said. Engineering concentrator Natalie Johnson ’08 went to Dresden, Germany, during the spring of her sophomore year. In the program she chose, “all of the classes were already approved,” she said. “The hardest part is finding a program that fits,” she said, adding that the process was made easier by the fact that other students from Brown had already completed the program in which she participated. In general, Brandauer said, it is important to have communication among the OIP, students and faculty. “Brown is a great climate to do study abroad,” Brandauer said, adding that the faculty is supportive of students who take that option.
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
PAGE 6
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
U.’s $1.4b capital campaign should reach $1 billion mark by June continued from page 1 health of the campaign is indicated not only by the total sum raised, he said, but also by the fact that donor participation has met goals across a range of gift sizes — from contributions of $10,000 to $50 million or more. The campaign was boosted in January by a $100 million donation that renamed the Medical School in honor of millionaire entrepreneur Warren Alpert and tied with a 2004 gift from liquor magnate Sidney Frank ’42 for the largest gift in Brown’s history. Alpert’s gift “leapfrogged the campaign,” Steinberg said, and prompted development officials to raise their goal for the end of this fiscal year in June from $940 million to an even billion. Although the campaign has now passed its halfway point and will soon enter its fi fth year, Vanden Dorpel said that does not necessarily mean interest will flag or that excitement generated by the beginning of the campaign will wear off. “The latter half of campaigns can be different from the first half, but it’s largely dependent — at
least in my experience — on the state of the economy more than it is the prospect pool,” Vanden Dorpel said. He added that regional campaign kickoffs throughout the United States will continue through the end of this year, and that some international kickoffs may take place even later. “If we see the excitement waning there are all sorts of things we can do to recreate it,” Vanden Dorpel said, such as a series of “midcampaign presentations.” Vanden Dorpel attributed the campaign’s progress in part to Brown’s success in explaining to donors the vision laid out in the Plan for Academic Enrichment. “The Plan for Academic Enrichment is very clear to our alumni and friends, so they can see how the campaign priorities relate to the plan,” he said. Rae Goldsmith, vice president of communications and marketing for the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education, a professional organization for education fundraisers, agreed that communicating goals is one strength of
Brown’s campaign. “They’ve done a really good job defining what the institutional goals and needs are,” Goldsmith said, adding that a university’s failure to do so can often result in “confusion” among donors. “They’ve done an especially good job laying this out.” “The goal with a campaign is always to lay out institutional need and identify supporters who are interested in supporting that need,” she added. As a result, Steinberg and Vanden Dorpel said, donor priorities have mostly lined up with those laid out by University officials in the Table of Needs, which outlines both the University’s top priorities and others it would be willing to pursue with donor support. Progress has been largely consistent across the three major areas the University has targeted, they added. Some recently announced building projects — such as the planned renovation of Faunce House and a new building at the Med School — were not among the core projects the University included in its $200 million goal for facilities fundraising, but Steinberg said the table
was always meant to be “a living and breathing document.” Richard Spies, executive vice president for planning and senior adviser to the president, said the University’s priorities are “evolving” as the campaign progresses, adding that the University had always intended to “leave a little extra flexibility” for additional building projects beyond the core set in its planning. Spies also said the University has been banking to a certain extent on the success of the campaign by continuing to implement the Plan for Academic Enrichment “even now while trying to raise the money.” “We are assuming some level of success,” Spies said. “The evidence to date is very encouraging, and we’re pushing ahead with the actual implementation of (the Plan for Academic Enrichment) based on that.” Spies said that, though returns from the campaign have been an important source of “good news” for the budget in recent years, the University has also had to deal with multimillion dollar expenses
incurred as a result of rising energy costs and fire code upgrades. The University has also spent aggressively to implement such key components of the Plan for Academic Enrichment as need-blind admissions and increasing the size of the faculty. The University’s ability to expand the scope of the Plan for Academic Enrichment to include an internationalization initiative in spite of recent higher operating costs, as it did last fall, is thanks to the continuing momentum of the campaign, Spies said. But, he added, the University will be able to adjust if returns from the campaign decline in the second half of the seven-year effort. “We have all kinds of fallback provisions and contingency plans if in fact it doesn’t work out over the next few years the way we’ve expected,” Spies said. Those may include slowing the addition of new faculty positions, scaling back or deferring capital projects, or in an extreme situation “shutting down” implementation of the Plan for Academic Enrichment for a period of time, he said.
After one year open, Spats fights to serve liquor after midnight continued from page 3 peal is motivated by a desire to fix the problem of “too many liquor licenses and too late a closing time on Thayer Street. They all want 2 a.m. and when they all close down it causes some noise … and mayhem.” Eric Chaika, owner of the Red Carpet Smoke Shop on Waterman Street, is one of the parties to the current appeal. “When you have a lot of liquor licenses, you get a lot of the things that go along with liquor (including) vandalism and rowdy-
ism. I don’t want to deny anyone the opportunity to have a business … but the proliferation of 2 a.m. licenses changes the character of the neighborhood.” Mitrelis, who also owns Paragon and Andreas’ on Thayer Street, said his experience on Thayer from the beginning of the licensing battle is a guarantee that he has the neighborhood’s interest in mind. “I have more at stake on Thayer Street than anyone else on the East Side,” he said. “Some of (the CHNA members) are expressing themselves with the
intelligence of a second grader, the way they were trying to approach their problem,” Mitrelis said. “They get a kick out of trying to control the businesses on Thayer Street, but they think they are doing the right thing,” he said. “I’m pretty sure the decision will come in my favor,” he added. Though Lt. Paul Campbell, comT manding officer of the Providence Police 9th District substation, opposed Spats’ liquor license application last year, he hasn’t taken a stand on the current appeal. “If they closed at 12 a.m., that
would be roughly 80 less people coming onto Thayer Street at 2 a.m., and from a policing standpoint that’s always a good thing,” Campbell said. But Campbell said he has been satisfied with Spats’ management since last year’s opening. “Up to this point they have been a pretty good neighbor, police-wise,” he said. In the last year, there have been two police reports filed regarding Spats, Campbell said. On May 6, 2006, a Brown student claimed he was assaulted inside the restaurant, but the police didn’t find anyone
matching the victim’s description when they went inside. The only other incidence occurred five days later, on May 11, 2006, when two Brown students were arrested for underage drinking. “We run a tight ship here — we watch who’s coming in,” Mitrelis said, referring to underage drinking. Nevertheless, he said, “There will always be someone trying to get in underage. It’s a continuous struggle. But let me tell you, they are not going to get in just by being good-looking or something.”
J. Walter Wilson to house student services continued from page 1
enjoy spring break
very beautiful view from the Rock.” Many of the services currently located in Rhode Island Hall will be moved to J. Walter Wilson, as Rhode Island Hall will be renovated and converted into the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Carey said. The Brown Card Office will also be relocated to J. Walter Wilson, according to O’Neil. “Having the Brown Card Office in a dormitory where students can’t find it has never made sense,” she said. She said since the office — currently located in Emery-Woolley Hall — is one of the first stops for all incoming students, the relocation of the office is also intended for students to become familiar with J. Walter Wilson and its student services early in their Brown careers. The actual renovation of the building will be strictly internal, said Stephen Maiorisi, vice president for facilities management. Though some internal walls will be torn down, many of the existing structural walls will remain, said Stephen Morin, director of environmental health and safety. According to O’Neil, approximately 10 new seminar rooms will be located in the Sol Koffler wing, located in the front of the J. Walter Wilson building. Though classes will be held in the seminar rooms, some of the programs housed in the building will also be able to use the rooms, O’Neil said. Since the building was formerly
used as a laboratory, it is currently being decommissioned, Maiorisi said. Researchers were required to follow strict lab closeout procedures when they moved to Sidney Frank Hall for Life Sciences, Morin said. Because radioactive materials had been used in the laboratory, extra steps had to be taken in the renovation process, Morin said. “Over the years people have been authorized to use small quantities of radioactive materials as part of their research,” he said. However, these materials were closely monitored when they were used, and all surfaces in the building were checked for contamination over winter break, he said. “One of the things (the contractor, Chase Environmental Group,) said in the summary was that this was one of the cleanest buildings he’s ever checked,” Morin said, noting that this indicated that the researchers had been very careful with materials and that the ongoing environmental health and safety efforts to inspect and remove waste had been successful. Only the first three floors will be occupied, Maiorisi said — the fourth floor is not part of the project and will be kept as “shelf space for future capacity.” A central chiller plant will be installed in J. Walter Wilson’s fi fth floor, which is the building’s existing mechanical space, Maiorisi said. Plans to renovate the building began over a year ago when the decision was made to move the occupants of J. Walter Wilson to Frank Hall, O’Neil said. The need for a
building for student support and student services was recognized, and “the whole idea of a student precinct started to emerge,” she said. “President (Ruth) Simmons considered doing a new building which would be a very large student center,” she said. “That makes less sense than renovating Faunce and J. Walter Wilson, because we have so much history in Faunce.” In August 2006, a group of administrators consisting of O’Neil, Carey, Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron, Michael McCormick, director of planning for Facilities Management, and “other people who had a stake in the building” met to decide which offices to move to J. Walter Wilson, O’Neil said. University officials are still in the process of selecting a design and construction contractor, which they hope to finalize by early June, Maiorisi said. Construction is expected to begin by late summer, he said. Administrators considered moving Career Services from Pembroke Hall to J. Walter Wilson, since Pembroke Hall is also slated for renovation, O’Neil said. Due to its size, however, Career Services will instead move to the Hemisphere Building on Angell Street, she said. The Health Careers Office was also considered for relocation to J. Walter Wilson, O’Neil said. But Bergeron “said she wanted things that had primarily an advising function to stay in University Hall, so it will be moved (to University Hall) instead of J. Walter Wilson,” O’Neil said.
C AMPUS N EWS THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
SDS seeks tuition freeze, fewer student loans BY THI HO S TAFF WRITER
Students for a Democratic Society is trying to convince the University to adopt a temporary tuition freeze for the 2007-2008 academic year and, in the long run, shift the focus of financial aid packages from loans to grants and scholarships. Last month, the Corporation approved a 5 percent increase in total undergraduate costs, as well as an 8 percent increase in the financial aid budget. Members of SDS, a left-wing student activist organization, said they are circulating a petition and seeking to raise awareness about tuition fairness on campus, saying rising tuition and loans place an unreasonable burden on graduating students. “We have a whole class of people entering the workforce with an insane amount of debt,” said SDS member Vale Cofer-Shabica ’09. “It’s bad for our country’s economy. We feel that the people have the right to an education.” Alexander Ortiz ’09, another SDS member, said education is “a fundamental right. In order to be upwardly mobile, you have to be able to get a college degree.” The Corporation approved an increase of nearly 40 percent in financial aid programs for international students over the next four years, but SDS members said improving financial aid for needy stu-
PAGE 7
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
dents in the United States should come first. “The fact that they’re shifting more of their money to international students — it’s a nice idea, but the University should be taking care of the poor around it before it pulls in people from several thousand miles away,” CoferShabica said. “We should take care of the house first,” said SDS member William Pasley ’07. Elizabeth Huidekoper, executive vice president for finance and administration, said the University considers many factors in determining tuition levels, including the priorities of the Plan for Academic Enrichment, which includes increasing the number of faculty, improving facilities and improving undergraduate and graduate aid. “They also look at where Brown’s fees are relative to its peers. They look at the financial aid needs, trends and budget,” Huidekoper wrote in an e-mail to The Herald. Other schools have only been able to implement tuition freezes by adding expenses elsewhere, said James Tilton, director of financial aid. In January, Princeton University announced a tuition freeze for the 2007-2008 academic year. But at the same time, Princeton increased room and board fees, effectively creating a 4.2 percent increase in total costs for students. Tilton described the tu-
Recording industry cracks down on student downloaders
ition freeze at Princeton as largely “symbolic.” Huidekoper also noted that the University keeps students’ interests in mind when determining financial aid packages. “We are continuing to look at and refine our financial aid policies and practices to ensure that we maintain our commitment to need-blind and are able to attract the best students,” she wrote. The University has dedicated significant resources to improving financial aid in recent years, including reducing the burden of loans, Tilton said. “In 2002-2003, part of the increase in the financial aid budget was to reduce students’ loan debts,” Tilton said. “Before then, average student debt was around $21,700. After, it decreased to $16,000.” Tilton said the University’s future initiatives are limited by the amount of resources available. “It all boils down to money,” he said. One of the goals of the financial aid office, he said, is to help students better manage their budgets. “I want to go through the full awarding season to get a sense of how policies are going and then make recommendations to the University,” said Tilton, who began at Brown in December. Tilton said he welcomes members of SDS to come to his office for information on financial aid. continued on page 10
Late Night Fund receives $30k for next academic year BY AMANDA BAUER C ONTRIBUTING WRITER
The Late Night Fund, which began in spring 2006 as a pilot program to support student groups hosting alcohol-free events, has been allotted $30,000 to continue next academic year. Financial support for the fund is not permanently guaranteed, however, and will have to be approved every year. In order for the Late Night Fund to continue, the fund’s board will have to show “that there has been success and interest” from the student body, said Shelley Adriance, coordinator for student activities and one of the advisers of the board that distributes the funds. The fund has been replenished thus far because “a number of groups have benefited from the Late Night Fund and been able to provide events for the community on Friday and Saturday nights,” Adriance said. Student groups including Harambee House, Taiko, Athletes In Action and the swing, salsa and ballroom dancing clubs have taken advantage of the fund. The groups have hosted a wide range of alcohol-free events, including movie showings, karaoke nights, cultural
performances and dances. Many of these groups have offered these events in the past but now “tailor them to meet Late Night’s expectations and get funding,” said Dani Levine ’09, the student at-large representative on the Late Night Fund’s board. Funding for alcohol-free events is limited. The board was created to provide incentive for new programs, and student groups can only use the fund twice for their events. This limitation forces some groups to seek financial support from the Undergraduate Finance Board. The board only funds two events because it allows “other groups to have funding,” Adriance said. “If (the board) funded only the same events, there wouldn’t be any room for new and creative events to happen because the fund would be used up.” Harambee hosted “One Night Stand” last Friday with support from the Late Night Fund, said Cassie Owens ’09, a member of Harambee. Harambee has hosted several social events in the past using its UFB funding but has only attempted to get support from continued on page 10
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
Q & A WITH FERNANDO HENRIQUE CARDOSO Fernando Henrique Cardoso, currently a professor-at-large at Brown, served as president of Brazil from 1995-2003. The sociologist and intellectual published his memoirs, “The Accidental President of Brazil,” in 2006. The Herald sat down with Cardoso to discuss his book, his friendship with former U.S. President Bill Clinton and U.S.-Brazilian relations. The Herald: What motivated you to release memoirs in English? Cardoso: The deal was not just to write memories, but to try to put the American audience, the non-Brazilian audience, in contact with what is going on in Brazil. So I used my memoirs to try to motivate people to read about Brazil. What has been the English-reading audience’s reaction to the book? I think it was not bad. I guess, they published two editions and now, this month, March 26th, a paperback will be available. …We had lots of reviews of the book, much more than in Brazil about the Brazilian book. Lots of book reviews. And, also, when you open Amazon(.com), you have some comments by the readers, and, also, they put some stars for each book, and mine has plenty of stars. (laughs) So, I assume that the public has accepted the book. What were the different purposes for the Portuguese and English books that you released around the same time? The Portuguese book is much more of an analysis of my own government. It is not memoirs.
It is much more a discussion of some issues related to my government, to some changes occurring in Brazil. How did Bill Clinton come to write the foreword of the English version? We have very good contact. When I started in Brazil a presidential library, Clinton came to the inauguration. We had contact before, because he was president at the same time as me. We had been together in the same network, named “the progressive governments,” the so-called “Third Way,” I was involved in that, too. So we had good connections. Then I asked Bill to write the intro. … Clinton, I like him very much. We have very good personal relations. In the book, you criticize several Brazilian political figures, including current President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Did you feel any restraint while writing these criticisms, and what has been the reaction to them? In the press, no, no one reacted to my criticisms. I did have some comments on Lula, but, normally, rather positive than negative comments on him. I think that’s not my appropriate role, to criticize the Brazilian president abroad. When I’m speaking in Brazil, I can be a little bit more critical. But when speaking in foreign countries, or writing for a foreign people, I think it’s not correct to criticize strongly President Lula. And I tried in this book not to be personal, not to be aggressive, and not just with Lula, in general
terms, but to understand people rather than to criticize people. President Clinton mentions in the foreword that Brazil and America have a special responsibility to work together to promote democracy in the region. What are your hopes for relations between these nations? In terms of democracy, we can do a lot of things together. The point is to understand to what extent democracy is being enhanced in America itself. I think it would be very positive if America continued to be more open as a society, more capable to correct mistakes. For instance, the Iraq war — it is clear for the American public that this was a mistake. So, now I’m anxious to see how the American public reacts in the upcoming elections and how the American government will try to reshape its international ties. So, provided that America continues to make progress in that area, it is a positive element to consolidating democracy in Latin America. When you write now, do you write as a sociology professor or a former president? Well, I suppose more as a man, putting together my experiences as president and my training as a sociologist. The thing is, with this coming age, we are less preoccupied with labels and more preoccupied with and entitled to say more openly, frankly, and sincerely in the simplest way possible, what we think about different issues. — Taylor Barnes
More undergrads opt for grad-level classes continued from page 5 him to try graduate-level classes. “I really enjoyed the small class size and the intense dynamic that develops within the small-class setting,” he said. Paul Wallace ’08 said he didn’t realize undergrads could sign up for graduate-level classes, so he was “pleasantly surprised” when he was allowed to take a graduate-level comparative literature course. He said having the graduate students in class with him added a lot to his academic experience. “It becomes much more apparent that the grad students have a significant amount of research in a specific area,” Wallace said. “It’s another great resource, having the grad students in there, because they have a very specific direction of information. It’s like having a class of lots of other teachers.” There are other benefits as well — students say the graduate-level courses can help prepare them for grad school or careers. “It’s helpful for getting into the graduate programs to have some graduate classes,” Merberg said. “And I was also running out of undergraduate classes.”
PAGE 9
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
“For undergraduate students thinking of pursuing careers in academia or going on to a Ph.D. program, it’s just a good idea to get a taste for what it’s like to take graduate courses,” Beddor said. But Merberg said some of the grad students are “less than happy” about having undergrads in their classes, and Beddor said he has heard that some professors discourage undergrads from taking graduate-level classes “because the content is so specific.” “It may be a general worry for some classes, but I’ve found that in the classes I’ve taken, while they have been very focused, there has been a lot of interesting material, and you have a wide variety of material and a wide variety of choices of what you want to focus on,” he said. Professor of Mathematics Joseph Silverman ’77 P’03 P’06 P’10, who teaches some graduate-level classes with enrolled undergraduates, said as long as students have the background necessary, he does not have a problem with them taking the course. “Brown philosophy is to give students advice and let them decide what classes they want to take,” he
said. “Well, it’s one of the great things about Brown — the relationship between the undergraduate College and the Graduate School. It’s a lot easier for students to cross over in both directions than in a lot of places,” Bergeron said.
Cardoso heads back to Brazil continued from page 1 co and also as senator for the state of São Paulo. His memoirs offer a history of Brazil through the lens of the Cardoso family, whose prominence in Brazilian politics goes back to Cardoso’s grandfather, who in 1889 delivered to the soon-to-be-deposed emperor a message declaring the formation of a republic. The book’s title derives from Cardoso’s initial resistance toward what he calls his “family business” of politics. A sociology professor until he “tired of the idleness of academia,” Cardoso entered politics late in life and ran for the Senate in hopes of promoting democracy during the final years of Brazil’s military dictatorship. At times in his book, he generalizes Brazilians in endearing ways such as, “It is said in Brazil that every youth is born with a soccer ball attached to his foot.” Still, he resists popular stereotypes of Brazilians, citing their “distaste for the way the world sees Brazil: a country of frivolous, perpetually beach-bronzed youth, reveling in an eternal Carnival.” The former politician writes and speaks openly about his con-
temporaries in Brazilian politics, telling embarrassing stories about deceased former president Jânio Quadros, and offers criticism of Brazil’s current president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, writing in his book, “I would never have imagined what a disappointment Lula would be as president.” Lula had been twice defeated by Cardoso in presidential elections and took office only after Cardoso had served the two term limit. Despite their contrasting public images — Lula, the rugged labor union leader, and Cardoso, the sociology professor — Cardoso writes that their relationship has not been entirely oppositional since they met almost 30 years ago. The two first met when Lula arranged to meet Cardoso to tell him that Lula’s union would support Cardoso’s senatorial campaign. As students head off for spring break, they may miss the chance to meet the former president before he leaves College Hill this month. Cardoso will take a roundabout journey home after his monthlong stay at Brown, stopping by the Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock, Ark., Chapel Hill, N.C., and Madrid, Spain, before finally arriving in Brazil.
PAGE 10
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
Sober campus events to receive $30k next year continued from page 7 the Late Night Fund twice, Owens said, because she was hesitant to apply. “My perception of the fund before I talked to Shelley (Adriance) in preparation for this party was that if you wanted to have a party, and it cost less than $500, you could propose it,” Owens said. She said she was surprised to learn that groups could actually request complete funding, which she said Adriance encourages. “I know that when people go in front of the UFB (to request funding), they get really intimidated and are peppered with questions, but we are more laid-back,” Levine said. “We have a goal — which is to provide alcohol-free alternatives — and if a group comes to us with
a great program, and they want money from us, we are delighted to help support them,” she added. “The great thing about alcoholfree programming is that there’s so much creativity out there. Any event that you could possibly conceive of that doesn’t involve alcohol could potentially get funding,” Levine said. “I think groups need to do the most creative programs possible to get the money and give it back to the community,” Owens said. The fund was recommended by the University’s Ad Hoc Committee to Review Social Events Policy and Procedures, which was created in November 2005 in the wake of Queer Alliance’s Sex Power God party, at which 24 students required emergency medical care.
SDS agenda: Temporary tuition freeze and reducing student loans continued from page 7 “Knowing what our policies are will be useful in making comparisons,” he said. William Emmons ’09, a member of SDS, echoed Tilton’s comments, saying SDS is “open to working with any elements of the administration that can help us become active members instead of passive members.” SDS members said their immediate goal is to raise awareness on campus and that they are circulating a petition to support a tuition freeze, rolling back the 5 percent increase in undergraduate charges already approved for next year. The group said it hopes to gather 5,000 undergraduate signatures and signatures from 1,000 graduate students. “One of the greatest things the petition can do is raise awareness. One of the big goals of the petition is to let people talk,” Ortiz said. Ortiz said the group’s longterm goal is to shift attention in financial aid away from loans to grants and scholarships. “Student
debt in this country is staggering, and it’s not a democratic or equitable way to access education,” he said. SDS plans to bring up the issue of a tuition freeze and a shift in the focus of financial aid at the next Corporation meeting in May, members said. Students said the proposed tuition freeze may not be practical, but improved financial aid packages may be more equitable. “I think it’s a good idea to shift loan-based financial aid to scholarship-based financial aid,” said Kate Leaird ’07. But Leaird said a tuition freeze did not seem to be realistic, given the effects of inflation. “It’s inevitable that tuition costs need to be increased. It seems more equitable to increase by small percentage increments,” said Jonathan Bogard ’09. “If after much scrutiny, the University determined it required added funds to expand its current efforts, and assuming financial aid for all students keeps up with costs, then there doesn’t seem to be any equity issue,” he said.
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Burke ’09 shines as m. lax goalie continued from page 16 same place a few times, between my right elbow and shoulder. It formed a massive bruise that covered my upper arm, from my bicep to my sternum. It was pretty cool. Which teammate has the toughest shot to block? It’s tough to say. Probably (cocaptain) Alex Buckley (’07). He has the hardest shot on the team, but as a midfielder, it’s tougher for him to get close to the goal, compared with attackmen. But when he gets his good shot off, it’s probably the toughest to stop. Dave Madeira’s (’07) shot is also tough. He’s been scoring a lot lately. He’s an attackman, and he can get a lot closer to the goal compared with a midfielder. How would you describe practice? Practice has been a lot better this year compared with last year. Coach (Lars) Tiffany (’90) keeps practice really up-tempo with everyone working hard. He knows how hard to work us. Last year with Coach (Scott) Nelson, I didn’t think we were working our hardest during practice. Do you enjoy practicing in the snow? It’s a lot of fun, but it’s really tough for a goalie. Many of my
teammates would pick up snowballs and pretend that they had a lacrosse ball in their sticks. So as a goalie, I try to keep my eyes on the ball, and it seems like everyone had a ball. The ball is tougher to stop in the snow, and I didn’t know where the ball was coming from.
plans? After Dartmouth this weekend, we’ll be back at Brown, practicing. Then we play Vermont on Tuesday and Notre Dame later in the week. We don’t get a spring break. I haven’t had a spring break since I was in fi fth grade.
How did you manage to defeat UMass last weekend? Well, we were lucky with the weather. The game was supposed to be at 1 (p.m.), but it got pushed back to 4 (p.m.). The weather cleared up, and the field was cleared. Our defense played very well. UMass got a few opportunities in the first quarter, but we were able to maintain their barrage of shots, and they didn’t get much after that. Bobby Shields (’07), one of the captains, had been out with a hamstring injury. He came back during this game and looked to be at full speed, causing some important turnovers.
Why are you wearing a blue Duke lacrosse bracelet? One of the former Duke players sent Coach Tiffany a package of blue bracelets to commemorate the Duke players. The bracelet says “Duke Lacrosse 2006, Innocent, #6, #13, and #45.” They were the players charged, that canceled their season about a quarter-way though. I wear it because my friend plays for them, and it’s my way of showing support for them.
Has your four-game win streak changed your team’s mentality? It feels great to be on a fourgame win streak, but we are definitely not content with a four-game win streak. This weekend we have our Ivy League opener at Dartmouth, and that is going to be a huge game. What are your spring break
How would your coach describe you? I’m a pretty quiet kid. I’ve never been outspoken. I’ve always been quiet, and most coaches know that even if I’m not yelling and screaming, I’m ready to play. Does being quiet affect your play? During a game, I have to yell and scream. It’s a goalie’s responsibility to call out the defenses and offensive formations. I guess I come out of my shell during the games.
Sheehy defeats long odds to complete stellar fencing career continued from page 16 looking around and your team’s kind of scattered around, and you think, okay, that’s cool.” Despite spending the last four years fencing at Brown, Sheehy’s first love growing up was another sport. From a young age, Sheehy played in the top ranks of junior hockey in Massachusetts. As a goalie, he played Triple A hockey with several players who were drafted into the NHL. Sheehy said he was he was too young to have his hockey future projected with any certainty, but needless to say, he showed lots of promise in the rink. A week before he got hurt, he played in a Triple A tournament with his team and recorded five shutouts in six games. Then, in late August of 1998, while visiting western Massachusetts, he suffered a devastating injury. After getting injured, he spent eight weeks in a hospital in Atlanta. The doctors gave him a wide range of possible scenarios, but he believed at first that he would fully recover. “I was a kid,” Sheehy said. “I was ignorant, and I was stupid. I thought that I would be back playing hockey within a month. As that month hit, I thought, okay, it would be three months. Then, by that time, I thought, maybe I have missed too much to get back into the competitive level. I was already so far into it that it wasn’t a huge blow or anything.” While working out on a daily basis, Sheehy said he saw people fencing and was intrigued. “I was in high school. I don’t remember exactly where I saw it,” he said. “I saw it the year before I came to college, the fall of my senior year in high school.” He decided it was a perfect match because it didn’t require him to use his injured left hand, and
shortly after seeing other people fence, he decided to start fencing himself When Sheehy began fenchimself. ing at Brown, his presence on the team made an immediate impact. “His strong character shows (through) his persistence and his consistency in practice everyday,” said Head Coach Atilio Tass. “And later on, once he had learned the sport, he … competed against people who had no other physical difficulties and was even able to beat a great number of them over the years. His entire career was extremely successful.” Sheehy is proud of how the team changed and grew over his fouryear tenure. This change was exemplified by the team’s improved recruiting along with its step up to Ivy League competition for the first time last year. “I’m looking forward to what the team is going to be doing,” Sheehy said. “(Our progress) is very encouraging. The people that are younger than me are going to be taking it to this whole new place. I didn’t teach them to fence or anything, but I was there as a part of it to show what Brown fencing is.” Sheehy said he feels that during his four years he experienced a true turning point in Brown fencing. “When people look back and think about (when) the team picked
up and started to become one of the best teams in the country, even though we’re not there yet, they’ll look back at this as the time where it started to change,” he added. “It’s been cool to be there for that.” Sheehy said he is completely satisfied with how his life has turned out, but he admitted that sometimes he does wonder what might have happened if he hadn’t gotten hurt. “Oh, yeah, all the time, but it’s the kind of thing that you’ve got to avoid,” he said. “What can you do? The big thing that I always think when I get into that trap is, what if I played hockey? What if I was playing goalie for BC right now? What if I had offers from pro teams? And then I think, well, that could have happened if I had hit at a one-degree different angle on the bottom of the lake. The best way to counteract that is to think that if I had been a degree in the other direction I could be dead. Sure, lots of stuff could have happened, but just as much bad stuff could have happened. You work with what you get. It’s a silly thing to think about what could have happened.” Sheehy’s athletic prowess has clearly extended to a new realm and a new level. So much so that perhaps a brass band should strike up a tune.
PAGE 11
PAGE 12
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
Rochelson: 2007 MLB results, Part II continued from page 16 ing depth. Pedro Martinez’s shoulder injury (out until August) and the inevitable regressions of John Maine and El Duque Hernandez will drop the Mets into second place in the NL East.
Kevin Kouzmanoff and 1B Adrian Gonzalez will put up nice numbers, but it’s nothing to go crazy over. The Padres will win the division because their pitching staff is durable and consistent, Trevor Hoffman will keep saving games, and the rest of the NL West is simply pathetic.
NL Central: Cubs fans, get excited… The Chicago Cubs are good this year. In 2006, they finished in dead last — behind the Pirates and Brewers, mind you — going 66-96 and disappointing the north side of Chicago once again. Why were they so bad? Well, their starting pitching looked like this: Ace Carlos Zambrano, 40year-old Greg Maddux and Sean Marshall — whom I’ve never even heard of. Those were the only Cubs pitchers to throw over 100 innings last year. The 2007 rotation has been completely revamped. Following Zambrano are newcomers Ted Lilly and Jason Marquis, super-prospect Rich Hill and Wade Miller. A dark horse to keep an eye on: rookie RHP Rocky Cherry, who’s having an impressive spring — 8 IP, 11 strikeouts. Even if he doesn’t make the team, any player named “Rocky Cherry” is worth following, but I digress. In addition to a much-improved rotation, the offense looks juiced compared to last season. With a healthy Derrek Lee at first base aand the addition of superstar Alfonso Soriano in center field, the Cubs will launch past their pathetic 4.42 runs per game from 2006 and take the crown in a weak NL Central.
National League Divison Series: New York beats Chicago, 3-2 This will be a tough battle, and the Cubs have a better team than the Mets, but a good bullpen is imperative to postseason success. Who would you pick to close out a huge win-or-go-home game: Billy Wagner or Ryan Dempster?
NL West: The Padres are the best of the losers The San Francisco Giants have great pitching but no hitting. The Colorado Rockies have a powerful offense — OF Matt Holliday and 3B Garrett Atkins are only going to get better — but their pitching is terrible (what a surprise). The Los Angeles Dodgers have no power — their biggest slugger is Nomar Garciaparra, with a mere 20 HRs in 2006. The Arizona Diamondbacks have some promising young stars — SS Stephen Drew, 1B Conor Jackson, and OFs Carlos Quentin and Chris Young all project to be very good hitters, but they’re way too green to produce significantly in 2007. That leaves the San Diego Padres. Are they any good? Well, kind of. Their pitching isn’t the best. Jake Peavy will have a monster season, but Chris Young will not come close to replicating his freakishly low 6.72 hits allowed per 9 innings of 2006. The offense is well rounded and has significant upside, but there’s no Tony Gwynn or Ken Caminiti. 3B
THE 2007 WORLD SERIES: New York beats Philadelphia, 4-3 This World Series is going to be exciting, close and a lot of fun to watch. The pitching match-ups are all pretty even. The Yanks’ offense is significantly deeper, but remember when the Astros rode Carlos Beltran’s bat all the way to the Series in 2004? The Phils have Ryan Howard to serve the same purpose. What’s the Yanks’ advantage? Mariano Rivera is a lot better than Flash Gordon. We’ll see some lateinning magic from Derek Jeter and Robby Cano as Gordon blows a few leads Byung-Hyun Kim style. Rivera will be solid as a rock, earning the World Series MVP and bringing a dearly missed Championship Trophy back to New York. And Chicago Cub Rocky Cherry, watching at home on his big-screen TV, will sit back and dream of one day becoming a New York Yankee.
National League Divison Series: Philadelphia beats San Diego, 3-1 “They’ll win when Peavy pitches.” This has been the postseason assessment of the Padres for the last few seasons, and not much has changed. Jake Peavy can outduel Brett Myers, Hamels or whoever you throw at him. But after that, Howard and Utley will let loose and send the Padres home wearing their third-straight “Division Champion” hats. National League Championship Series: Philadelphia beats New York, 4-2 In a division-rival match-up, the Phillies will down the Mets with relative ease. Their offenses are equally potent, but the Phils have a serious pitching edge even with Pedro Martinez’s late-season return. Philadelphia will keep on racking up HRs and Ks all the way to the World Series.
Ellis Rochelson ’09 hopes Mr. Cherry’s dream comes true.
Snow secures title for equestrian team continued from page 16 ’08, Irmak Tasindi ’08, Hayley Goldbach ’09, Stephanie Syc ’08 and Joyce Kwok ’08. In each event, the top two riders from each region will advance to Zones. As regional champions, the squad as a whole will participate in
the Zone 1 Championships on April 7, hosted by Mount Holyoke College. The Bears will face off against Zone 1’s three other regional champions, and the top two finishers will later compete at the Intercollegiate Horse Show Association Nationals in May. — Erin Frauenhofer
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Mahr: Spring season brings more than just flowers continued from page 16 dominated by a select few has become parity-laden to the point that there are more teams that have a shot at the playoffs than there are ones that don’t. Teams coming off sub-par years have proven they can contend with the right mix of talented up-and-comers and established veterans (see Exhibit A, last year’s Tigers), while those highpayroll teams that look dominant on paper don’t necessarily succeed in October. Aside from the increased level of competition, the start of baseball season is always enjoyable because of the anticipation of seeing new players in new uniforms. Not since Pedro Martinez joined the Ole Towne Team nearly a decade ago have the Red Sox gone to such great lengths to welcome a new player, but the red-carpet treatment given to Daisuke Matsuzaka this winter may trump that. Will he adjust to his new, pressure-filled environment? Does the gyroball actually exist? Storylines like these are so juicy, there’s no need for dessert. The NBA and NHL playoffs So the NBA is admittedly a oneconference league, but any Brown student who has forsaken their work to stay up late and watch a Western Conference game knows that as long as you look west, you will be entertained. The top three contenders for the Larry O’Brien Trophy — the Mavericks, Suns and Spurs
— will be locked up in some pretty memorable games in their quest for the finals. And don’t forget that added storyline of the MVP race and how each of the candidates — namely Steve Nash and Dirk Nowitzki — will try to ratchet up their play down the stretch to bring the trophy home. Meanwhile, the NHL is being dominated by, appropriately enough, two teams that come from warmer climates — the Nashville Predators and Anaheim Ducks. The Predators are still in the running for the league’s best overall record, while the Quack Attack is getting healthy at the right time and priming itself for another run deep into the postseason. Now if only NBC could lure Gary Thorn away from ESPN, people would actually tune in. The NFL draft It is somewhat disconcerting that an event with no actual athletic activity could be considered one of the premier sporting events of the spring, but the draft has become such a circus-like event in recent years that fans dress up for it. Yet just as baseball is exciting for the prospect of seeing new faces in new places, football is exciting for fans who believe that one stud rookie can reverse their team’s fortunes. The cream of this year’s draft crop should be no different. Can man-child JaMarcus Russell and his ridiculous arm turn the Raiders into a winner again? Will Golden Boy Brady Quinn stay golden if he
ends up on a sub-par team like the Lions? Is Adrian Peterson really the once-in-a-generation tailback that people say he is? The anticipation in answering all these questions is a thing of beauty. Outdoor intramural sports On a more personal, close-tohome level, spring is also the time when all the amateur Brown athletes such as yours truly can finally venture outside for intramurals. Basketball, inner tube water polo and ice hockey were nice wintertime diversions, but none of them stack up to running after a fly ball or an errant Frisbee throw as the sun kisses your face (wow, that was really trite). Getting out of class for the day and heading straight for an IM game behind the OMAC is the closest thing I’ve had to recess since fi fth grade, and the level of joy I feel is paramount to that of an elementary schooler. There’s a reason why I talk about intramural softball with the rest of my Dienasty teammates year round. And there it is: A handful of springtime joys that are just waiting to be had. The temperature is finally rising, and it’s safe to come out and enjoy yourselves, sports fans. Don’t you feel reborn already?
Chris Mahr ’07 would have his One Shining Moment if Kansas beat Georgetown for the national title.
Leading team in batting, Eno ’08 makes ‘The Cut’ continued from page 16 ting to the coaching staff, especially first-year assistant coach Bill Cilento, the team’s main hitting coach. Eno said a small adjustment Cilento made to his batting stance — Eno used to rest his bat on his shoulder, but now holds it more upright — enabled him to shorten his swing and feel more comfortable at the plate. Soft-spoken but eloquent, Jonathan-James Eno grew up in Kahului, Hawaii, on the island of Maui. At H.P. Baldwin High School, he excelled in baseball, football and soccer and was named the Maui News’ Maui Interscholastic League Athlete of the Year during his senior year. He also excelled in academics, graduating as school valedictorian. Eno said he wasn’t heavily recruited by collegiate baseball programs, getting looks from the University of Hawaii as well as some smaller programs. He decided to attend Brown, he said, because “academics was my primary concern.” “If I could walk onto the team that was at Brown, then it would have been a bonus,” Eno recalled thinking.
During the fall of his freshman year, Eno said he attended the oneday walk-on tryout with about six other players. Drabinski said he was impressed with Eno’s skills, but his roster was already full and he didn’t take any walk-ons that year. Eno said he wasn’t especially disappointed or discouraged by the news. In fact, he said it gave him a good opportunity to concentrate on school and to spend more time in the gym building up muscle for the next year. The next fall, Eno showed up at tryouts and impressed Drabinski again. This time, the coach added him to the roster. Drabinski said he remembers calling Eno a day or two later to tell him he was on the team. But the coach said he forgot Eno had tried out a year earlier. “I asked him, ‘Why weren’t you at the tryout last year?’” Drabinski said. Without missing a beat, Eno replied, “No, I was, and you cut me,” Drabinski recalled, laughing. Eno said there’s no stigma attached to him as a walk-on, saying the players easily accepted him. But while they don’t question his baseball skills, some, like third baseman
Matt Nuzzo ’09, do like to rib him about his hometown — or island, rather. “He always questions if Hawaii is part of America,” Eno said with a smile. Drabinski said he expects Eno to split time between leftfield and designated hitter this season. When he’s in the lineup, Drabinski likes to bat him second. “He can hit and run, he can put down the bunt, he can slash,” Drabinski said. “He’s a prototypical No. 2 hitter because of how he handles the bat.” While he has been hitting well in the young season, Eno, who is a bit undersize and doesn’t hit for power, said he has absolutely no plans to pursue a professional baseball career. “I don’t have a chance,” he said. But those who are worried about his career prospects shouldn’t fret; Eno already has a four-year contract of sorts waiting for him after he graduates from college. The suitor? The Alpert Medical School. Eno, a member of the Program in Liberal Medical Education, said, “I’m a PLME, so hopefully, medicine’s in the future for me.”
Rhody Fresh milk available at Whole Foods continued from page 3 He said no studies have shown whether rBST affects the nutritional quality of milk or has negative health effects on humans. “Eventually we convinced (the other Rhode Island farmers) of the importance of having this on our label,” Hines said. He said being able to make this claim makes a huge difference in terms of marketing the product. Whole Foods has recently come under fire from consumers who say it has strayed from its promise
to provide locally produced food — such as Rhody Fresh milk — but Hines said, “Once we changed our label, Whole Foods welcomed us with open arms.” Hines first met with a representative from Whole Foods at the Rhode Island Local Food Forum, a gathering for farmers and food retailers hosted by the nonprofit organization Farm Fresh Rhode Island, on Feb. 13 hosted in Andrews Dining Hall. Farm Fresh R.I. aims to bring products from Rhode Island farms to Rhode Island consumers. “The whole point of this event
was to make connections,” said Noah Fulmer ‘05, Executive Director of Farm Fresh R.I. Fulmer and Louella Hill ’04, co-founder of Farm Fresh R.I., have been working to make the connection between Rhody Fresh and Whole Foods for several years. Hines said he was simply glad to bring Rhody Fresh milk to a wider market. “More people will realize how important Rhody Fresh is to the community, to keeping Rhode Island farms economically viable,” he said.
PAGE 13
E DITORIAL & L ETTERS THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
PAGE 14
THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
STAF F EDITORIAL
Diamonds and coal Coal to snow. Because it’s March. Come on, Rhode Island, get with the program. A diamond to Robert A.M. Stern, the architect whose firm will design the Nelson Fitness Center. We only have one question: How sturdy are your roofs? A cubic zirconium to Whole Foods’ delayed incorporation of Rhody Fresh milk into their product line. While we’re glad that local organic milk is now on sale, any action that makes the Ratty look forward-thinking and ahead of the curve should be reason to pause. A diamond to activism on campus. What with the occupation of Welcome Arnold, the rally against the Iraq War and the “die-in” downtown, it feels like 1968. But coal to the cool new way to protest wars: the “die-in.” Switch the syllables and the innovative protest spells “indie.” Coincidence? Or is this how the SDS hipsters justified their postmodern performance, which included slathering raspberry jam on a building? Was this artsy display an installation of some sort? Will we see another iteration of it in List? Or better yet, were the handprints just practice for a new Faunce mural concept?
JASON LI
A diamond to Thete for being too lazy to type up their bylaws. Could this excuse work for classes, too? Fortunately, failing at Brown has no consequences, whether it’s class or ResCouncil. Coal to a tame Starf*ck. We were counting on Ann Coulter showing up for this year’s party and declaring Brown students godless. A diamond to last weekend’s pulp fiction festival, which must have infected the minds of undergrads who’ve seen too much Tarantino. How else do you explain the randomly violent punching of a DPS officer, students walking around holding fire and a shower mysteriously painted purple overnight? NEXT — Fedora-wearing University officials smoking cigarettes and turning up the collars of their trench coats. And a confused coal to the student who called DPS when she discovered she’d been scammed online. We’re curious — why did you call DPS? Have you heard about its recent crackdown on PAW prints identity theft? A diamond to UCS’ appointments chair who left applicants hanging. But we’re e-mailing it to you, so we’re not sure you’ll even notice.
LETTERS U. should print course catalog To the Editor: Thank you for pointing out the problems with an online course catalog (“In defense of paper,” March 20). The online catalog is so unusable that a remedy needs to happen within the next week or two before pre-registration, even if at this point that means the University printing out the catalog on white paper and distributing that among students. We need to be able to flip through many hundreds of courses and easily view professor names and class times.
It is a shame, but this mess could have been avoided by asking the opinion of any student. It’s particularly troubling considering how many times I’ve walked past the pallets full of Brown telephone directories that no one uses.
Jake Rosenberg ‘08 March 21
SDS explains Textron protest To the Editor:
T HE B ROWN D AILY H ERALD Editors-in-Chief Eric Beck Mary-Catherine Lader
Executive Editors Allison Kwong Ben Leubsdorf
Senior Editors Stephen Colelli Sonia Saraiya BUSINESS
EDITORIAL Lydia Gidwitz Lindsey Meyers Stephanie Bernhard Stu Woo Simmi Aujla Sara Molinaro Ross Frazier Jacob Schuman Michal Zapendowski Peter Cipparone Justin Goldman Sarah Demers Erin Frauenhofer Madeleine Marecki
Arts & Culture Editor Arts & Culture Editor Features Editor Features Editor Metro Editor Metro Editor News Editor Opinions Editor Opinions Editor Sports Editor Sports Editor Asst. Sports Editor Asst. Sports Editor Asst. Sports Editor
PHOTO Eunice Hong Christopher Bennett Jacob Melrose
Photo Editor Photo Editor Sports Photo Editor
General Manager Mandeep Gill General Manager Ally Ouh Executive Manager Darren Ball Executive Manager Dan DeNorch Laurie-Ann Paliotti Sr. Advertising Manager Office Manager Susan Dansereau PRODUCTION Design Editor Steve DeLucia Copy Desk Chief Chris Gang Graphics Editor Mark Brinker Graphics Editor Roxanne Palmer Web Editor Luke Harris POST- MAGAZINE Hillary Dixler Melanie Duch Taryn Martinez Rajiv Jayadevan Mindy Smith
As The Herald reported earlier this week, the Brown chapter of Students for a Democratic Society, with the support of local activists and SDS members from Boston and Connecticut College, gathered for a die-in and rally in front of Textron’s headquarters in Providence (“Student arrested at SDS ‘die-in’ downtown,” March 20). We were there in protest of Textron, because it, like all war profiteers, promotes U.S. militarism and imperialism. Overall we are very pleased with the action, which elicited much support from bystanders, some of whom even joined our protest. We are disturbed though, by some of the misleading and dishonest statements made by Textron and the Providence Police Department in relation to what happened. First, Textron lied to Rhode Island when it told NBC 10, in response to our protest, that it “does not produce anti-personnel cluster munitions.” Mass Tech: The Journal of New England Technology explicitly revealed that Textron’s “sensor-fused weapon is a cluster munition.” Textron has publicly stated that this weapon is “used to engage and defeat soft targets
over a wide area.” For those not familiar with military jargon, “soft targets” means people and “wide area” implies a lack of precise targeting, and thus civilian deaths. Second, PPD made a misleading and disingenuous comment about their relation to our protest. Capt. David Lapatin of PPD told protesters that “we’ll make sure you’re safe.” This comment, however, was followed by police aggression which left one SDS member with a knee injury and another in a holding cell for hours. We were dismayed at this unnecessarily aggressive response to our peaceful protest and question whether the police’s loyalties lie with citizens or with Providence’s corporations. Mike Da Cruz ‘08.5 Ingrid O’Brien ‘07 Will Lambek ‘09 Baird Bream ‘10 Brown Students for a Democratic Society March 21
Managing Editor Managing Editor Managing Editor Features Editor Features Editor
Jihan Chao, Allison Kwong, Designer Fariha Ali, Joy Neumeyer, Lucy Stark, Copy Editors Senior Staff Writers Rachel Arndt, Michael Bechek, Oliver Bowers, Zachary Chapman, Chaz Firestone, Kristina Kelleher, Debbie Lehmann, Scott Lowenstein, James Shapiro, Michael Skocpol Staff Writers Susana Aho, Taylor Barnes, Brianna Barzola, Evan Boggs, Irene Chen, Nicole Dungca, Catherine Goldberg, Isabel Gottlieb, Thi Ho, Rebecca Jacobson, Tsvetina Kamenova, Franklin Kanin, Hannah Levintova, Abe Lubetkin, Christian Martell, Taryn Martinez, Zachary McCune, Nathalie Pierrepont, Alexander Roehrkasse, Jessica Rotondi, Marielle Segarra, Robin Steele, Allissa Wickham Sports Staff Writers Amy Ehrhart, Kaitlyn Laabs, Eliza Lane, Kathleen Loughlin, Megan McCahill, Marco Santini, Tom Trudeau, Steele West Business Staff Dana Feuchtbaum, Kent Holland, Alexander Hughes, Mariya Perelyubskaya, Viseth San, Kaustubh Shah, Jon Spector, Robert Stefani, Lily Tran, Lindsay Walls Design Staff Brianna Barzola, Jihan Chao, Aurora Durfee, Sophie Elsner, Christian Martell, Matthew McCabe, Ezra Miller Photo Staff Stuart Duncan-Smith, Austin Freeman, Tai Ho Shin Copy Editors Ayelet Brinn, Catherine Cullen, Erin Cummings, Karen Evans, Jacob Frank, Ted Lamm, Lauren Levitz, Cici Matheny, Alex Mazerov, Ezra Miller, Joy Neumeyer, Madeleine
CORRECTIONS POLICY The Brown Daily Herald is committed to providing the Brown University community with the most accurate information possible. Corrections may be submitted up to seven calendar days after publication. COMMENTAR Y POLICY The staff editorial is the majority opinion of the editorial board of The Brown Daily Herald. The editorial viewpoint does not necessarily reflect the views of The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. Columns, letters and comics reflect the opinions of their authors only. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR POLICY Send letters to letters@browndailyherald.com. Include a telephone number with all letters. The Herald reserves the right to edit all letters for length and cannot assure the publication of any letter. Please limit letters to 250 words. Under special circumstances writers may request anonymity, but no letter will be printed if the author’s identity is unknown to the editors. Announcements of events will not be printed. ADVER TISING POLICY The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. reserves the right to accept or decline any advertisement at its discretion.
O PINIONS THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
Paved with good intentions
Free Taiwan BY PETER CHAI GUEST COLUMNIST
Imagine if, when you went to represent your country in the Olympics in 2008, your country did not exist. Imagine if you were watching a televised meeting of the United Nations and there was no American representative. Imagine for a moment that one day you were no longer American, because there was no such thing as the United States. This is the reality of the people of Taiwan, a small island nation just off the coast of China. We are 23 million citizens living in a country that the world doesn’t recognize. Today, Zhou Wenzhong, the Chinese ambassador to the United States, comes to Brown to represent a country that has fought for decades to force the world to forget Taiwan. Imagine that you are an Olympic Tae Kwan Do gold medalist. Imagine receiving your medal under the Olympic flag in 2004 to the Olympic anthem because your country isn’t recognized — you come from “nowhereland.” Imagine you are a citizen standing in line to vote in Taiwan’s first democratic elections in 1995, while Chinese missiles soar overhead. Imagine you are an emergency room physician in Taiwan in 2003 battling the emergence of SARS, but because your country is banned from the World Health Organization, you don’t realize the disease is airborne. Imagine you are a member of Taiwan’s presidential cabinet and send your children to school in Washington, D.C. — but to please China, the United States bans you from visiting your home and your children. Taiwan has lived under a shadow cast by China for decades. Since Taiwan’s loss of U.N. membership in 1971, China has repeatedly stated that Taiwan — a country with its own government, flag and standing army — is not an independent state. “Rogue province,” “necessary use of force” and “reunification” are the “peaceful” words the Chinese government uses to placate the world. Despite international pressure, Taiwan has sought to become a member of the international community. Taiwan acted as a first responder during the recent tsunami in Southeast Asia and has become an international power in manufacturing. Nonetheless, Taiwan remains neglected internationally. Even the United States, a proponent of Taiwan’s transition to democracy, refuses to resolutely support its key trading partner and important regional partner in promoting East Asian democracy. When you hear the Chinese ambassador speak, think about the hypocrisy of his words when he talks about China “becoming a greater international friend.” Don’t forget Tibet, which suffers under Chinese occupation, and the persecutions of the Falun Gong in China. Don’t forget Taiwan. Today, at 4 p.m. in Salomon 101, take the chance to speak up to the Chinese ambassador. In his native country, people do not have that chance. Peter Chai ’06 MD’10 is TaiwaneseAmerican.
PAGE 15
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
BEN BERNSTEIN
CAMPUS ISSUES COLUMNIST
I am worried that I have chosen the wrong concentration. My NCAA bracket is in shambles. Prospective employers don’t understand why my writing classes gave no grades. My current adviser stopped returning my e-mail requests for advice back in November. One of these problems is unfixable, but most of them will be addressed — at least broadly — over the next year by Brown’s newly appointed Task Force on Undergraduate Education. For those who, like me, deleted the campuswide e-mail about the task force after seeing that it promised no free pizza, I’ll sum it up. The task force will evaluate the current undergraduate academic experience and make recommendations to the Corporation and the faculty, who will then decide whether to enact its proposals. The task force was appointed by Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron and Provost David Kertzer ’69 P’95 P’98 as a way to re-evaluate Brown’s curriculum for the reaccreditation report for the New England Association of Schools and Colleges. According to The Herald, Bergeron has told members of the Undergraduate Council of Students to expect comprehensive change (“New task force will review College,” March 1) and Bergeron told me that fundamental changes were indeed possible. Though the Task Force on Undergraduate Education has noble goals, for its recommendations to be legitimate it needs to achieve widespread participation from students and faculty. In order “to engage a broad spectrum of Brown students, faculty, staff and alumni in an open and vigorous discussion about our curriculum and its future,” as stated in the original letter announcing the committee, the task force must increase the ratio of students to faculty on the committee, add an alumni representative and
hold a student referendum after its recommendations have been made. The committee currently consists of three students and 10 faculty members, two of whom are also administrators. I turned for help to a friend who is a math concentrator, and he told that’s a 10-to-3 ratio of faculty to students. Student voices on the committee are being marginalized. In an interview, Bergeron explained the reasoning behind the low ratio of students to faculty on the committee. She explained that studies have shown that eight is the ideal number of people for a small group discussion, but that extra spots were added in order to include faculty members from a wider range of departments and with a wide variety of experiences. Bergeron is absolutely correct that small groups and a diversity of experience are important when selecting faculty for the committee, and these criteria are important for selecting students as well. We have very passionate students on the committee, but their passion will not be enough to provide the necessary range of undergraduate experience for authentic student representation. And three students, no matter how passionate, may have a hard time being heard on a committee with 10 older and more experienced voices fighting for their own ideas. I spoke with Jason Becker ’09, one of the three students on the committee. Becker spoke articulately about his feelings on Brown’s curriculum and specifically the advising program, which he calls “a major concern.” Another concern he expressed was to what extent the student’s opinions will be heard and incorporated. For Becker, “how large the student role will be” is more important than the number of students on the committee, but numbers may matter in establishing that role. As a former student who could reflect on how the Brown experience affected his postcollege life, an alumni representative would also bring valuable information to the committee that current faculty and students cannot
provide. Moreover, there is an economic incentive to incorporate alums more directly in the discussion, as they are major financial backers of the University and have a major stake in any changes that are made here. Officials should appoint an active alum to the task force who will be responsible for researching and representing alumni views on the curriculum. Finally, the task force should submit their recommendations to a student vote next spring. In a letter to the editor published in The Herald (“Student input on task force essential,” March 8), two students pointed out that a recent Herald poll showed only 46 percent student approval of UCS, which appointed the students on the task force. Regardless of how active these three students are in trying to represent their peers, anyone appointed by a body with less than majority support will not be seen as truly legitimate. But legitimacy is not the only reason a student referendum is necessary. The faculty not only has more representation on the committee, they also have the ability to reject any changes to the curriculum by faculty vote. Students, past and present, have just as much at stake in curricular changes as the faculty and should thus have the same ability to accept or reject the changes that are recommended. A student vote is vital to the legitimacy of the committee and any changes it could recommend. Bergeron and Kertzer should be applauded for re-evaluating our curriculum and advising program. Bergeron made it clear to me that she values the open curriculum, showing that what makes our University strong will not be put in question by this committee, while genuine concerns could be addressed. However, without a task force that is both broadly supported and justly constructed, the attempt to makeover Brown’s academic experience will be a flawed process.
Ben Bernstein ‘09 believes that the University will thank him for this one day, when it’s older.
China: Funding genocide in Darfur SCOTT WARREN, MAX SCHOENING AND ELIZA SWEREN-BECKER GUEST COLUMNISTS Last month marked the four-year anniversary of the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today — the genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan. The international community has been consistently strong on rhetoric — continually calling for action to protect the innocent Darfurians and rebuking Sudanese leaders for their violent campaign. Yet the bitter fact remains that the situation on the ground has remained almost completely unchanged since the atrocities began. An under-funded, under-manned African Union peacekeeping force fails to adequately protect the people of Darfur, as thousands continue to die each month. Tragically, Darfur is close to representing another failed commitment of the international community to “never again” tolerate genocide. Though the United States could do more to end the genocide — including imposing federal sanctions and funding peacekeepers — one nation has emerged as the most influential actor allowing the continued mass slaughter of innocent civilians in Darfur: China. As China’s ambassador to the United States, Zhou Wenzhong, visits Brown today to give a lecture on China’s foreign policy of “peaceful development,” we must recognize the indisputable fact that China has actively facilitated the genocidal government of Sudan’s killing regime in Darfur. China is complicit in the genocide in Darfur. Sudan is home to vast oil fields, and one of the cruel ironies of the last four years is that Sudan’s GDP has actually risen during the course of the genocide. Much of this can be directly attributed to China’s growing interest in the region. Though other countries, including the United States, have prohibited domestic businesses from conducting operations in Sudan,
China has actually encouraged it. In fact, in the last 10 years, China has invested an estimated $10 billion in Sudan. Much of this is directed toward the oil industry — China buys more than two-thirds of Sudan’s oil exports, resulting in 9 percent of China’s total oil reserves. In order to build up its own economy, China has repeatedly ignored Sudan’s gross violations of international human rights. Through its economic policies, the Chinese government has indicated that economic interests are significantly more important than the lives of innocent Sudanese. Moreover, there is a direct link between the burgeoning oil profits in Sudan and the genocide occurring in Darfur. An estimated 60 to 80 percent of oil revenues are funneled directly toward the Sudanese military — the same military currently helping to perpetrate the atrocities. By utilizing Sudan’s oil reserves, China provides the government of Sudan with the funding it needs to conduct its expensive genocide. Zhou, when confronted with this information in 2005, simply replied: “Business is business … I think the situation in the Sudan is an internal affair.” Would a country have dared to utter those same words when doing business with Hitler during the Holocaust? There is no possible way that the government of Sudan could afford to carry out its genocidal practices without the economic support of China. Thankfully, the University and the city of Providence recently recognized business is not business when it comes to Darfur by divesting from companies helping to facilitate genocide, including the Chinese companies PetroChina and Sinopec. Along with significant economic support, China has provided political leverage, allowing Sudan to refuse any attempts by the international community to deploy U.N. peacekeepers to the region. In August 2006, China abstained from U.N. Security Council Resolution 1706, a resolution requiring the United Nations to deploy peacekeepers to Darfur. This abstention demonstrates China’s unwillingness to provide
protection to people for Darfur, compromising international support for the critically needed operation in Darfur. In early February, as the international community continued to call for strong action to end the genocide, China’s leader, Hu Jintao, visited Sudan. Instead of criticizing Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for his handling of Darfur, Hu provided Sudan with an interest-free loan to build a presidential palace. Hu also forgave Sudan’s debt to China and promised that the two countries would continue to build a fruitful, mutually beneficial relationship. China, instead of punishing Sudan for its genocide in Darfur, has actually rewarded it. As China’s economy continues to grow and the country aims to become a superpower, the 2008 Beijing Olympics present an opportunity for China’s post-T post-Tiananmen Square coming-out party. While China looks to utilize the premier international event to showcase its massive and recent growth, the international community must denounce China for its explicit violation of the international solidarity and spirit that are intrinsic to the Olympics. While China’s announced slogan for the 2008 Games is “One World, One Dream,” it is clear that China does not feel the people of Darfur fit into that dream. The Darfur Action Network plans on hosting a rally outside of the speech today to educate the public on the link between China and Darfur. We appreciate the University’s efforts to bring diverse speakers to campus, and welcome the opportunity to hear Zhou’s views on Chinese foreign policy. Still, we urge the ambassador to address the situation in Darfur and explain why China has not only complacently watched the unfolding of genocide but has also actively facilitated the most egregious crime against humanity. Scott Warren ’09, Max Schoening ’09 and Eliza Sweren-Becker ’09 are members of the Darfur Action Network
S PORTS T HURSDAY THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2007
PAGE 16
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Leading team in batting, Eno ’08 makes ‘The Cut’ BY STU WOO
FEATURES EDITOR J.J. Eno’s ’08 teammates like to call him “The Cut.” Not because of the buzzed haircut he likes to hide beneath his baseball cap. Not because of the cut physique he spends hours a day honing in the gym. And definitely not because he was cut from the baseball team as a freshman trying to walk onto the squad. “It’s because when we play (intramural) flag football, I’m known as being shifty,” Eno said. Now, after walking onto the team as a sophomore last year, Eno might be known for another cut of his: his smooth and balanced left-handed swing. After batting .207 in limited action last year, Eno is now leading the team
Spoiler Alert: 2007 MLB results, Part II Last week, I let you all know that the New York Yankees are the best team in the American League. Who will they face in the 2007 World Series? Here’s how the National League Ellis Rochelson will play out Ellis’ MLB Exclusive and who will triumph in October. NL East: Phillies power their way to the top Philadelphia hasn’t won the division since 1993, when Lenny Dykstra and a 26-year-old Curt Schilling led the team to 97 wins. They’ll reclaim that glory in 2007, thanks to the team’s versatile lineup and exciting pitching staff. The offense is led by the best infield in baseball — 1B Ryan Howard, 2B Chase Utley and SS Jimmy Rollins are all top players at their positions, and Howard and Utley are just starting their careers. In 2006 the Phils led the NL in runs scored per game with 5.34, but their lackluster pitching staff surrendered an ugly 5.01 runs per game. The rotation will be significantly improved in 2007, no longer wasting the ample offense provided for them. In the second half of 2006, 23-year-old LHP Cole Hamels had a 3.39 ERA and a ridiculous 101 strikeouts in 88 innings. Look for Hamels, the Phils’ first-round pick in 2002, to be the staff ace by midseason. With support from newcomer Freddy Garcia and control-freak Jon Lieber — whose 1.29 BB/9 innings in 2006 was the lowest in the NL — the Phils are set to win 90-plus games. The wildcard will go to the Mets, who won the division in 2006. While they have a powerful offense, they’ll struggle to overcome a serious lack of pitchcontinued on page 12
Sheehy ’07 defeats long odds to complete stellar fencing career
with a .368 average after seven games this season. His recent success isn’t a surprise to Head Coach Marek Drabinksi, who praised Eno for his work ethic. He said the individual work Eno put in during the offseason is paying off. “Here’s a kid who’s a neuroscience major, and I can’t remember the last time he’s missed a practice or a weightlifting session,” Drabinski said. “And if he did, you wouldn’t have to worry about him because you know he’d make it up. That’s just the kind of kid he is.” Eno is quick to deflect praise about his success at the plate, saying, “It’s not a big deal.” But he does credit his improved bat-
BY ANDREW BRACA S PORTS S TAFF WRITER
continued on page 13
Snow secures title for equestrian team The equestrian team had the weekend snowstorm to thank for its Zone 1, Region 1 championship. Due to weather conditions on Saturday, the Bears’ seasonending show at Johnson & Wales University’s barn in Rehoboth, Mass., was canceled, and the Bears’ 30-point lead in the Region 1 standings secured them the title. Brown finished with 322 points, ahead of the University of Connecticut, which had 292 points. Roger Williams University and the University of Rhode Island both finished with 260 points, and Connecticut College had 218 points to round out the top five Region 1 schools. On March 31, several Bears will compete at Regionals, which will be held at the Mystic Valley Hunt Club in Glades Ferry, Conn., and will probably feature a ride-off between Whitney Keefe ’08 and URI’s Amanda Tustian for Region 1 Open Level Rider. Keefe will be joined at the competition by teammates Marissa Geoffroy ’07, Grace Peloquin ’07, Jessica Mendelson ’08, Kimberly Mickenberg ’07, Rachel Lubin ’07, Katie Goetz ’08, Courtney Pope ’07, Emily Cole continued on page 12
Jacob Melrose / Herald File Photo
John Sheehy ’07 ffenced his last collegiate bout at the IFA championships on March 3.
Burke ’09 shines as m. lax goalie BY MARCO SANTINI S PORTS S TAFF WRITER
Last weekend, Jordan Burke ’09 made 16 saves for the men’s lacrosse team (4-1), guiding them to a win over the University of Massachusetts, the second-best team in the country just a season ago. The Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship concentrator from Maryland took over the starting role in goal this season, and despite giving up 12 goals in his first start, the Bears have won four games in a row, with their first Ivy League match-up this weekend at Dartmouth. Herald: How did you feel going into your first game as a starter against UMBC? Burke: I was pretty nervous going into the first game. The entire game happened really fast. I ended up with 18 saves, which is the most I’ve had this year, but I also gave up 12 goals. I got a little rattled, and I learned to calm down. I had to play my best, and if I let in a goal, I had to bounce back. They just had a lot of shots and won in OT, 12-11.
Jacob Melrose / Herald File Photo
After the equestrian team’s win by default on Saturday, Marissa Geoffroy ’07 will compete in the open flat at Regionals on March 31.
Do you consider yourself an aggressive goalie? I’m not too aggressive. When there is a chance to come out of the cage, I won’t hesitate to do so, but my main priority is to stop the ball. I’m not really expected to make a play outside of the cage.
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK What kind of protection do goalies wear? We wear a helmet, chest protector and gloves. I don’t wear any arm pads. Besides a cup, I don’t wear anything else below the waist. Does it hurt to get hit with the lacrosse balls? It doesn’t hurt anymore. I’m numb to that kind of pain now. I started playing lacrosse as a sixth-grader in Maryland. All my friends had played. One of my good friends now plays at Duke, Tom Clute. My middle school team didn’t have a goalie, and they needed someone to step in, so Tom convinced me to play goalie. I had never played lacrosse, but I didn’t really know any better. Did it hurt getting hit with lacrosse balls back then? I didn’t like getting hit. The legs are the worst. Getting hit in the quad always left a huge bruise. I could handle being hit almost anywhere else.
When John Sheehy ’07 fenced his last bout for Brown, there was no grand finale. When he ended his fourth and final season as a Bears epeeist with an 11th-place finish in the C pool at the Intercollegiate Fencing Association Championships, there was no celebration befitting the end of a career. But to Sheehy, fencing goes beyond tournament results. When Sheehy was 13, he injured his neck while diving off a dock. Due to a spinal cord injury at the C4 level, Sheehy now walks with a limp and has limited control of his left hand. Despite the odds, Sheehy joined the Brown fencing team as a walkon during his freshman year. He has fenced for the team ever since and became an integral member of the team along the way. After finishing the IFA Championships last month, Sheehy’s fencing career has come to a close. There was no brass band to accompany his exit, but the lack of fanfare did not matter to Sheehy. “Fencing isn’t really a sport where there’s an opportunity for that to be recognized,” he said. “You fence your last bout, and it just happens to be the last one you fence because you’re not qualifying to the next level. So, you’re done, you’re continued on page 11
Spring season brings more than just flowers Is it the sports world that revolves around the seasons, or vice versa? It is a tough call to make, because every March, much of the country seems to break out of its wintry slumber and prepares for spring, arguably the most exciting of sports Chris Mahr seasons. Rogers Mahrtian Encounters Hornsby used to say that he’d spend his winters staring out the window waiting for spring, and I find myself cut from the same cloth. The winter months are all about meaningless regular season games, but spring offers a colorful array of exciting playoff games, each of which captures the country’s imagination at one point or another. Most obvious is March Madness, to which my Herald colleagues and I have paid great attention. But aside from all those “One Shining Moments” we are sure to see in the next two weeks, here are some other things to look forward to in springtime.
What was the worst injury you ever had from standing in front of a shot? During my freshman year in high school, I got hit in the
Baseball season No other sport symbolizes rebirth and renewed hope as much as baseball, especially in this day and age when the sport is more competitive than ever. What was once a sport
continued on page 11
continued on page 13