THE BROWN DAILY HERALD WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2006
Volume CXLI, No. 43
www.browndailyherald.com
An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891 SHORT BUT SWEET This weekend’s Ivy Film Festival showcases several Sundance pictures and 36 student-produced shorts ARTS & CULTURE 5
ALL THE NEWS U.’S SEE FIT TO PRINT ? The Supreme Court refused to hear a case concerning universities censoring school-funded student newspapers CAMPUS WATCH 3
UNDERGRAD UPRISING Jill McCormack ’06 calls for undergraduates to help save the Brown Bookstore from being outsourced OPINIONS 11
TODAY
TOMORROW
wintry mix 47 / 33
cloudy/windy 51 / 37
Online ticket system spells end of Main Green campouts BY SARA WALTER STAFF WRITER
Courtesy of Chioke Harris
Almost 80 percent of New Orleans suffered severe storm damage, including this car near the 17th Street Canal.
New Orleans: seven months later BY ROSS FRAZIER SENIOR STAFF WRITER
NEW ORLEANS — More than 80 Brown students, traveling either in student groups or independently, joined hundreds of others here for their spring breaks, helping to rebuild a city that is still struggling to return to some sense of normalcy more than seven months after Hurricane Katrina. Residents and visitors alike here complain about the media’s coverage of the storm. They charge that the media extensively covers New Orleans’ Lower Ninth Ward, which was the most heavily damaged area during the storm, but neglects other neighborhoods that, though having a greater chance of recovering, were also significantly flooded. The Lower Ninth Ward does indeed make for great TV footage — the area is like a ghost town. Every house is significantly damaged, many are destroyed and quite a few were washed completely off their foundations. Images of the primarily poor, black population of the Ninth Ward, contrasted with those of
the undamaged mansions of the Garden District, present a sobering picture of racial and socioeconomic inequity. But several residents were quick to point out that 80 percent of New Orleans was flooded. Large sections of the city have a “bathtub ring” that indicates how high floodwaters rose, and trash and debris abound. Residents said if the media showed more images of New Orleans East, a heavily damaged upper-middle class black suburb, or of the Lakeview neighborhood, a mixed-race, mixed-class area that was flooded when the levees broke, people would share their view that, as several residents and volunteers put it, Katrina was “an equal-opportunity storm.” Kevin Lander, a Tulane University student, told an audience at a March 27 panel of students and residents affected by Katrina that misperceptions about New Orleans’ condition are particularly problematic because of the potential electoral effects. A mayoral election is scheduled for
The fabulous life of Brown professors? How tuition breaks, airline tickets and research money stack up BY SIMMI AUJLA SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Transatlantic flights can clock in at a pricey $1,400 round-trip, but the University will foot the bill the next FEATURE time Professor of History Tim Harris travels to England for academic research or a speech at the University of Cambridge. Harris, who specializes in 16th- and 17th-century British history and has published several books on the period, said the Faculty Travel Fund provides professors with one trip a year for academic or professional purposes. The Office of the see PERKS, page 9 Editorial: 401.351.3372 Business: 401.351.3260
see NEW ORLEANS, page 8
It is not for lack of tickets that Ray Serrano ’07 won’t be attending Saturday’s lecture by Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y. Rather, following the implementation of a new online ticket distribution system, Serrano said he feels deprived of a “great bonding experience” — camping out on the Main Green like he did last year to see former President Bill Clinton. “I was disappointed when I saw that it was online ticketing and not camping out again,” Serrano said. “If I thought we were going to have to wait for tickets, I probably would have done it again.” A new online system — accessible through a ticket reservation Web site — was developed by a team including members from Computing and Information Services and the Office of Public Affairs and University Relations, said Cynthia Schwartz, director of University events.
The new method was put in place to prevent a repeat of the long lines — which included tents pitched on the Main Green — prior to the distribution of tickets to Bill Clinton’s lecture last year, said Michael Chapman, vice president for public affairs and University relations. “Last year when President Clinton came here, we handed out tickets in sort of the old-fashioned way,” Chapman said. “There were some frustrations about that ticket distribution system.” Following the Bill Clinton lecture, the Office of the President asked the public affairs office to explore more efficient ways to distribute tickets to large events on campus, Chapman said. Schwartz and her staff wanted to develop a way of reserving tickets online, an idea that led them to work with members of the Office of Web Communications and CIS, Chapman added. see TICKETING, page 7
Paper course bulletin will eventually become obsolete, registrar says BY SIMMI AUJLA SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Although Course Announcement Bulletins have been printed and were distributed this week, the CAB’s days are numbered. “Both the course announcement and the University catalog will eventually disappear in the present state,” said University Registrar Michael Pesta in reference to the CAB and the University Bulletin, which provides a more extensive listing of offered courses and is printed every three years. The implementation of Banner, a comprehensive program that will replace systems and databases used for admissions, financial aid and course registration, will eliminate the need for both the
Next provost to be hired internally
CAB and the Brown Online Course Announcement, since students will register for courses directly from Banner’s online catalog, Pesta explained. Still, printing some form of the CAB for the next few years will help the University make a smooth transition from paper to online technology, Pesta said. “I don’t necessarily want to make too many changes at the same time,” he said. “Even though paper technology is aging, I think there are good reasons to keep it to help support people as they become accustomed to the new system.” He suggested printing a shorter summary of courses once Banner is implemented. Pesta said he hopes students will be able to register for courses online in April see CAB, page 7
TASTY PI
Decision on bookstore will likely be made before summer, Huidekoper says BY ERIC BECK NEWS EDITOR
The University’s next provost will come from within Brown, President Ruth Simmons told the faculty at its monthly meeting Tuesday. In order to provide for administrative continuity and ensure the University maintains momentum, Simmons said she intends to appoint a new provost by the end of June, when Provost Robert Zimmer will leave Brown to become president of the University of Chicago. Such a quick search only allows for serious consideration of internal candidates. Simmons said though some professors have encouraged her to consider bringing an outsider to the University as provost, she does not intend to conduct a lengthy national search. Simmons said she has been accepting nominations and consulting with department chairs, multidisciplinary center directors, senior administrators and mem-
bers of the Brown Corporation to identify current Brown professors who are wellsuited for the post. Simmons also updated the faculty on the other current searches to fill senior administrative posts. Both the dean of the college and the vice president for research posts will be vacated this summer. The dean of the college search committee has been accepting nominations for a search that will be primarily internal but will also consider candidates from outside the University, Simmons said. The search committee for a new vice president for research has completed its work and submitted its recommendation, Simmons said, adding that she will act on the recommendation “in the very near future” and expects to announce the new appointment by the end of the month. In other business, Executive Vice Pressee FACULTY MTG, page 6
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
Kam Sripada / Herald
The Department of the History of Mathematics held its annual “Cuneiform Cuisine” dinner Monday at the Annmary Brown Memorial. It featured food prepared from ancient recipe tablets.
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