Thursday, October 17, 2002

Page 1

T H U R S D A Y OCTOBER 17, 2002

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD Volume CXXXVII, No. 93

An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891

Smeal kicks off ‘Never Go Back’ campaign for women’s rights

U.will decide on pluses, minuses by semester’s end

BY OLIVER BOWERS

Women’s rights are in greater jeopardy now than they have been in 30 years, said Eleanor Smeal, president of the Feminist Majority Foundation, in a Wednesday presentation that kicked off the Never Go Back campaign for reproductive rights in Rhode Island. Never Go Back aims to defend the female right to abortion against the growing threat by a potentially antagonistic Supreme Court, Smeal said. “Right now, we are in the longest period of no appointment in a hundred years,” Smeal said, speaking to the potential appointment of a justice who could overturn the Supreme Court’s tenuous support of abortion rights. Five justices now support the Roe v. Wade ruling, and four oppose it. “The nation will likely (see new appointments) in January or at the latest June,” she said. According to Smeal, the primary strategy of Never Go Back is to petition the Democratic Senate to filibuster all attempts by President George Bush to appoint pro-life justices to the Supreme Court. “We are not going to get a majority,” Smeal said, calling the filibuster a necessary last ditch effort given the potential precariousness of the situation. “Some people think it’s impolite to filibuster. But I say we’re fighting for young women’s lives.” For decades, Smeal, a renowned women’s activist, grassroots organizer and strategist, worked to win women’s rights legislation for a litany of causes. She spearheaded battles for women’s rights in the state, national and international arenas, from challenging the oppression of women under Afghanistan’s Taliban to opposing the appointment of past Supreme Court justices. In her address, Smeal spoke out passionately against the Bush administration and what she termed the “right wing drift of our nation.” “Fight now” Smeal urged, scanning her eyes across the audience. “If we lose Roe v. Wade, we’re not going to get it back in your generation … (and again) we’ll have back alley abortions and young women dying.” Since the landmark Roe v. Wade decision, Smeal said, right wing forces have steadily chipped away at women’s freedoms, she said. Bush “hasn’t appointed any Supreme Court justices, but we’ve seen his appointments in the lower courts. If these people become the core of our judicial system, the entire structure (will erode)” she said. “How many of you are aware that 8 out of the 12 circuit courts have majority antiabortion support?” Conservative forces are also taking away the right of a woman to have an abortion outside of the United States, she said. Smeal cited a gag order reinstated by Bush to deny federal funds to any internasee SMEAL, page 11

The College Curriculum Council voted in a nearly split decision to put the grading system back on this year’s agenda BY AMY RUDDLE

Beth Farnstrom / Herald

Kyle Diggins, the Democratic candidate for Ward 1, made his pitch to students last night in Wilson Hall, at a meeting sponsored by the Brown College Democrats.

Seeking City Council, Diggins makes his pitch to students The Democratic candidate outlined his position on issues ranging from crime to corruption, calling the administration of former Mayor Vincent Cianci “an embarrassment” BY GEORGE HAWS

Kyle Diggins, the Ward One Democratic candidate for city council, outlined his position on crime, the minimum wage, corruption within city government, affordable housing and street parking at the College Democrats’ meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Wilson 101. “Lot’s of changes need to come about,” he said about the current East Side police presence. “There’s an answering machine in (the police station) and they check it every few days or so . . . Police are not doing what they should be doing.” Diggins addressed corruption in the administration of former Mayor Vincent Cianci. “It was an embarrassment. It showed everything that was wrong with (this) city government that can go wrong — the way deals were struck, the way people lied to the FBI . . . Not the message we want to send to children,” he said. He proposed an ethics contract that

every city employee would sign. After signing it “if you do lie to the police, you’re fired,” he said. Diggins told the crowd of Democrats that the East Side must have overnight parking. His Green Party opponent David Segal has also made parking reform one goal of his campaign. Segal’s proposed system would allow off-campus University students to purchase street parking passes. Diggins agreed, and said that reform should aim to improve convenience for parkers. “Parking problems have always been bad in the city and especially Ward One,” he said. Diggins said “it doesn’t make sense to have the people who need” overnight parking unable to get that privilege. Continuing, Diggins criticized absentee landlords who charged their renters exorbitant fees. “I would have no problem with rent control for the city of Providence,” he said. When asked what he thought set him apart from Segal, Diggins emphasized his status as a native resident of the Fox Point area. “I’ve lived in this neighborhood my whole life,” he said. “There’s been good change and there’s been bad change. I think that does set you apart a little bit from everybody.” Segal did not attend the meeting, but his campaign materials were displayed at the event.

I N S I D E T H U R S D AY, O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 0 2 Young America’s Foundation indicts 12 Brown classes for liberal bias page 3

www.browndailyherald.com

Even amid bombings, students stick with study abroad at Israel’s Hebrew University page 3

Only one student shows at forum to discuss new online course registration page 5

The College Curriculum Council is currently debating proposed changes to Brown’s grading system that could allow for pluses and minuses. The CCC is set to decide on the issue late this semester or early next semester, said Dean of the College Paul Armstrong. A recent survey found that 82 percent of faculty members favored the addition of pluses and minuses. The CCC’s decision to debate the issue is a reversal of last year’s closure of the topic. The CCC voted in a nearly split decision to put the issue back on this year’s agenda, Armstrong said. New members of the council wanted a chance to discuss the issue, Armstrong said. “I feel of two minds about this, and I think the CCC does as well,” Armstrong said. “As a faculty member ... I see a big difference between a B+ and a B-,” Armstrong said. The current system is not “conveying as much information as I would like it to when I give a final grade,” Armstrong added. Changes to the grading system were discussed last year at the Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning in response to concerns about grade inflation. When a committee from the center surveyed faculty from all fields of study last year, 60 percent indicated that they felt pressured to inflate grades. Of those surveyed, 82 percent favored the implementation of pluses and minuses to combat grade inflation. “Most faculty are in agreement that the grading system needs to be more fine-grained,” said Bernard Reginster, associate professor of philosophy and chair of last year’s survey committee. “There is grade inflation due to the lack of grading options available to professors. (Pluses and minuses) give professors more flexibility,” said Sean Yom ’03, a CCC representative. “Professors feel pressured to increase the curve,” Yom added. Professor of Education Luther Spoehr, a participant in discussions at the Sheridan Center last year, noted the presence of an “upward see GRADES, page 11

TO D AY ’ S F O R E C A S T Sarah Green ’04 suggests the benefits of war with Iraq aren’t worth the risks column, page 15

Women’s tennis reaches semifinals at annual ECAC tournament sports,page 16

partly cloudy high 62 low 44


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.