Thursday, January 25, 2007

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THE BROWN DAILY HERALD T HURSDAY, J ANUAR Y 25, 2007

Volume CXLII, No. 2

Revamped Orientation recommended by U. committee

Record number of regular decision applications for class of 2011 BY JAMES SHAPIRO S ENIOR S TAFF WRITER

Proposed changes include required summer reading and shorter schedule BY MICHAEL SKOCPOL S ENIOR S TAFF WRITER

First-years entering the University should have mandatory summer reading and a shorter Orientation, a University committee recommends in a report released today. The Orientation review committee, which was created in midOctober 2006, calls for a new Orientation schedule that would begin later — during Labor Day weekend — and require that the first day of classes be pushed back a day to the Wednesday after Labor Day. But the University’s academic calendar is part of the faculty rules and regulations, so any change requires a vote of approval by the faculty. University officials intend to seek such approval at a faculty meeting Feb. 6. In order for administrators to implement the new Orientation schedule this year, the faculty must approve the calendar change at the Feb. 6 meeting, said Interim Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services Russell Carey ’91 MA’06. If the faculty rejects the proposal on Feb. 6, the new Orientation schedule would not be in place until 2008 at the earliest. That vote is the biggest hurdle facing implementation of the committee’s recommendations. Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron acknowledged that the faculty vote is crucial in determining whether extensive changes could be implemented this year, but she declined to speculate as to the likelihood of the proposal’s success. In its report, the committee recommends reducing the number of days of Orientation programming prior to the beginning of classes from six days to four and extending some events to the first weekend after classes start, which the report calls “First Weekend.” Other changes recommended by the committee, which comprised administrators, faculty and students, include reducing the number of mandatory class meetings from four to three and improving administrative coordination of the Orientation program. In devising its recommendations, the committee focused on three areas of concern: the length and scheduling of Orientation, its academic content and the required class meetings. The recommendation for a compressed schedule responds to concerns about the length of the current Orientation schedule, which University officials say leaves students with too much downtime. continued on page 6

INSIDE:

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Courtesy of Levi’s Public Relations

Stephanie Rezendes, a junior at Rhode Island College ’08 (left), and Josie Nash ’10 (right), were selected from a pool of 2,000 entrants to become nationwide winners of Levi’s Style Search for denim models.

Providence’s next top models? Nash ’10 wins Levi’s model search BY TAYLOR BARNES STAFF WRITER

FEATURE

Neither Josie Nash ’10 nor Stephanie Rezendes, a junior at Rhode Island College, walked into the Levi’s store on Thayer Street intending to become national jeans models. Last Oct. 3 to Oct. 5, to promote the opening of their new store at the Providence Place Mall, Levi’s transformed what had been the apparel store Cargo on Thayer Street, into a temporary denim shop. When Nash and Rezendes visited, they found a recruiting spot for Levi’s college model search, the Levi’s Style Search, which was heavily advertised around campus in the weeks leading up to the

opening. Rezendes stopped by the Style Search after finishing a shift at Paragon on Thayer Street. “I just wanted to see what skinny jeans they had.” But instead of quietly hunting for the perfect pair of jeans, Nash and Rezendes — strangers prior to winning the contest — found themselves in a swarm of denim shoppers and model hopefuls. “It was a little bit chaotic,” Nash said. Rezendes agreed. “It was crazy. People were getting dressed

A record number of prospective students applied to the College this year, with 18,951 applications for the class of 2011 received so far. University officials expect that number to increase as latecomers trickle in. “We’re not finished counting yet,” said Dean of Admission James Miller ’73, who estimated that the final number of applications would top 19,000. He said the number of students who will be admitted is not yet known, but the final number of matriculating students in the class of 2011 should be about 1,460 students. Regular decision applications increased more than 4.3 percent over last year, from 15,937 to 16,644 received to date. Miller credited the increase — which was less than last year’s increase of 6.7 percent — to Brown “continu(ing) to be an attractive option for students,” the growing number of high school graduates in general applying to college and the existence of need-blind admission, which was introduced five years ago. Admission officials report a notable increase in applications from international students — a 15.4 percent rise, with applications growing to 2,078 from 1,801 a year ago. “We did more recruiting internationally than we have for a number of years,” Miller said, not-

ing that admission officers visited China and, for the first time in several years, Africa. Miller said the increase in international applications may be related to the University’s recent emphasis on internationalization. “It’s hard to tell, but it may be a byproduct of people’s awareness that Brown is more focused on globalization,” he said. Minorities from within the United States constitute about 30.5 percent of the total admission pool, with applications from black students increasing nine percent over last year. Applications from Asian-American and Hispanic students each increased about five percent. But applications from American Indian students decreased slightly, from 63 to 61. Regular decision applicants remain hopeful, but given the daunting numbers, many are pragmatic as well. “I really want to get in, and I think there’s a chance of me getting in, but it’s not extremely high,” said Josh Darfler, a senior at Lansing High School in Ithaca, N.Y. Lansing said he was attracted to Brown by its flexible curriculum, and as a prospective biology concentrator, he was also impressed with the new Sidney Frank Hall for Life Sciences. Naomi Jagoda, a senior at Edgemont High School in Scarsdale, continued on page 4

continued on page 4

Peace Corps sign-ups down among Brown alums BY IRENE CHEN STAFF WRITER

Brown dropped from No. 13 to No. 17 among medium-sized universities producing volunteers for the Peace Corps last year, with four fewer alums ser ving overseas in the program than in 2005. But current and former volunteers said the lower ranking should not be seen as a sign of diminished interest in the Peace Corps at Brown. In 2006, 27 Brown alums ser ved in the Peace Corps, a US government program that sends volunteers to live in developing countries and work on various projects, including English language instruction and agricultural development. Thirty-one alums were volunteers in 2005.

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For five years, Brown has been among the top 25 middle-sized schools providing volunteers for the Peace Corps. Middlesized schools are those with undergraduate enrollments between 5,001 and 15,000. Topping the list this year was George Washington University, which took the No. 1 spot from the University of Virginia. The change in volunteer numbers from 2005 to last year isn’t signifigant, said Januar y Zuk, the Peace Corps recruiter for Brown and other Rhode Island schools. Zuk’s predecessor as Brown’s Peace Corps recruiter, George Rutherford, wrote in an e-mail to The Herald that the Brown students he met “took on the challenge and chose to sail out of safe harbors so that they could ser ve others.”

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15 OPINIONS

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

Rutherford especially noted the “engaged” nature of Brown students. “At my info sessions I would always get extremely insightful questions. Questions that made me think about my wonderful but imperfect Peace Corps experience,” Rutherford wrote. “I always told students to regard me not just as the recruiter but also as a returned volunteer who would be happy to talk about the hard times as well as the wonderful ones.” Zuk agreed that Brown students are “ver y socially aware, progressive and dedicated to helping people.” “I find that when I go to career fairs, Brown students are ver y aware of what the Peace Corps is about already,” Zuk said.

THE WAFFLE HOUSE LINE Opinions Edior Michal Zapendowski ‘07 ruminates on the last real divide between the Yanks and Southerners

continued on page 4

16 SPORTS

DEOSSIE ’07 AT SHRINE Football’s Zak DeOssie ‘07 took another step toward the NFL with his solid performace in the East-West Shrine Game on Saturday

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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