THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 2006
Volume CXLI, No. 26 BATHROOM READING A new sound installation in List Art Center features readings of graffiti from campus bathrooms ARTS & CULTURE 3
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An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891 NO ROOM FOR THE LITTLE GUY Via Via IV, in the shadow of the LiSci, says business is down due to ongoing construction CAMPUS NEWS 5
HOUSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM Michael Ramos-Lynch ’09 argues that childhood obesity in Houston can’t be solved by limiting food options OPINIONS 11
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Committee: Bookstore should be outsourced BY ERIC BECK NEWS EDITOR
The Bookstore Review Committee issued a report today that recommends outsourcing the operation of the Brown Bookstore to an external vendor such as Barnes and Noble. The committee found “considerable potential … to improve product offerings, service, aesthetics and layout in the store to make it a more comfortable, academic and welcoming destination,” according to the report. The report focuses on two main operating models for the University. First, the University could continue to operate the bookstore independently, funding substantial investments and implementing significant improvements. Second, an external vendor specializing in university bookstores could be contracted to operate the bookstore. “Contracting with a vendor was preferred by the majority of the committee, as it offers the most potential to provide expertise, resources, systems and capital to upgrade the bookstore, as well as the capacity to stay current with changes in the college merchandise and text- and trade-book markets in the future,” according to the report. Elizabeth Huidekoper, executive vice president for finance and administration and chair of the bookstore committee, told The Herald the report is not a conclusive decision on the future of the bookstore. Members of the committee will meet this month with campus constituencies such as the Faculty Executive Committee, Undergraduate Council of Students, Graduate Student Council and Staff Advisory Committee and hold campus-wide forums to solicit feedback.
The committee will then address concerns raised during the campus vetting process and issue a final recommendation to President Ruth Simmons and her cabinet, which comprises about a dozen top University administrators. Simmons and her cabinet are expected to make a final decision in April or May. Even though Huidekoper said a more thorough examination of both outsourc-
ing and self-operation is needed before a final decision is made, the report focuses almost entirely on the outsourcing model — management by an external vendor is described in five pages, while only three paragraphs address self-operation. Associate Professor of English Stesee BOOKSTORE, page 4
join Brown’s AOA. Boney said membership in AOA can strengthen a student’s residency application. She acknowledged an active chapter at Brown might hurt those students who placed in the top 25 percent but were not invited to join AOA. Certain residencies might immediately discard these students’ applications upon seesee AOA, page 6
see FORUM, page 7
Jacob Melrose / Herald
The University may outsource the bookstore to a vendor such as Barnes and Noble.
Medical School faculty and students engaged in contentious discussion last night about the re-activation of Brown’s chapter of a national medical school honors society. While faculty members in support of the chapter said it would recognize student achievement, students argued it might heighten academic competition. Last month, members of the Med School’s faculty and administration, headed by Dean of Medicine and Biological Sciences Eli Adashi, re-activated Brown’s chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha. The chapter has a controversial history at Brown: it was voted out by the first Med School class in 1975, and additional attempts to re-activate the chapter — the most recent of which came in 1999 — have failed. Associate Professor of Pediatrics Charlotte Boney, whom Adashi appointed as the faculty member in charge of Brown’s AOA chapter, spoke in favor of the chapter’s re-activation. She said AOA promotes and recognizes excellence, both in scholarship and in extracurricular involvement. “Students deserve recognition for achievements, whether they are scholarly, leadership or humanitarian,” Boney said. “All of us benefit when our peers succeed. We feel their infectious
enthusiasm for success.” Medical students in the top 25 percent of their class are eligible for AOA consideration. Eligibility also depends on extracurricular activities, such as research, campus leadership and community service. Students do not submit an application to AOA, but are rather given an invitation to join, which they can decline. Boney said about 17 percent of each class would receive invitations to
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BY CHLOE LUTTS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Participants in yesterday’s forum on the possible addition of pluses and minuses to Brown’s grading system discussed topics including grade inflation, an on-campus obsession with A’s, the New Curriculum and graduate schools’ perception of transcripts. The forum, which was sponsored by the Undergraduate Council of Students, was structured as a six-participant panel debate: two faculty members for and one against, and two students against and one for. Approximately 70 people, mostly students, attended and had the opportunity to ask questions of the panel. Each panelist was given the opportunity to make a five-minute opening statement, beginning with Dean of the College Paul Armstrong, chair of the College Curriculum Council. Armstrong advocated the addition of pluses and minuses to eliminate what he termed “compression at the top.” A’s have become “meaningless” grades because they make up 62 percent of letter grades, he argued. At the same time, he said, getting an A “means everything to students” because they have become the “only acceptable” grade. He believes adding pluses and minuses would alleviate some of the pressure to get A’s. Armstrong said adding pluses and minuses would not “violate the spirit of the New Curriculum,” as some critics have asserted. Calling himself a “passionate advocate” of the New Curriculum, Armstrong argued that compression at the top has “subverted the New Curriculum (by) jeopardizing values.” Students try to “game the system” to avoid getting B’s, which he believes they wouldn’t do to avoid B-pluses. He accused students of using provisions of the New Curriculum designed to encourage risktaking to avoid getting B’s, offering anecdotal evidence of students attempting to fail courses. Students do this so a course does not show up on their transcript, and they can avoid receiving a B, he said. The “original intent” of the New Curriculum was to reduce pressure to earn perfect grades, and
Possible Med School honors society sparks student outcry BY REBECCA JACOBSON SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Students and faculty debate pros/ cons of pluses and minuses at forum
Sen. Reed, leading voice on Iraq war, to speak tonight BY BEN LEUBSDORF METRO EDITOR
When Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., talks about Iraq, people listen. He made his seventh trip to Iraq in January, visiting troops in Tal Afar, a city near the Syrian border that was re-taken from insurgents by American and Iraqi forces in mid-2005. Also a four-time visitor to Afghanistan, Reed has emerged as the leading Democratic voice in the Senate on progress in Iraq. This evening, he will deliver the Stephen Ogden ’60 Memorial Lecture on International Affairs in List 120, at 6 p.m. His lecture, titled “President Bush and the Long War: Are Slogans Enough?” will address Iraq, Iran and
President George W. Bush’s strategy for fighting global terror, he said. “I think there’s been progress (in Iraq), but it’s very fragile and it could be reversed,” Reed told The Herald in a Feb. 17 interview. “On the military side we have established territorial control. There are no longer insurgent enclaves like Falluja and Tal Afar. But the insurgency is very adaptable and they are exploiting the political divisions and economic troubles” in Iraq. Reed said Iraq needs “a government, not just a leadership,” and though the December elections were an important step forward, working ministries that can provide services to the general population are a necessary next step. “I think it’s going to take many, many months,” he said.
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Reed said he will discuss these and other topics, including “the extent that the focus on Iraq and the huge resources in Iraq have constrained our flexibility when dealing with Iran,” in his speech. Reed grew up in Cranston and graduated from the
reed.senate.gov
Sen. Jack Reed will give the Stephen Ogden ’60 Memorial Lecture on International Affairs in List 120 at 6 p.m. tonight.
see REED, page 4 News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com