THE BROWN DAILY HERALD F RIDAY,
Volume CXLII, No. 31
RCH
9 , 2007 200 7
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
IWP fellow could face arrest upon return to Iran
Iranian author Ravanipour takes refuge at Brown BY TAYLOR BARNES S TAFF WRITER
Iranian author Moniro Ravanipour was too scared to shower when she was in Germany for a writers’ conference in 2001. Soon after she arrived, her husband called to tell her Iranian authorities opposed the conference. She feared they might have installed secret cameras in her hotel bathroom and would broadcast the footage in Iran to suggest the conference attendees were engaging in salacious behavior.
BY TAYLOR BARNES S TAFF WRITER
When Shahryar Mandanipour’s fellowship with the International Writers Project ends this June, he will be forced to return to Iran and potentially face arrest unless he finds a job in the United States that will allow him to extend his visa. “It will not be easy to return, for me. I don’t know what will happen in the airport,” Mandanipour said, explaining that in the past three months, about 150 scholars, writers and journalists have been arrested upon returning home from abroad. “Everyday I’m thinking about it. Sometimes I think I’ve got to go back. Sometimes, when I try to be rational, I think of my responsibilities to my family … here. Honestly, I don’t know what to do,” Mandanipour said. He said he is especially concerned for his 16-year-old son. “Here, he will be safe. There is no hope for him in Iran,” he said. This predicament is not entirely new for IWP fellows. They are selected for the fellowship precisely because they face oppression in their home nations, said Robert Coover, director of the IWP and adjunct professor of literary arts. Sponsored by the Graduate Program in Literary Arts and the Watson Institute for International Studies, the year-long IWP fellowship provides a stipend and workplace to writers who face political oppression in their countries of origin. “The hardest thing is, what do you do about people when you have to let them go in a year or so?” Coover asked.
“I had many wounds from this country, but I still loved it.” Shahryar Mandanipour Though the difficulty was anticipated, Mandanipour’s situation is especially challenging, Coover said, because relations between Iran and the United States have worsened since Mandanipour arrived on College Hill. Mandanipour was eligible for the fellowship because Iran’s Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance censored many of his writings. “You can’t anticipate which story will be allowed to be published,” he said, adding that including a “sexy scene or love scene” in a story will jeopardize its publication. While at Brown, Mandanipour continued on page 4
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ARTS & CULTURE
“Living in Iran, for a writer like me, is a risk,” said Ravanipour, who is the fourth fellow the International Writers Project has brought to Brown. Sponsored by the Graduate Program in Literary Arts and the Watson Institute for International Studies, the program hosts one writer each year who feels unable to engage in free expression in his or her home country. Shortly after the conference in Germany, Ravanipour returned to
Min Wu / Herald Moniro Ravanipour (right) is the fourth fellow the International Writers Project has brought to the University. The program hosts one writer each year who feels unable to engage in free expression in his or her home country.
continued on page 6
Metcalf to temporarily house history dept., other programs BY OLIVIA HOFFMAN CONTRIBUTING WRITER
The Metcalf complex — including the Metcalf Chemistry, Metcalf Research and Medical Research labs — will serve as a temporary home for several programs and departments, allowing for large-scale construction and renovation projects elsewhere on campus. Considerable space opened up in the complex last fall when the Department of Neuroscience relocated to the Sidney Frank Hall for Life Sciences. “It’s really the only space on campus right now that we have flexibility with,” said Associate Provost Pamela O’Neil, who staffs the provost’s Space Committee, which monitors how space in campus buildings is allocated. According to O’Neil, the vacant areas will be used as “interim space” for a number of departments. “In the next few years, we are going to be using it to solve some temporary problems,” she said. “When we take a building and move it or gut it to renovate it, we need some place to put the people that are currently occupying it,” O’Neil said. “It doesn’t sound very glamorous, but we can’t do the major build-
THE STARS OF IMPROV A profile of Brown’s newest improvisational comedy troupe, Starla and Sons — a long-form improv group that has gained a cult following
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Eunice Hong / Herald File Photo Shahryar Mandanipour (above) may be forced to return to Iran and could face arrest when his fellowship ends this June.
5 CAMPUS NEWS
ing projects that we’re doing unless we have that space to move people into.” The Department of History will occupy office space in the complex for six months, O’Neil said. Some members of the history department will be displaced from their offices in Peter Green House when that building gets picked up and moved to a nearby location to make way for the Walk, the pedestrian pathway that will link Lincoln Field to the Pembroke campus. An anthropology lab was also recently installed in Metcalf, but O’Neil said she hopes the lab will eventually move to Rhode Island Hall, which will be renovated to house the Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. Metcalf will also house the ADVANCE program, which will move into office and conference space on the second floor of the building within the next week, O’Neil said. Funded by a five-year grant from the National Science Foundation, the program, which is directed by O’Neil, aims to facilitate the advancement of women faculty in science and engineering. O’Neil said “a subset” of the Department of Mathematcontinued on page 6
SPRING FORWARD — EARLY Turn your clocks ahead one hour this Sunday — daylightsaving time starts this weekend, three weeks earlier than in previous years
Med School report calls for more research collaboration BY KRISTINA KELLEHER SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Boosted by a $100 million donation from the late Warren Alpert, the Alpert Medical School is embarking on a new phase of strategic growth as it aims to strengthen research ties with area hospitals and unify research administration. The Corporation broke from its traditional routine for its February meeting and replaced some committee meetings with a full-day retreat to discuss the future of the
Med School and hear from members of a planning group appointed by Provost David Kertzer ’69 P’95 P’98 last September to consider strategic initiatives for the Med School. The objective of the planning group’s discussion with the Corporation was to “share ideas, educate, bring up to date, seek feedback and ask for advice,” said Eli Adashi, dean of medicine and biological sciences, who chaired the working continued on page 4
R A D I O S TA R
Chris Bennett / Herald NPR and ABC veteran Robert Krulwich spoke Thursday night on his career in journalism.
11 OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
POINT-COUNTERPOINT Don Trella ’08 and Michal Zapendowski ’07 square off on the issue that has haunted all of us since high school English class — human free will
12 SPORTS
ALUM TO COACH PATS Former Brown football player and coach Bill O’Brien ’92 has been hired as an offensive assistant coach by the New England Patriots
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