THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2006
Volume CXLI, No. 31
SOCIAL SURGERY Courtney Jenkins ’07: “Grey’s Anatomy” is the great uniter, giving Brown students something to bond over besides classes OPINIONS 11
DROP IT LIKE IT’S HOT Administrators discuss whether many students choose to drop courses late in the semester instead of getting a B CAMPUS NEWS 5
Provost Zimmer to be offered top spot at UChicago BY ANNE WOOTTON METRO EDITOR
The University of Chicago’s Board of Trustees will act in a special meeting today regarding the election of Provost Robert Zimmer as the 13th president of the university, according to a campuswide e-mail sent by President Ruth Simmons Thursday morning. If elected, Zimmer will succeed current UChicago President Don Randel on July 1, 2006. Randel announced his departure from UChicago last fall and will become president of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation this summer. If elected, Zimmer will be the fourth consecutive president of UChicago who was former provost from another university. UChicago’s last three presidents were formerly provosts at Yale, Princeton and Cornell, according to Larry Arbeiter, director of communications for the university. “One great advantage is that he has two really important kinds of experience, as provost at a top university, Brown … and he spent most of his academic career here (at UChicago),” Arbeiter said. “We have an intense academic culture that we’re proud of, and he’s very familiar with that.” Arbeiter added that Zimmer’s name came up frequently in conversations on campus while a search committee worked to replace Randel.
“People who I’ve spoken to are quite excited about it, very pleased — (Zimmer’s) name is one that has been mentioned for some time,” Arbeiter said. “People have leading candidates; I think it’s clear he was a leadwww.brown.edu ing candidate Provost Robert Zimmer here for some time.” In her e-mail, Simmons highlighted the integral role Zimmer has played in the development and implementation of the Plan for Academic Enrichment. “Under his leadership and guidance, we have expanded the faculty and� strengthened our multidisciplinary programs through initiatives,” Simmons wrote, citing the Environmental Change Initiative, the Center for Computational� Molecular Biology and the Cogut Center for the Humanities. Zimmer has also been a strong supporter of University partnerships with see ZIMMER, page 4
HEY FOR HAYES ’06 Sarah Hayes ’06 was named Ivy League Player of the Year, the first w. hoops player to win that award since 1994 SPORTS 12
Mere mention of the housing lottery is enough to instill fear in the hearts of most students this time of year. The possible disappointment, looming uncerand dreaded waitlist FEATURE tainty inspire palpable tension throughout the month of March. But the winners of Residential Life’s first pick competition — Michael Kadin ’08, Graham Browne ’08, Jonathan Thompson ’08, Jose Hernandez ’08 and four of their
friends — couldn’t be more excited. Kadin and Hernandez are familiar with the competition. They finished in second place last year, narrowly losing out on the coveted first pick by twelve votes. “When we found out we got second place we decided that the next time around we would do whatever it takes to win,” Kadin said. “We didn’t have a set idea in mind, but we were planning for a year in advance.” This year the pair joined friends to submit a music video spoof of “Trapped
‘HAIR’ PIECE
Meghan Boudreau / Herald
The revival of the musical “Hair,” directed by Christopher Bayes, highlights the ARTS & CULTURE 3 contemporary themes of its 1960s subject matter.
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U.-wide plus/minus forum advances debate for the few in attendance BY ROSS FRAZIER SENIOR STAFF WRITER
The merits of adding pluses and minuses to undergraduates’ grades were debated in a sparsely attended University-wide forum that turned contentious, revealing the passions aroused by the issue. Panelists and audience members noted the disappointing turnout — 19 students and nine faculty attended Thursday’s two-hour discussion in Salomon 101. Each of the eight panelists spoke for several minutes and then responded to questions and comments from audience members. Those who spoke against the proposal, including College Curriculum Council member Shyam Sundaram ’08, Professor of Biology and Senior Adviser to the Dean Jonathan Waage and Associate Professor of Sociology Ann Dill, all said while they are in favor of changing the grading system to better reflect students’ progress, they do not believe the addition of pluses and minuses would achieve that goal. “I’m in favor of changing the system, but not in the way it has been proposed. I would only favor a change if it represented actual compromise between faculty and students, and that is not what this is,” Sundaram said. Tristan Freeman ’07, chair of the Undergraduate Council of Students’ Academic and Administrative Affairs Committe, spoke against claims by Lecturer
R. Kelly spoof wins first pick in the housing lottery BY ALISSA CERNY STAFF WRITER
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in the Closet” by R. Kelly, with revised lyrics by Kadin, a member of the Higher Keys, a coed a cappella group. Browne said he was struck with the winning idea while walking home over President’s Day weekend. “I was listening to my iPod on random shuffle, when ‘Trapped in the Closet’ came on. I sent Mike a text (message) right then saying that we had to do a parody where our room was a closet,” Browne said. Kadin still has the text from Browne that inspired their entry. It reads: “I have the perfect idea for the video…parody on ‘Trapped in the Closet’ called ‘My room is a closet’...start writing.” Though the submission was later titled “Trapped in a Triple,” the winning idea was born. The video begins with Browne hearing the news of their second-place finish last spring. Browne, Thompson and Hernandez walk around campus while discussing the nervous anticipation of the housing lottery: “Hop up and go to ResLife and fill all the pages. Adding and subtracting guys for all the lottery’s phases. Pray each night hoping for a good number. Jose’s nervous, calls up his girlfriend and dumps her.” In the video, the group ends up with the last pick for the lottery’s first phase after Browne’s cell phone rings in class, offending a teacher with connections to ResLife. The song ends with the lyrics, “I feel like a cripple — all I got is a triple. JT faints, while Jose and I is tripping. We’re living in a triple — Might as well have lived in the closet.” see HOUSING, page 7
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in Education Luther Spoehr and others who say the current policy allows students to “game the system” by modifying their level of effort in response to how they think they will perform in a particular course. “Brown students aren’t doing well here because they’re in high-stakes games of chess with their professors,” Freeman said. “They’re doing well because they are extremely bright. The evidence of any gamesmanship is anecdotal at best.” “We really don’t have any quantitative information on what percentage of students actually game the system,” Waage said. “If students are going to game a three-letter system, what make us think they’re not going to game a sixletter system as well?” Associate Professor of Philosophy Bernard Reginster listed arguments in favor of the proposal, saying that with so few students receiving C’s, the current system is effectively the same as S/ NC. Though she argued that greater distinction is needed in grading, Dill questioned whether adding pluses and minuses effectively informs students of their progress. “Perhaps we should use numerical grading going out to three or four decimal places,” she said facetiously. “My son is in such a university and he got pi as a GPA. We’re not sure what it see FORUM, page 6
Divestment timeline still unclear BY MARY-CATHERINE LADER FEATURES EDITOR
Though the Corporation unanimously voted to divest from Sudan two weeks ago, a list of companies with ties to the Sudanese government has yet to be determined. Until this list is approved by the Corporation’s Advisory and Executive Committee, Brown cannot divest funds or notify the University’s external managers of the policy. The University will divest from companies that “meet the criteria for supporting and facilitating the Sudanese government in its continuing sponsorship of genocidal actions and human rights violations in Darfur,” according to a Feb. 25 e-mail sent to the Brown community from President Ruth Simmons. A partial list could come before the committee as soon as its meeting next Friday. But no deadlines have been set, and thorough research on these companies remains the priority, according to Executive Vice President for Finance and Administration Elizabeth Huidekoper. Still, divesting is an urgent issue, said Huidekoper, who is facilitating the divestment effort. “We really want to do this as soon as possible,” Huidekoper, who is facilitating the divestment effort, said. Once the Corporation approves a list of companies, the Investment Office will divest from any whose stock the Universee DIVESTMENT, page 4 News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com