The Brown Daily Herald F riday, O ctober 19, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 92
Iraq war comes to Brown in the first person this weekend By Chaz Firestone Senior Staff Writer
Journalists, soldiers, activists, authors, bloggers, lecturers and filmmakers will descend on campus this weekend with one common theme: The war in Iraq. A two-day conference sponsored by the Watson Institute for International Studies, “Front Line, First Person: Iraq War Stories,” will feature first-hand, uncensored accounts of the war from soldiers and embedded journalists who have returned to the United States to tell their stories. The conference will feature military blogger and author Matthew Burden, former U.S. Sen. Lincoln Chafee ’75 and award-winning blogger Colby Buzzell, a former soldier who blogged from the front lines and then released his stories in a book titled “My War: Killing Time in Iraq.” Also speaking will be documentarian Deborah Scranton ’84, whose critically acclaimed 2006 film, “The War Tapes,” won the Tribeca Film Festival’s “Best Documentar y” award and was shortlisted for an Academy Award nomination. “The War Tapes” was shot by 21 active continued on page 4
U. to begin search for VP for campus life
Bergeron’s reshuffling fuels more departures, and questions arise By Michael Bechek Senior Staff Writer
Since Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron began an overhaul of her office’s organization about a year ago, at least five of her deputies have resigned or been fired, including two experienced deans and a research analyst who were driven to seek other jobs because they did not like the changes Bergeron had made. Steven Cornish MA’70, an associate dean who became the dean of first-year studies in 2006, left the
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office over the summer to become the associate dean for curriculum at Bowdoin College. His departure followed that of colleague Robert Shaw, who left in June to become the dean of the school of education at Westminster College in Salt Lake City. This month, Daniel Gilbert, a research and financial analyst in the dean of the College’s office, quit his post to become a financial and administrative manager at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. Cornish told The Herald he believed Gilbert had
chosen to leave because of the restructuring. Gilbert could not be reached at the telephone number listed for him on Harvard’s Web site. “There was no recognition or respect given to the good work that was done prior to the restructuring,” Cornish said in a phone interview, adding that though the decision to restructure the office “didn’t make much sense,” deans felt powerless to do anything about it. The high turnover has put added pressure on the dean of the College’s office, which had already lost
several deans immediately prior to Bergeron taking office in July 2006. The restructuring has further aggravated the difficulties the office faces by putting most deans in new positions with additional responsibilities and has forced the more experienced deans to shoulder a heavier workload, current and former administrators say. Cornish’s sudden departure followed that of Shaw and of two executive associate deans, Perry Ashley and Jonathan Waage, who continued on page 6
Baby geniuses? Speaker goes inside the secret lives of infants By Leslie Primack Contributing Writer
Flanked by two 10-foot-tall photographs of smiling babies, guest speaker Carolyn Rovee-Collier PhD’66 delivered a lecture last night on “The Secret Life of Infants.” The Rutgers University professor of psychology described her radical work on infant memory, including her discovery that babies as young as six weeks old can learn and remember. “She is one of the premier authorities on infant learning and development, and specifically on children’s memory,” said Lewis Lipsitt, professor emeritus of psychology and founder of what is now Brown’s Center for the Study of Human Development. Lipsitt told The Herald that Rovee-Collier made the groundbreaking discovery that pre-verbal infants can remember things. “This may seem like a very obvious thing to people nowadays,” he said, “but at one time it was presumed that babies were just a blob, or as William James called it ... ‘a booming buzzing
By Debbie Lehmann Senior Staff Writer
As the two-year term for Interim Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services Russell Carey ’91 MA’06 nears its end, the University will begin a national search next month for a candidate to permanently fill the position. Carey was appointed in the summer of 2006, after David Greene resigned to become vice president for strategic initiatives at the University of Chicago. President Ruth Simmons told The Herald in September 2006 that Carey, who has been at the University for almost two decades, was more “deeply committed” to Brown. Though his appointment is temporar y, Simmons gave Carey full authority as head of campus life to ensure that campus life initiatives continue smoothly. Simmons also said last year that a two-year term would allow time for student input in the search for a permanent head of campus life. Undergraduate Council of Students President Michael Glassman ’08 said he would meet with Simmons next week to discuss oppor-
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Rutgers University psychology professor Carolyn Rovee-Collier lectured Thursday on infant learning and development.
confusion.’ ” Rovee-Collier described in her lecture how she and her colleagues outfitted infants with ribbons tied to their ankles, allowing them to control an overhead mobile by kicking their foot. Infants as young as six weeks
old caught on within 15 minutes and began moving their feet more, causing the mobile to swing. This evidence of positive reinforcement in infants flew in the face of all previous infant research. Jean Piaget, a leader in child psychology,
By Simon van Zuylen-Wood Staff Writer
Unlike conservatives, liberals have neglected to connect moral values with their political platform, Peter Beinart, editor-at-large of the New Republic magazine told a Salomon 001 audience Thursday night. In a lecture co-sponsored by the Brown Democrats and Brown Students for Israel and called “Why Liberal Values are Moral Values,” Beinart opened by saying his inspiration for the speech was President Bush, who Beinart said won the 2004 election in part because voters could identify his beliefs. “Liberals are great at talking about policies but bad at talking about what they believe,” Beinart said. “When I talk to conservatives in Washington, I ask them, ‘Tell me a good book that shapes what it means for you to be a conservative.’ You ask liberals by and large, and you get nothing at all.” Beinart said his problem with
Meara Sharma / Herald Visiting Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior Rachel Herz read from her book “The Secent of Desire” on Thursday evening at the Brown Bookstore.
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JINDAL JUST MIGHT U.S. Rep. Bobby Jindal ‘91.5, R-La., could become the governor of Louisiana in Saturday’s election.
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Beinart: Liberals must better articulate fundamental beliefs
THE NOSE KNOWS
Devilishly good Sock and Buskin’s “City of Angels” brings film noir and mystery to Stuart Theater.
had claimed that infants could not learn until five or six months of age, Rovee-Collier said. Rovee-Collier’s findings encountered much resistance, she said. It
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Opinions extra James Shapiro ‘10 likens Ratty-nomics to America’s healthcare system and Renata Sago ‘10 probes the pot.
liberals today is not their ideology, but their lack of identifiable values. “If you look at who communists were really mad at, it was liberals, because liberals had the ability to humanize capitalism,” Beinart said, adding that liberals could be even more successful furthering social progress if they expressed as much concern about family values as conservatives. “I think the reason America has become a coarser society is because Americans don’t spend as much time with their children as they used to,” he said. While Beinart said he holds liberals accountable for ignoring values, he also blames conservatives for addressing morals too generally. Beinart said that in the face of the Abu Ghraib prison torture accusations, “the more George Bush talks about his deep love of freedom, the less credibility it has all over the world.” continued on page 4
16 SPORTS
flippin’ in The men’s soccer team’s Darren Howerton ‘09 dishes about his signature flip throw-in.
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