THE BROWN DAILY HERALD WEDNESDA
Volume CXLII, No. 53
A PRIL PRI L 18, 18 , 2007
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
Prefrosh drop anchor at ADOCH on rainy day BY ZACHARY CHAPMAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
fessor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences Sheila Blumstein, a member of the task force and former dean of the College and interim president of the University. “I think (the meeting) is an opportunity for all of us to meet each other and hear what Dean Bergeron has to say, as I’m sure she will elaborate on what the task force’s charge is,” she said of the committee’s first meeting Thursday. Many other faculty appointees said that they too are waiting to hear from Bergeron at Thursday’s meeting. They have received little information on the committee’s planned course of action, they said. Bonde told The Herald she is waiting to hear what questions Bergeron hopes the task force will answer about the College, though she added they have already spoken briefly about the committee’s role. Like many other members of the committee, Professor of Neu-
Despite enduring a day of wet and windy weather, there was a festive mood on College Hill Tuesday as about 950 students and 750 parents descended on campus for A Day on College Hill, Brown’s annual two-day program for admitted students and their parents. With fellow prospective students seemingly everywhere and a host of activities filling the day’s schedule, even those from the sunniest of locales seemed to be enjoying the festivities. When Sima Baalbaki rolled out of bed this morning, it was 80 degrees and sunny on the beach along the Gulf Coast, where she was vacationing with her family. Eight hours later, she stepped off a plane at T.F. Green Airport and faced a biting drizzle. Yet Baalbaki — who hails from Florence, Ala., and is deciding among Brown and three other schools — seemed mostly unperturbed by the dismal weather. “The weather’s not great, but I’ve been having a lot of fun meeting a lot of people,” she said inside a crowded Leung Gallery in Faunce House. “It was weird because I had to pack warm and cold stuff for my trip.” Paulina Pagan ’11 of San Juan, Puerto Rico, flew into Boston this morning. “I think it will be a transition — getting used to New England weather — but I think I’ll work into it,” she said. Pagan said Brown was the only school she seriously considered attending. “When I came here to visit in August, it was beautiful, and I just got a feeling and knew it was the right place for me,” she said. Pagan said she thought living in New England would be the more difficult for her moth-
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Chris Bennett / Herald
In Leung Gallery in Faunce House, prospective students line up to receive housing assignments as they arrive for ADOCH.
Thursday’s carnival rescheduled The annual SPEC Day Carnival, originally planned for Thursday, has been postponed to April 26 due to forecasts of rain. The rescheduling will probably not affect turnout at the carnival, said former Special Events Commission Co-Chair Divya Kumaraiah ’07. “I think SPEC really draws crowds, especially given its location on the Main Green,” Kumaraiah said. “Lots of people come just because they see it, not because they were actually planning to come.” In addition to free barbeque, music and giveaways, the carnival will include a moon bounce, a mechanical bull and a bungee run. SPEC set a rain date for the event when it began planning, Kumaraiah said — typical of most Spring Weekend events. The carnival will now be held from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Thursday, April 26 on the Main Green. —Debbie Lehmann —
Faculty members greet College task force with open minds, questions BY EVAN BOGGS STAFF WRITER
Faculty members on the Task Force on Undergraduate Education will try to keep an open mind when the committee meets for the first time Thursday, they told The Herald. The committee’s three student members were selected by the Undergraduate Council of Students in early March, and faculty appointments were announced March 20 in a campuswide e-mail from Provost David Kertzer ’69 P’95 P’98 and Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron. The task force, which will undertake a broad review of the College and its curriculum, comprises 13 members, including 10 faculty members. Bergeron and Dean of the Graduate School Sheila Bonde, who both have faculty appointments, will also represent the University administration. “I’ve done no preparation other than to come (to the meeting) with an open mind,” said Pro-
Simmons, Chafee ’75 and Miller ’73 welcome students to ADOCH BY FRANKLIN KANIN STAFF WRITER
As rainy weather greeted admitted students arriving for A Day on College Hill, University officials showered prospective first-years — many of whom are weighing Brown against other college options — with glowing praise for Brown’s unique culture and curriculum. Speaking in Salomon 101, President Ruth Simmons, Dean of Admission Jim Miller ’73 and former Sen. Lincoln Chafee ’75, — now a visiting fellow at the Watson Institute for International Relations — welcomed students to the University’s two-day program for accepted members of the class of 2011. Miller had earlier spoken to parents at a separate event. Miller told the parents in Sayles Hall about the “culture of kindness” Brown fosters in its community. “We take students from various backgrounds, and abilities, and experiences and families, and we bring them here and we bring them all together … and we say get along. Get along with each other,” Miller said. In her speech to the prospective students, Simmons said that sense of community makes Brown students so happy. Rather than get caught up in competition, which she said can happen at many other institutions, Brown students form closer bonds through the work and effort they do at the University. “Miraculously at Brown, students feel part of a shared experience — they feel part of a community. And they feel they should grow together. And that’s one of those deeply satisfying things at Brown,” Simmons said. continued on page 5
DPS completes phase-out of PPD officers from patrols BY DEBBIE LEHMANN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
The Department of Public Safety has completed its phase-out of Providence Police Department officers working on paid University details and will now only hire PPD officers to patrol on campus as part of an emergency contingency plan. DPS will hire PPD details only “if the needs arise,” Chief of Police Mark Porter wrote in an e-mail to The Herald. DPS will consult Walter Hunter, vice president for administration, prior to hiring PPD patrol details, and if they are hired, the PPD officers will be deployed on the
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outskirts of campus, Porter wrote. Porter noted that PPD officers may patrol “around the campus area” even if they are not hired as DPS patrol details. The phase-out of PPD officers began last year when the University decided to arm its police force. Partly because arming DPS officers would allow them to “respond to and pursue criminal interests,” Porter wrote, the department began discussing its use of PPD details. DPS has hired three to four PPD officers to help patrol campus for the past several years. Including PPD officers on these patrols was
PROFS’ PROFITS UP Faculty pay across the country rose slightly the past two years, and Brown salaries rank in the top third of the nation
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7 ADOCH
“necessary and extremely beneficial” to the University, particularly when DPS officers were not armed, Porter wrote. DPS continued hiring PPD patrols while it was arming campus officers and implementing an overall patrol-staffing plan. During this time, only two PPD officers were hired during the evening and night. These officers patrolled only the perimeter of campus instead of the entire interior, Porter wrote. Last October, DPS further scaled back PPD patrol details, hiring only one officer. PPD officers were continued on page 4
ADOCH BY THE NUMBERS Some facts and figures about this year’s admitted class and The Herald, along with pictures from around campus during ADOCH
Rahul Keerthi / Herald
A Providence Police Department cruiser sits outside the Brown Bookstore.
11 OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
BEST OF BROWN In his final column, Joey Borson ’07 divulges his thoughts on what makes Brown the fascinating place it is
12 SPORTS
W. RUGGERS ROLL The women’s rugby team overcame a mud-covered field and some rain on Sunday to beat Yale and claim the Ivy League tournament
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