THE BROWN DAILY HERALD WEDNESDAY, F EBR UAR Y 28, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 24
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
Banner demo shows students new system
Med School introduces ‘concentrations’
Banner, which will be longer and segmented. Under Banner, most pre-registration advising for the Fall 2007 semester will take place from April 2 to 20 and rising seniors — the first to register under the new system — will begin pre-registering on April 24. Dunbar then demonstrated how the new course search feature, which is divided into two sections, will function. Students who want to learn general information about a course will use the “course catalog” for multi-departmental searches and searches for multiple professors or attributes at once, similar to features provided by the student-run Mocha system but not the University’s BOCA site. “The catalog will be the complete compendium of courses offered at Brown,” Dunbar said. Students who want to know term-specific details about a course, such as where it is meeting and certain course restrictions, will consult the “course schedule.” Finally, Dunbar showed students how they would register
BY CHAZ FIRESTONE SENIOR STAFF WRITER
BY NANDINI JAYAKRISHNA CONTRIBUTING WRITER
The Alpert Medical School has introduced a scholarly concentrations program that will allow medical students to take electives and conduct research in an interdisciplinary field outside the conventional medical curriculum. Part of the Med School’s broad curricular redesign, the program is voluntary and is intended to promote creative scholarship in medical learning, said Philip Gruppuso, associate dean of medicine for medical education. It was first introduced for the class of 2010. “The traditional medical curriculum does not have scope for creativity,” he said. “These concentrations are analogous to what people would consider minors.” The program currently offers 12 concentration areas with topics including global health, aging, advocacy and activism, medical ethics and disaster relief. Emily Rickards, manager of the program, said it is likely to grow in terms of both concentrations and number of students in coming years. Gruppuso and Rickards said they expect between 20 and 30 students out of the 92 in the class of 2010 to enroll in the program this year. The program requires students to undertake projects on campus, in local hospitals or abroad during the summer after their first year. Funding for the summer assistantships will come from the Summer Research Assistantship program and from “generous gifts and grants” received by the Med School for infrastructural changes and curriculum redesigns, Gruppuso said. Some concentrations — such as continued on page 4
Chris Bennett / Herald Associate Provost Nancy Dunbar gave a PowerPoint presentation Tuesday about the Banner system.
The first public demonstration of Banner’s online course registration system was given last night by Associate Provost Nancy Dunbar to an audience of 13 students in Salomon 001. Dunbar, who ser ves as Banner project owner, went over the aspects of registration that directly apply to students, including the relationship between advisers and students, the course search feature that will replace the Brown Online Course Announcement and the registration procedure itself. She used a PowerPoint presentation instead of the interactive Banner client because the Banner interface is still under development. “We’re still in a test environment, and things are always changing in a test environment,” she said. Dunbar emphasized the difference between the current preregistration process — where all advising and paper work take place during a two-week period — and pre-registration under
continued on page 4
Retiree learning group’s vote to split from U. fails despite garnering majority BY NANDINI JAYAKRISHNA CONTRIBUTING WRITER
The Brown Community for Learning in Retirement will remain affiliated with the University, though a majority voted to become independent at a convocation Tuesday. At the lunchtime meeting at Josiah’s, 56 percent of the members present voted in favor of disaffiliating from the University, short of the two-thirds necessary to break away.
A growing scarcity of classroom space on campus and the possibility that University officials would seek more academic and administrative oversight had caused the group to consider disaffiliating with the University. BCLIR is a community of older adults interested in continuing their learning experience in various fields. It has been affiliated with Brown for 23 years. Harry Switzer, the incoming president of the group, said he will work with Karen Sibley, dean
of summer and continuing studies, to plan the group’s future. “We had two viable options — staying or leaving — and we’ve picked one,” he told The Herald. “We will work with Dean Sibley in every way possible to make the best of the situation.” Switzer said the decision to function through Brown will hold for now, but if “things do not work out” in the future, the group may reconsider its decision. The organization, which had previously managed its own ad-
ministrative affairs, will hand over management of its programs to Sibley’s office, and the group’s members will advise her on academic affairs, Switzer said. Sibley, who attended the first half of the meeting, said she would want as much advice from the group as possible regarding its courses and publicity. The group’s name will now be included in the summer and continuing studies catalogue, which should continued on page 4
Nutritionist urges students to have healthy body image BY STEPHANIE BERNHARD FEATURES EDITOR
Chris Bennett / Herald Health Services Nutritionist Heather Bell spoke Tuesday about body image as part of National Eating Disorders Awareness Week.
INSIDE:
3 CAMPUS WATCH
DARTMOUTH DRINKERS Dartmouth banned water pong in some residence halls in response to potential health risks and property damage
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5 CAMPUS NEWS
S&J MEDIA COVERAGE The national media reported the U.’s revelation last week of how it was planning on making amends for its slavery ties
Heather Bell, a nutritionist at University Health Services, spoke Tuesday in Petteruti Lounge about the importance of accepting one’s body as it is and rejecting media images of perfection. The talk, part of National Eating Disorders Awareness Week, was titled “Be Comfortable in Your Genes: Your Body Is A Work of Art.” Discussing body image with college students is necessary because it is a widespread preoccupation, Bell said. Obsessive anxiety about body image can lead to eating disorders, compulsive exercise and other physical and psychological conditions. Bell said about 10 students per week make appointments with
11 OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
SPEAR-ED Courtney Jenkins ’07 laments Britney Spears’ self-destruction and the subsequent loss of our generation’s innocence
her to discuss issues related to eating disorders. She cited a national study that shows 74 percent of undergraduate women and 46 percent of men think “constantly or very frequently” about how others perceive their bodies. Bell said her suggestions for improving positive body image include separating one’s body image from character and “recognition of body diversity.” Bell explained that a graph of the population’s body weight would look like a bell curve, with most people falling in the middle. “But if you look at media images, all the women at least fall way to the left,” Bell said. She showed slides of a Barbie continued on page 6
12 SPORTS
SKIERS SNAG FIRST The ski team is headed to Nationals after tying for first place at the regional competition over the weekend
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