THE BROWN DAILY HERALD T HURSDAY
Volume CXLII, No. 30
8, 2007 2 007
Reparations experts criticize U.’s slavery and justice response
R AT T Y K A R A O K E
Eunice Hong / Herald The Las Vegas Dinner Special at the Sharpe Refectory featured seafood, red velvet cake and karaoke.
Financial aid packages lower for upperclassmen, officials say BY JAMES SHAPIRO SENIOR STAFF WRITER
The University made significant strides in improving financial aid when it eliminated the work-study requirement for first-years in 2002, but the policy leaves upperclassmen with a perceived drop in their scholarship packages. “University scholarships for freshmen would normally be higher simply because their packages have no work component, and they get the University Work Scholarship as part of their first award,” said James Tilton, director of financial aid. The University Work Scholarship, worth $2,350 this year, exempts first-years from work-study. As of late February, the average University scholarship for first-years on financial aid was $24,929. The sophomore average was $22,540. The average for juniors was lower at $20,900, and the average for seniors was $21,411. Upperclassmen have access to higher annual federal loan
maximums, according to Tilton. Consequently the loan components of financial aid packages increase slightly for juniors and seniors. Tilton said the proportion of students who get need-based University scholarships stays relatively stable across classes. “It’s roughly 40 percent for all classes. The freshman class may be slightly higher, but the rest average out at around 40 percent, and that’s students who get need-based University scholarship. There are more students who receive federal aid loans,” he said. A Herald poll conducted last year found that 36.9 percent of students on financial aid were very or somewhat dissatisfied with their aid packages. The poll was administered to 461 undergraduates in the registrar’s office from Jan. 30, 2006 to Feb. 3, 2006. The margin of error for financial aid questions was 7.3 percent. continued on page 7
Brown financial aid distribution
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
BY MICHAEL SKOCPOL SENIOR STAFF WRITER
SLAVERY AND JUSTICE
Though reparations experts have praise for the University’s official plan to make amends for its historic ties to slavery and the slave trade, some criticize the response’s lack of focus on immediate descendants of slaves. Reparations activists who expressed similar concerns about the recommendations made by the University Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice in October say the official response should have done more to directly create opportunities for black Americans. The University’s response included creating a $10 million endowment for public education in Providence and funding for graduate fellows who agree to serve in local schools. Its other initiatives
included increased transparency about the University’s historic ties to slavery, discussions with local officials about the creation of a memorial to commemorate the slave trade and academic research initiatives related to slavery. Adjoa Aiyetoro, co-president of the Legal Defense Research and Education Fund of the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America, said the public education initiatives that form the centerpiece of the response are a “nice thing” but are ultimately “irrelevant” to Brown’s involvement in slavery and the slave trade. “No one would say this is awful,” Aiyetoro said. She is a law continued on page 5
ResLife plays lottery matchmaker with social BY STU WOO FEATURES EDITOR
A few minutes after 6 p.m. yesterday, Lucy Seyfarth ’10 sat at a table in the North Wayland Lounge and began filling out a biographical information form. She listed her hobbies (sailing and traveling), favorite TV shows (“The Office” and “Scrubs”) and her preference for neatness (1, on a scale of 1 to 5 with 1 being the neatest). A few minutes later, she stood up and prepared to mingle with a group of about 20 complete strang-
ers in the hopes of finding the perfect mate. Roommate, that is. “I’m a little freaked out right now,” Seyfarth said. Taking a page from the book of speed dating, the jaunty matchmaking gimmick that stormed major American cities in the late 1990s, the Office of Residential Life held what it called a “Matching Social” last night for roommateless students looking for that perfect someone with whom to enter the housing lottery. The students played a get-to-know-you game
and then divided into two smaller groups to discuss their likes and dislikes. “I have TiVo!” one girl said. “That’s a major perk of living with me.” Housing Officer Chad Mank, who led the hour-long event, said the social was intended to help students jilted by potential roommates or suitemates and those who might not have someone to live with because of “shyness or introversion.” The event is about “getting continued on page 6
A look inside Brown’s co-ops BY JOY CHUA CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Walk into West House on a Friday night for open dinner, and residents will likely be sitting in the living room singing “Let It Be” or “Yellow Submarine.” Some might play Scrabble as they sing, while others piece together a puzzle. The scene may be reminiscent of family life, but it is actually a glimpse of the community living offered by cooperative housing at
F
FEATURE Brown. The program house, located near the intersection of Brown and Meeting streets, is one of three co-op houses and the only one managed by the University. The other two co-ops are owned by the Brown Association for Cooperative Housing, a nonprofit corporation consisting of the apcontinued on page 4
INSIDE:
postINSIDE
HANGING WITH DUNCAN post- is just chilling this week — hanging out with singer Duncan Sheik ’92, watching pretentious movies and eating sushi
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3 METRO
DISCOUNT DESIGNER Second Time Around, a consignment store that sells cut-rate designer clothing, opens today on Thayer Street
Chris Bennett / Herald FInlandia Co-op on Waterman Street.
11 OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
THE FINE ART OF BS Benjamin Bright ’07 reflects on his Brown experience and realizes the most important skill he’ he’s acquired is the ability to BS like a pro
12 SPORTS
FASTEST PAIR IN THE LEAGUE Thelma Breezeatl ’10 and Paul Raymond ’08 came back from the Ivy League Heps last week each with first-place finishes in the 60-meter dash
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