The Brown Daily Herald T uesday, S eptember 18, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 70
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
Sciences losing concentrators at high rate By Michael Bechek Senior Staff Writer
In response to finding that prospective science concentrators frequently lack necessary support and abandon the sciences at an alarmingly high rate, the University should create a center on campus to provide academic tutoring, advising and a sense of community for such students, the Undergraduate Science Education Committee recommends in its report, to be released today. The committee also recommends curricular innovation to enhance the multidisciplinary appeal of introduc-
tory science courses, increased funding for undergraduate research and an improved effort to recruit top high school students who plan to concentrate in the so-called “STEM” — science, technology, engineering and math — fields. An undergraduate science resource center, the committee advises, could serve as a “home base and catalyst” for these planned initiatives. More than just a useful way of centralizing undergraduate science initiatives, the 54-page report says, the center should be “a highly visible University-wide effort that would give science students continuous sup-
port” — assistance in finding tutoring, concentration advising, research opportunities and career advice. Such a center “would be particularly important in their first two years,” the report added. The committee identified the creation of the center as the most pressing need and recommended that it be established and become operational in a temporary campus space as soon as possible — probably this semester. “I was surprised that it was the number-one priority,” Dean of the continued on page 4
Despite devotees, iPhone reception weak By Cameron Lee Staf f Writer
Chris Bennett / Herald Richard Holbrooke ’62, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and a Brown professor-at-large, spoke Monday at the Watson Institute for International Studies.
Since its release in late June, critics have heaped praise on Apple Inc.’s iPhone, with the Wall Street Journal’s Walter Mossberg calling the device a “breakthrough handheld computer.” But Theo Frechette ’09.5 wanted to experience the new technology for himself. The day the iPhone launched, Frechette was among the many Apple fanatics waiting in line at a Boston Apple store, eager to be one of the first to get his hands on Apple’s latest gadget. “I was incredibly excited about (the iPhone) from the moment Steve Jobs gave the keynote (announcing it) in January,” Frechette said. He admitted that waiting for eight hours — when the store actually had plenty of iPhones — may have been excessive. Benjamin Schnapp ’07 MD ’11 was also at an Apple Store on June 29, but he was on the other side of the counter as an employee. Schnapp, who worked at Providence Place from September 2006 until August 2007, said lines for the iPhone
Former U.N. amb. recalls heated times on College Hill By Simmi Aujla Metro Editor Forty-six years ago, Richard Holbrooke ’62 put an ad on the fourth page of The Brown Daily Herald. “The Brown Daily Herald presents Malcolm X,” read the ad. “Tickets on sale — Faunce House Office.” Then an aspiring journalist and editor-in-chief of The Herald, Holbrooke said Monday — on his first visit to campus since he was appointed a professor-at-large in February — that he was drawn into a decades-long career in foreign service because of the national and international issues he faced as a Brown student. Holbrooke started his on-and-off government career in the Foreign Service in Vietnam just after gradu-
ating from Brown. More than 30 years later, at President Bill Clinton’s charge, he helped broker the Dayton peace accords, ending the brutal fighting in Bosnia in the 1990s. He had previously spent a stint as ambassador to Germany and later served as the United States’ ambassador to the United Nations. Appointed to his professor-atlarge post at the Watson Institute for International Studies last semester, Holbrooke spoke to about 30 students Monday evening about current foreign policy challenges, such as the war in Iraq. Holbrooke will return to College Hill in October and December to deliver speeches and lead undergraduate seminars. continued on page 5
e x a mining th e constitution
Kimberly Perley / Herald
Owners of the iPhone give the device rave reviews, but the hyped Apple product isn’t frequently spotted on campus.
stretched almost the entire length of the mall, and anticipation in the line was high. “(The Apple Store) blacked the windows,” he said. “It was ver y exciting, watching the throngs of
Chris Bennett / Herald Randy Barnett, a Georgetown University law professor, delivered the Constitution Day lecture, organized by Brown’s Political Theory Project.
INSIDE:
3
METRO
www.browndailyherald.com
5
CAMPUS NEWS
Q&A with Holbrooke The Herald brings you an exclusive interview with the former ambassador to the United Nations.
continued on page 7
Hickey ’08 squashes ‘Banner bug’ By Chaz Firestone Senior Staf f Writer
Rock Fellow REpublicAns Former Cranston Mayor Stephen Laffey lambastes the national GOP.
people in front of the store.” As an Apple Store employee, Schnapp was able to use the iPhone before it was officially released and
Imagine you have just logged into your Banner account. Moments later, you receive an e-mail that reads “check out this cool video!” followed by an innocent-looking hyperlink. You click the link as your Banner window sits in the background, but the site doesn’t seem to load, so you shrug it off and continue with Banner, registering for that last class you had been shopping. But little do you know that you’ve just become a victim of theft. Your home address, academic transcript and private financial aid information have been sent to a neighboring room or a different state or country. Your classes have been dropped. And as you stroll out the room with naive confidence, your most precious information sails out, too.
11
OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
OPINIONS Zack Beauchamp ’10 argues the GOP doesn’t have the bite to match its rhetoric on terror.
Thanks to Brendan Hickey ’08, you can rest easy. Hickey’s discovery of this potentially detrimental attack and its subsequent patching — just days before registration period began — means students at Brown and the hundreds of other schools using Banner software needn’t worry. Hickey, a computer security enthusiast, discovered the threat in late August while working on a summer project at Brown. After encountering an error message in Banner, Hickey used his intimate knowledge of Web security to identify a loophole that would allow for a bug called CSRF, or a cross-site request forgery. “The idea is that a student is using Banner, and you send them a link to another site that can execute actions as if it were the student,” Hickey said. “It could force somecontinued on page 6
12 SPORTS
Sick Days Despite sore throats, the volleyball team survived a tournament without going on sick leave.
News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com