THE BROWN DAILY HERALD Volume CXLII, No. 26
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$190m budget will fuel two years of campus construction BY SCOTT LOWENSTEIN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Brown’s campus will get a dramatic facelift over the next two years, thanks to an extensive slate of facilities projects approved by the Corporation during its meeting last weekend. The approved projects are part of a $190 million capital budget discussed by the Corporation last weekend. Though the Corporation hasn’t fully approved the entire $190-million budget, it did endorse specific short-term phases for a range of projects. The Corporation will assess the progress of these initiatives before approving the full budget. The planned $190 million shows a continued emphasis on physical development at the University. “The Plan for Academic Enrichment … is designed to set our path as an institution, and so it has to encompass all of the critical elements of that,” such as attracting the best students and faculty to Brown and providing for their needs, said Richard Spies, executive vice president for planning and senior adviser to the president. “It was very clear that as we looked at the University, there were some critical needs that had to be attended to … and one of these was facilities.” The Corporation approved planning for three projects that had not previously been announced — renovations to Faunce House and the J. Walter Wilson building and capital improvements to the University’s information technology infrastructure. The $15 million renovation of continued on page 4
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Former Guantanamo Bay chaplain describes loss of civil liberties BY JOY NEUMEYER CONTRIBUTING WRITER
James Yee went from being a highly praised Muslim chaplain at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility to being accused — and later exonerated — of spying for terrorists. Last night he told a crowd in Salomon 101 that Americans’ “civil liberties are under fire” and that “if all this could happen to me … then it can happen to any one of us.” Yee’s speech kicked off the Brown Muslim Students Association’s Islam Awareness Month 2007. The theme is “the many faces of Islam.” Yee, a third-generation Chinese-American who converted to Islam in 1991 after graduating from the United States Military Academy, was selected as the Muslim chaplain at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba in 2002. In September 2003, while headed home on leave, he was arrested and imprisoned for 76 days on espionage charges. But after a government investigation, all the criminal charges against him were dropped. “It’s clear that we’re living in
Eunice Hong / Herald Former Muslim chaplain James Yee spoke last night in Salomon 101 about his experiences at Guantanamo Bay.
a very dangerous post-9/11 period, one in which the civil liberties of all Americans … are threatened,” Yee told The Herald before his speech. “My story pinpoints these dangers.” Noor Najeeb ’09, president of the BMSA, introduced Yee, de-
scribing his life as “a story that is rarely voiced and even more rarely heard.” Yee described his journey from a Lutheran upbringing to his conversion to Islam. “For me, it was a reconfirmation of my monotheistic faith,” he said. Yee
left active service in the Army in the summer of 1993 to study Arabic and Islamic sciences in Damascus, Syria. He returned to active duty in January 2001 as an Army Muslim chaplain. continued on page 6
Rhodes Center to promote policy-oriented int’l economics BY DEBBIE LEHMANN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
A $10 million gift from William Rhodes ’57, senior vice chairman of Citigroup and a former University trustee, will establish the Rhodes Center for International Economics at the Watson Institute for International Studies. The gift is the most recent gesture of support for Brown’s growing research and teaching in business, entrepreneurship and economics. The Corporation last weekend accepted the gift to fund the cen-
ter and create an endowed professorship in international trade and finance. The center will promote “first-rate” research on international economic issues, particularly those that are relevant to policy, according to Professor of Economics Ross Levine, who helped draft the proposal for the gift. The Rhodes Center, which will be located in the Watson Institute, where Rhodes is a board member, will also support academic conferences and visiting professors. “Economics touches on the lives of many people,” Levine said.
“If we’re teaching students to prepare for the world and take jobs in the world, knowledge of international economics will be of great use to them.” The establishment of the Rhodes Center goes hand-in-hand with student interest in taking finance and economics classes within the context of a liberal arts education, Levine said. Student interest in economics has been rising consistently over the past five years, according to Professor of Economics Andrew Foster, the department chair. Fos-
ter said enrollments in economics classes are up 25 percent from last year, partly because there is a renewed “general sense that economics has something to say about world issues.” Foster said the Department of Economics has changed significantly over the last decade and no longer keeps to itself on campus. The increase in interdisciplinary programs that include economics is not only due to interest from other departments that want to be continued on page 6
For family, friends and girls, students share videos on YouTube BY STU WOO FEATURES EDITOR
Su-Yee Lin / Herald Director Ivan Tan ‘09, Whit Schroder ‘09, Ben Struhl ‘09 and Eric Mukherjee ‘09 (left to right) along with Jordan Chesin ‘09 (not pictured), created “Tunak Tunak Brown” and posted it on YouTube as a parody of Daler Mehndi’s “Tunak Tunak Tun.”
INSIDE:
3 ARTS & CULTURE
SAX IN THE CITY Sax in the City festival will be held this weekend to encourage collaboration between experimental musicians and Brown students
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5 CAMPUS NEWS
CREAM OF THE CROP ResCouncil’s First Pick Competition winner is the video “Skintones,” a short on an all-male, all-naked a cappella group on campus
FEATURE
They don’t do it for fame or money, they say. They just do it for fun. Or for friends and family. Or for girls. Though they may never become as popular as lonelygirl15 or Saturday Night Live stars, several Brown students have posted videos that have attracted a small following on YouTube, the popular online video site that allows users to upload videos, such as clips of popular TV shows or homemade movies of, well, practically anything. One such video is “Tunak Tunak Brown,” which Eric Mukherjee ’09 and his friends posted on the site last May as YouTube was gaining popularity. The video is a parody of Indian artist Daler
11 OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
POINT-COUNTERPOINT The Herald’s columnists debate religion’s role in American politics — should it be taken seriously seriously, or does it detract from the debate?
Mehndi’s “Tunak Tunak Tun” music video, which became an Internet phenomenon a few years ago. A side-to-side comparison of the two music videos shows that, for better or worse, the Brown students stayed faithful to the original. “We just saw other sorts of Tunak impersonation videos (on YouTube) and they just weren’t up to snuff,” Mukherjee said. “So we decided to go out and do it justice.” He said he and his friends produced the video in their free time just for fun and that he was “pleasantly surprised” to find that the video has been viewed over 7,500 times, according to the Youcontinued on page 4
12 SPORTS
M. ICERS ENTER POSTSEASON Men’s hockey enters postseason play at Princeton in a series that determines whether they will advance to ECACHL quarterfianls
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