THE BROWN DAILY HERALD WEDNESDAY, J ANUAR Y 24, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 1
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
Simmons not in running for top job at Harvard
Friedman Study Center opens BY STEPHANIE BERNHARD FEATURES EDITOR
After two years of planning, the $4 million Susan and Richard A. Friedman Study Center is now open to students as a 24-hour study space. Located in the basement, lobby and mezzanine levels of the Sciences Library, the 27,000-square-foot center contains new, brightly colored furniture, a cafe and dozens of new computers. The SciLi basement — Level A — now houses over 65 computer workstations, a multimedia workstation area, two conference rooms, eight private group-study rooms featuring dr y-erase walls and an assistive technology room for the vision and hearing impaired. The center has also been outfitted with entirely new lighting
and furniture, some designed for “serious study” and some “nap-worthy,” according to Katherine Wolford, project director for Campus Life and Student Ser vices. The basement windows now look out onto several new gardens, some still under construction, on the librar y terrace, while the main SciLi reference and checkout ser vices, previously located in the lobby, are now on Level A. Though the floor structurally comprises one large, rectangular room, furniture and decorative barriers break it into several sections. Signs with decibel levels, ranging from zero to 50, denote how quiet students should be in a specific area. The revamped lobby contains the new Friedman Cafe,
BY ROSS FRAZIER NEWS EDITOR
him first, a move the veteran professor, who had taught at Brown since 1965, called “unfair” and “unjust.” “It’s inconceivable that they treated me this badly,” Erikson said. “It’s certainly not collegial, not hearing my side of the stor y … and wiping my course out.” Bergeron said in an e-mail to The Herald that Erikson’s classes were canceled because they lacked “proper departmental
President Ruth Simmons is not a serious candidate for the presidency of Har vard University, according to a Jan. 10 report in the Harvard Crimson, but her name continues to appear in media reports covering the school’s search for a new leader. Perhaps in response to those reports, Simmons bluntly indicated Tuesday that she will not be leaving for Har vard. “I feel extremely fortunate to do what I do at Brown. I can think of no better job. I am not a candidate for the Har vard presidency,” Simmons said in a statement to The Herald. In December 2006, Simmons was one of 30 potential candidates on a list that Har vard’s nine-member search committee gave to the school’s Board of Overseers, as reported by the Crimson and the New York Times. But since then, that list has been pared down and no longer includes any Ivy League presidents, according to reports leaked to the press over the past several weeks. Convincing someone to take what many consider the most prestigious job in higher education is not as easy as it sounds. Simmons gave her first explicit denial yesterday, and officials from Columbia, Princeton, Stanford, the University of Cambridge and the University of Pennsylvania, among others, have all said they would not accept Har vard’s presidency. Simmons, who earned her Ph.D. at Har vard, originally suggested to a group of parents at an Orientation event in September that she would not accept a position at the Cambridge, Mass., university. “I was just saying that I was ver y happy and satisfied to be at Brown and that I could think of no better job,” Simmons said in a September inter view with The Herald. “I think I even conceded
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Christopher Bennett / Herald
Former Senator Lincoln Chafee ‘75 in his office at the Watson Institute.
Chafee takes Watson post enjoyed most in my time at the Senate,” Chafee said. Chafee said he is looking forward to “the chance to do something different” from politics. After graduating from Brown in 1975 with a degree in classics, he worked as a farrier, a blacksmith who shoes horses, in Montana and Canada for several years before he returned to the Ocean State and was elected to the Warwick City Council in 1986. In 1992 he became mayor of Warwick, and in 1999 then-Gov. Lincoln Almond appointed Chafee to fill his father’s Senate seat after John Chafee passed away. Chafee won a full term in 2000, but he was defeated in his re-election bid by Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse in November. “It’s been a long stretch of being
BY SIMMI AUJLA METRO EDITOR
In October 2002, then-Sen. Lincoln Chafee ’75 of Rhode Island was the lone Senate Republican to vote against authorizing the invasion of Iraq. ““The last thing we want is unnecessary conflict,” he told The Herald on Monday. This semester, Chafee will lead an undergraduate study group at Brown centered on the same belief — that nations should try their best to avoid violent conflict. Chafee joined the Watson Institute for International Studies Jan. 7 as a distinguished visiting fellow, the first former senator from Rhode Island to join the institute, according to Associate Director Geoffrey Kirkman ’91. “(The job is) perfect because international relations was the area I
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Christopher Bennett / Herald
The Friedman Study Center in the Sciences Library, now open to students, addresses the long-standing need for a 24-hour study space on campus.
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Canceled course won’t stop professor from teaching BY STU WOO FEATURES EDITOR
Officially, his course is canceled, but that won’t stop G.E. Erikson, professor emeritus of medical sciences, from teaching it anyway. Since he retired in 1990, Erikson had been teaching a University course every semester pro bono, he said. But late in December, he received a letter from Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron telling him that his two classes, one that would have been
taught this semester and another in the fall, had been canceled because they were not affiliated with any department, which violated University rules. After receiving the letter, Erikson decided he still wanted to teach. So he will, by holding “Ventures in the History of Biology, Medicine, and Public Health,” formerly UC 102, as an informal course twice a week over this semester. It will be free of charge, he said, to Brown students, community members and whoever else
wants to attend. “It’s something that I very much enjoy learning about and helping other people learn about,” he said. Still, Erikson said he was upset with the way University officials canceled his classes. The former professor said he told administrators about the affiliation problem in 2005 and offered to work with them to find a solution. But he said Bergeron and the University decided to cancel his classes without consulting
Snow and State of the Union mark students’ return to campus BY CHAZ FIRESTONE SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Though she hid it well behind a smile, Deeksha Gupta ’10 had a marathon travel journey back to Brown. After a four-hour drive from her hometown of Chandigarh, India to Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi, 10 hours on a plane to London’s Heathrow Airport, a 20-hour stopover in England, seven hours on a second plane to Boston, a missed bus at South Station, a commuter rail ride to Providence, a taxi cab to Brown and a swan dive into her bed in Keeney Quadrangle, Gupta was finally back. “I was literally falling over by the time I
INSIDE:
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made it here,” said Gupta, who was feeling the effects of a 10.5-hour time difference. “Once I got into bed, I thought I’d never leave.” In addition to jet lag, Gupta has had to adjust to the biting Providence weather, which dipped into the teens over the weekend. But Gupta said that the greater contrast was the presence of snow, which is seldom seen in her Indian hometown. “It’s really pretty,” Gupta said of the white patches dotting the Main Green. “But it’s cold.” In nearby Caswell Hall, California native Autumn Graham ’09 adjusted to the cold weather by trying to keep her mind off of
NO CREDIT HURTS J-TERM Its 19 participants loved January@Brown, but UCS representatives and administrators are looking to increase enrollment
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it and thinking instead about all the work ahead of her as classes start. “When I came in, I felt pure dread at the sight of snow, but now it’s not so bad,” she said. “I have a two-page to-do list, so I don’t have time to think about snow — I’m stressing out.” One item on Graham’s list is planning a spring break trip, which for now is a mental refuge of sun and warmth from the grey skies of Providence. “I’m really happy to see all my friends,” she said. “But break is never too short.” For Jill Lambiase ’10, the trip back to Brown hit a rut when, minutes before her arrival on campus, she realized that she had
MOCHA: A YEAR LATER The student-created online course catalog celebrates its second spring shopping period but faces an uncertain future
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195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
forgotten her laptop at home. Luckily for her, Lambiase’s home is East Greenwich, R.I., so she made a quick U-turn and drove 15 minutes back to her house. With no redeye flight, no jetlag and no weather change, Lambiase’s return to Brown has been relaxed. “I’ve been sleeping in a lot, so the biggest adjustment for me will be waking up early for class,” she said. Then she smiled and added, “On second thought, there might not be much adjustment at all.” Transition to life at Brown has been easier still for Meredith Daniels ’07, who spent
QUIGLEY THROWS DOWN Sean Quigley ‘10 takes on political correctness, the Verbotsgesetz and Europe’s new Iron Curtain
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DANIELS DRAFTED Brown soccer star Andrew Daniels ‘07 is selected by pro fessional soccer club FC Dallas, going 18th in the draft
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