Tuesday, March 6, 2007

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THE BROWN DAILY HERALD T UESDAY,

Volume CXLII, No. 28

ARCH

6, 2007 20 07

Since 1866, Daily Since 1891

Jamaica Kincaid speaks on Columbus’ impact on present-day Caribbean

Students, administrators doubt efficacy of U. writing requirement

BY ISABEL GOTTLIEB CONTRIBUTING WRITER

When Antigua-born prizewinning author Jamaica Kincaid reads Christopher Columbus’ accounts of his first voyage to the New World, she sees “with terror, his present and our future … it makes our presence now seem inevitable.” Kincaid read from and commented on the journals, which she called a “founding text” of her own work and life, in Salomon 101 last night to kick off Caribbean Heritage Week. Kincaid spoke about how Columbus’ initial impressions of the Caribbean set the template for how foreigners — specifically, white Europeans — continue to see the region today and what it has meant for people of Caribbean heritage. Born in Antigua in 1949, Kincaid came to New York when she was 16. After working and attending college for several years, she continued on page 6

BY NICK WERLE CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Fewer than half of Brown students believe all undergraduates fulfill the University’s English requirement, which mandates “competence in reading and writing,” a recent Herald poll found. Many see the current requirement, which is being reviewed by the Office of the Dean of the College, as toothless.

THE HERALD POLL

Chris Bennett / Herald Acclaimed writer Jamaica Kincaid kicked off Caribbean Heritage Week with a reading from the journals of Christopher Columbus.

Banner mock registration kicks off

Possible new dorm chair has wow factor, drawbacks BY MATTHEW VARLEY C ONTRIBUTING WRITER

Most students who stopped by the Office of Residential Life last week received the same instruction: Have a seat. ResLife was testing a new model of desk chair loaned to the University for student evaluation. At first glance, the chair appeared ordinary — essentially a standard swivel chair on wheels with an upholstered seat and back. The chair’s distinguishing characteristic, however, was a delight to many. With the pull of a lever, the chair separates from its base and, when placed on the floor, rocks on two semicircular beams.

44 percent of students polled agreed that all undergraduates satisfy the requirement, while 38 percent disagreed. 18 percent either didn’t know or didn’t answer. Conducted from Jan. 29 to Feb. 2, the poll has a margin of error of 4.7 percent with 95 percent confidence. The writing requirement does not currently have any curricular enforcement mechanism. When professors record students’ grades at the end of each semester, they can indicate that a particular student needs to work on his or her writing by putting a check in a particular column. These data

BY CHAZ FIRESTONE SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The chair’s flat-surfaced base becomes a small table useful for a laptop computer. “Check that out … that’s a little impressive,” said Jamal Shipman ’07 on witnessing the transformation of the chair into a small workstation. Shipman was critical, though, of the chair’s lack of armrests. According to Barbara Ross, an administrative assistant in ResLife, Shipman’s critique was a common one. “Everyone says it needs arms,” Ross said. The chair — named Trey by its manufacturer, Sauder Education — was designed specifically

Mock registration, a week-long process designed to ensure the smooth implementation of Banner’s online course registration module, began Monday as students and professors tested the system. Members of the Undergraduate Council of Students, Meiklejohn peer advisers and various professors were given scripts that instructed them to enter and misenter data and then report Banner’s response. “The process is going smoothly so far,” said Lisa Mather, associate registrar for registration services and organizer of the mock registration program. “But we

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have a whole week planned, so we’ll see how things turn out.” Participants Monday began the pre-registration phase, which was staggered by semester level and will continue today until registration closes at 10:00 a.m. A “summer,” which will begin at 12:01 p.m. and end at 4 p.m. today, will simulate Orientation, allowing only those playing the roles of freshmen, transfer students and new graduate students to register. “The idea is to fit the entire semester and more into one week,” said Thomas Doeppner, associate research professor of computer science and a participant in the program.

continued on page 6 Student opinion on whether all undergrads fulfill the University’s English requirement Don’t know/ No answer

18% 18 %

44%

Yes

38% No

continued on page 4

Scientists speak out on their religious beliefs Christian faith can reconcile with evolution, students and scholars say BY FRANKLIN KANIN CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Though tension between scientific discovery and religious belief can prove divisive, Brown students and professors say the two are not mutually exclusive — studying one can drive interest in the other. Many scientists maintain their faith because, they say, they believe texts such as the Bible and tools like microscopes hold different, but equally valid, truths. Joses Ho ’08, a neuroscience concentrator and member of College Hill for Christ, said part of his reason for studying neuroscience is his faith. “I believe that man is made in the image of God, so there’s definitely something special about

Courtesy of saudereducation.com The Office of Residential Life is considering a large-scale purchase of Sauder Manufacturing Company’s Trey chairs, which convert into floor rockers and stools when disassembled.

INSIDE:

3 METRO

CHIPOTLE ARRIVES IN R.I. The popular fast-food Mexican chain is opening a restaurant in Warwick and plans to open another in Providence

www.browndailyherald.com

5 CAMPUS NEWS

MURAL MAKEOVER The SAO is sponsoring a contest to cover the recently painted-over walls in lower Faunce with a SAO-funded student mural

the brain that makes us different from animals and from chimpanzees,” he said. “Science has definitely got me thinking about the soul because I believe that we all have souls. Is the soul found in the brain or is this something found outside? That is where science is pushing me.”

FEATURE Luke Renick ’08, an engineering concentrator and another member of College Hill for Christ, said many elements of science lead people to religion. He cited the writing of Francis Crick, a Nobel Prize winner for his work on DNA. “(Crick’s) thing is when you

11 OPINIONS

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

RADICALLY MODERATE Columnist Abroad Matt Prewitt ’08 examines the modern trend of moving away from radicalism toward more comfortable moderation

delve deeper and deeper into a cell, and into the origin of human life, and the building blocks of our life, it’s so incredibly complex,” Renick said. “Scientists are just baffled by the complexity, and so it leads a lot of people to say, ‘well, maybe there is a God behind this, maybe there is a designer.’” Professor of Biology Ken Miller ’70 P’02, who is a devout Catholic, said he sees no contradiction in his professional and private beliefs. “I think both science and religion are reflections of our very human inclination to try to make sense of the world in one way or another,” Miller said. Miller has written textbooks about the theory of evolution and continued on page 9

12 SPORTS

W. WATER POLO TAKES 2ND The women’s water polo team made it to the ECAC Championship finals by beating Wagner and Bucknell but lost to No. 18 Princeton

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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