The Brown Daily Herald T uesday, S eptember 11, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 65
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
EMS calls down for Orientation BY Scott Lowenstein Senior Staff Writer
Amid mixed reviews from students and praise from University officials, this year’s revamped Orientation schedule has yielded at least one noticeable success — fewer alcoholrelated calls to Emergency Medical Services. Administrators attributed this decline, primarily, to a different Orientation schedule from last year. Ten alcohol-related calls and two emergency room ambulance transports were made between Saturday, Sept. 8 and Sunday, Sept. 9 this academic year, compared to 18 calls and seven transports over last year’s first weekend, said Margaret Klawunn, associate vice president for campus life and dean of student life. “The weekends are structured differently this year, so it is not completely comparable,” Klawunn said. Last year, freshmen moved into dorms starting on a Wednesday, while they moved in this year on Saturday, Sept. 1. Overall, Klawunn characterized this year’s Orientation as a success, adding that in terms of alcohol consumption, this year “seems to be better than last year,” she wrote in an e-mail to The Herald. Klawunn attributed the drop in EMS calls to the shortened, concentrated Orientation schedule and the change in move-in days. The weekend freshmen and early-arriving upperclassman moved in began Saturday, Sept. 1, and saw seven calls and two Emergency Room transports, while no calls were made during the first academic weekday nights, Klawunn added. “There were a lot of activities,” Klawunn explained, noting freshmen meetings with advisers, class meetings and academic seminars based continued on page 4
Rahul Keerthi / Herald
Students from the Middle East debate the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and American foreign policy, among other issues, with the College Republicans and Brown Dems.
State Dept. brings Middle East students to campus By Franklin Kanin Senior Staff Writer
Fourteen youth delegates from the Middle East visited Brown yesterday as part of a U.S. State Departmentsponsored cultural exchange intended to expose students to American society and political culture. Their visit included a tour of campus, an information session about American journalism at The Herald and a conversation with both the College Republicans and Brown Democrats. The State Department’s International Visitor Leadership Program,
S i x Y ears L ater
which coordinated the visit, brings leaders from around the world to the United States to experience “civic life,” including “pluralism, tolerance, and volunteerism” according to its Web site. The group that visited Brown also went to Washington, D.C., Seattle, Austin and Dallas, and included students and young professionals from 10 countries — Syria, Jordan and Yemen among them. The Middle Eastern participants are all youth leaders in their home communities, said Kate Green, outgoing director of the Rhode Island International Visitor Program.
A new Brown-Rhode Island School of Design joint degree program, which will award students a bachelor’s degree from Brown and a bachelor of fine arts degree from RISD, is now accepting applications for the fall of 2008. The five-year program has been approved by the governing boards, trustees and faculties of both schools and will officially come into existence later this month when both schools’ presidents sign a legal document. Previous efforts to create such a program could not reconcile the schools’ different schedules — the universities’ terms start and end at different times, and RISD has a short winter term in between its fall and spring terms. To solve this problem, students will alternate se-
Rahul Keerthi/Herald American flags on the Main Green commemorate the six-year anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
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media in their home countries. Rawan Sweis, a senior studying chemical engineering at Al Balqa’ Applied University in Jordan, was surprised that in the United State “everything is organized.” She noted the “Walk” and “Don’t Walk” signs she found in each American town she visited. “We have them only in the capital, not everywhere,” she said. Iyad Yacoub and Aya Malas from Damascus, Syria, said they came to the United States to learn about American non-governmental orgacontinued on page 8
Brown-RISD dual degree to begin fall 2008 By Isabel Gottlieb Senior Staff Writer
LIl’ rhody ain’t big Rhode Island is the sixthleast obese state in the union, according to a nationwide study.
Alaedeen Atiga, a student of business and information technology at Informatics College at the University of Libya, said came to the United States to give a more accurate portrayal of Libya and the Middle East to Americans. Many Americans he met during the trip did not even know Libya exists, he said. “One American asked me if we had an airport. A lot of them think we live in the desert and ride camels,” Atiga said. Other students in the delegation said they were somewhat surprised by how the United States differed from the image the portrayed by the
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CAMPUS NEWS
the moldy blues A Brown professor discovered a link between household mold and depression.
mesters between the two schools, living and taking classes at only one school at a time to avoid having to juggle the two universities’ different schedules. Dual-degree candidates will spend their first year at RISD to complete the freshman foundation requirements. Students may then spend any semester on either campus, as long as their five years are ultimately split evenly between both schools. For the next five years — the pilot phase of the degree program — a maximum of 20 students will enroll in each class. At the end of that period, administrators will re-evaluate and decide whether to expand the program. Currently, the program only accepts first-year students, not transfers. Each dual-degree candidate will have two advisers, one from each university. While they can select con-
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OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
‘Law and order’ man Adam Cambier ‘09 gives the “Law and Order” lover’s take on the presidential hopes of Fred Thompson.
centrations in any area, Brown-RISD students must complete at least one concentration at each school. Students will declare concentrations after their third year — as opposed to Brown students, who must declare after their second years — and will receive concentration advisers then. “Someone could major in, for example, industrial design with an emphasis on sciences from Brown. Some students may be preparing themselves to be doctors and could study design elements of the human body and use visual training to become really extraordinary doctors,” said RISD President Roger Mandle. “I could imagine someone developing a whole new approach to space exploration. ... To me, (these possibilities) are one of the most interesting aspects of this.” continued on page 5
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VAULTING TO FAME Record-holding gymnast Alicia Sacramone ’10 has decided to become professional.
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