Thursday, February 8, 2007

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THE BROWN DAILY HERALD T HURSDAY, F EBR UAR Y 8, 2007

Volume CXLII, No. 12

Since 1866, Daily Since 1891

Darwish lecture provokes fierce student reaction BY DEBBIE LEHMANN SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Eunice Hong / Herald

Students from Brown and Providence College joined R.I. residents in the State House on Tuesday to call for publicly funded elections.

Students rally for public Fuentes campaign financing speaks on his work METRO and heritage BY SIMMI AUJLA METRO EDITOR

BY CHRISTIAN MARTELL STAFF WRITER

Carlos Fuentes, a major political novelist and a professor-atlarge at Brown, spoke in Spanish about his internationally acclaimed novel “La Muerte de Artemio Cruz,” Latin American governments and the effects of globalization on the region to a crowd gathered at Brown Hillel on Wednesday afternoon. “I can talk about others a lot, but it is always hard to talk about one’s own work,” Fuentes confessed to the crowd. Yet the lecture seemed to cause him no trouble. Fuentes was born in Panama City, a son of two Mexican parents who expected him to grow up knowing the history of their homeland. At 16 years old, he moved to Mexico City, which he still calls home. After graduating with degrees from the University of Mexico and the University of Geneva in Switzerland, he followed in his father’s footsteps and became a diplomat for the Mexican government in 1965. His political career sent him to France, London and Venice, while his literary contributions have provided him with teaching opportunities at institutions such as Princeton, Harvard, Cambridge and Columbia universities and the University of Pennsylvania. Fuentes began his lecture with a crash course on the history of the Mexican Revolution, the central event of his third novel, which in English is called “The Death of Artemio Cruz.” He spoke about the motivations continued on page 7

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Nearly 80 Brown and Providence College students joined Rhode Island residents in the State House rotunda Tuesday afternoon to support publicly funded elections in Rhode Island. Supporters of new state campaign finance reform legislation addressed the crowd as students and community members held signs reading “People In, Money Out” and “Love Your State? Fix Its Elections.” Rep. Edith Ajello, D-Dist. 3, and Sen. Rhoda Perry P’91, D-Dist. 3, filed the bill, the Rhode Island Public Financing of Elections Act, with the General Assembly on Tuesday. The proposed legislation would fully finance political candidates who choose not to take any private donations. To prove public interest, candidates would have to collect a certain number of $5 contributions and then receive a grant from the state government. The office the candidate seeks determines the required number of contributions and the grant amount. If the candidate runs against

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Eunice Hong / Herald

Nonie Darwish, a pro-Israel Arab feminist, polarized a crowded Salomon 101 last night as she spoke on Islamism.

Interdisciplinary programs can struggle in departmental system BY MICHAEL SKOCPOL SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Biomedical ethics and Middle East studies may be very different fields, but they have much in common — both are interdisciplinary, both are growing fields of interest in the United States and both have languished at Brown in recent years. The undergraduate concentration in biomedical ethics — the first of its kind in higher education and for years a vibrant program — was suspended last year due to a lack of dedicated faculty and insufficient departmental support. Middle East

POST- SCORES Super Bowl coverage from Israel, the worst music album of 2007 and the pleasures of losing your virginity.. Who could ask for more?

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privately funded opponents, the public financing fund will then match the money spent by opponents, but the monetary support is capped at three times the amount of the initial grant. Under the proposed system, a gubernatorial candidate would receive the most seed money — $90,000 — and would be granted a maximum of $270,000 for the entire campaign. The proposed public financing system will face skepticism from legislators and constituents, as well as the limitations of the state’s financial situation, Ajello said. Arizona and Maine, among other states, have adopted similar systems, but legislation in both those states was introduced through popular initiatives by voters, rather than filed by elected officials. Typically, publicly financed election bills passed by state legislatures are more limited in scope or are vetoed, as was the case of Connecticut’s bill in 2000. The Rhode

Denouncing Islamist ideology as “archaic and oppressive,” Arab feminist Nonie Darwish declared Arab culture in “a head-on collision with the rest of the world” during a speech yesterday evening in Salomon 101. Darwish’s speech was followed by a heated question-and-answer session, during which several students passionately questioned her views and academic credentials. Growing up in Cairo and Gaza, Darwish said she learned to hate Jews, Israel and America. Yet she is now an ardent supporter of Israel and a women’s rights activist. Darwish founded ArabsForIsrael. com, a Web site that urges Muslims and Arabs across the globe to “give Israel and the Jewish people the respect they deserve in their tiny little country.” She is also the author of “Now They Call Me Infidel: Why I Renounced Jihad for America, Israel and the War on Terror.” Darwish was originally scheduled to speak last semester, but her lecture fell through after the Sarah Doyle Women’s Center declined to fund her appearance and

Brown Hillel decided not to sponsor the event alone. The Office of Campus Life and Student Services and the Political Theory Project sponsored last night’s talk. According to Yael Richardson ’08, president of Hillel’s executive board, Hillel decided not to sponsor the event last semester because of “inflammatory statements” Darwish has made about Islam. “We didn’t see it as our place to bring a speaker who has spoken in a derogatory manner about another religion,” Richardson said. “If another organization were to bring a speaker who has made anti-Semitic remarks, we hope they would also be respectful of us.” In an interview with The Herald, Darwish said she is used to being silenced after growing up in “Middle East dictatorships and police states.” She said she was “disappointed that in America this could happen” but added she is very grateful the University invited her to speak. “It shows that our academic leaders are very wise men,” she said.

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studies has battled a lack of coordination and faculty absences and at times has struggled to offer enough courses for its concentrators to fulfill their requirements. Even large, popular programs can face challenges if they fall outside formal academic departments. The international relations concentration boasts approximately 400 concentrators but has only one concentration adviser whose job is officially part-time. Interdisciplinary programs at the University depend on a variety of departments to hire faculty, provide support staff and offer DIVESTING FROM DARFUR Sen. Rhoda Perry P’91 and Rep. Edith Ajello introduced legislation to divest the state of R.I.from Darfur at the urging of student groups.

courses. If departmental priorities lie elsewhere, an interdisciplinary program can suffer or disappear. The success stories among interdisciplinary programs — such as Judaic studies and Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship — are generally either treated as departments or have independent sources of financial support, such as COE’s extensive fundraising. The problems of other programs have not escaped the notice of University officials. Interdisciplinary programs will be one focus of an upcoming administrative review of undergraduate concentra-

11 OPINIONS

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

GOP: NEW AND IMPROVED? Don Trella ’07.5 warns jubilant Democrats of the Republican Party of the Future — a GOP that could evoke Libertarianism in an effort to get votes

tions, officials say. A bioethical crisis Many interdisciplinary programs, especially smaller ones, become successful thanks to the efforts of a small group of dedicated faculty or key administrators, but if those central organizing figures leave, the program may be left high and dry. This was the case with the University’s biomedical ethics concentration. For years, a core group of faculty from the Medical School, continued on page 6

12 SPORTS

W SKIERS MAINTAINS EDGE W. The women’s ski team gets fourth place at home and nabs second place at MIT to come within one point of third place in the MacConnell Division

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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