The Brown Daily Herald Wednesday, N ovember 7, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 105
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
Spring Weekend to move a week earlier to dodge Passover By Meha Verghese Staff Writer
Brown’s Spring Weekend — the traditional four-day extravaganza of music, food and drink — will take place from April 10 to 13 this year, a week earlier than usual. This spring, the start of the Jewish holiday Passover falls during the third weekend of April, which is when the University usually schedules Spring Weekend, said Ricky Gresh, director of student activities. “We tr y to schedule (Spring Weekend) several years in advance,” Gresh said, but this year’s conflict was not discovered until the summer. “We discovered that the calendar that was consulted a few years ago had an error in it,” he said. Changing the dates was not difficult, Gresh said. There were no conflicts, since the problem was discovered before the Scheduling Office began booking the use of public spaces for the academic year. Spring Weekend coincided with Passover in 2005 and with Eastern Orthodox Easter in 2006, and some
Course Announcement Bulletin to return, the registrar tells the faculty By Michael Bechek and Michael Skocpol Senior Staf f Writers
ing to University Chaplain Janet Cooper Nelson. The Pew survey, published in January, found that 20 percent of 18- to 25-year-olds identify as atheist, agnostic or nonreligious — twice the percentage found in the 1980’s. Cooper Nelson said, since she came to Brown in 1990, about 5 percent of Brown students identify themselves each year as “atheist/agnostic” on surveys given to
Members of the Corporation, Brown’s highest governing body, have insisted that improving and expanding student housing figure more prominently into the University’s plans for the near future, President Ruth Simmons told the faculty Tuesday. University officials had expected to abandon plans to construct a new residence hall in response to the unexpected cost of replacing the moribund Smith Swim Center, Simmons indicated, instead choosing to prioritize improvements in other areas. At its monthly meeting Tuesday, the faculty also heard from University Registrar Michael Pesta that Brown will publish a printed course announcement bulletin for the 2008-2009 academic year, after determining that its elimination this year had exacerbated students’ difficulties with the transition to the new Banner online registration system. “This will be known as the year without a course announcement,” Pesta told a faculty member who said he had heard “a lot of blowback from students” about its absence this year. The new bulletin will be available to students in April, in time for pre-registration for the Fall 2008 semester. Reporting on the October meeting of the Corporation, Simmons
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File photo courtesy of Zachary Marcus
At last year’s Spring Weekend, students listened to the Flaming Lips amid blue balloons, distributed by the headliners.
students had to choose between attending religious services or Spring Weekend events, said Megan Nesbitt, assistant director of Hillel.
“Since then, the Office of Student Activities has been in touch with religious communities to find out the dates of Eastern Orthodox
Easter, Easter and Passover in an attempt to avoid overlapping Spring continued on page 4
Faithlessness on the rise? By Joanna Sharpless Contributing Writer
Herald File Photo
President Ruth Simmons, pictured here at UCS last year, will attend Wednesday’s general body meeting.
Simmons to speak at UCS By Franklin Kanin Senior Staf f Writer
Students who stop by Petteruti Lounge tonight to share their views on the student activities fee increase — which will be voted on tonight — at the general body meeting of the Undergraduate Council of Students will be disappointed. The meeting will take place in Leung Gallery to accommodate the crowd that the council hopes President Ruth Simmons will draw. Tonight Simmons will discuss the Plan for Academic Enrichment and seek student feedback on her administration’s initiatives. “(Simmons) is doing this review of the plan to present to the Corporation in February. This is sort of the prime time for student feedback,” said UCS President Michael Glassman ’09. “What’s missing from the original plan that needs to be focused on? This is a great opportunity for us to say, ‘Housing has really
INSIDE:
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CAMPUS WATCH
www.browndailyherald.com
New dorm back on the agenda
been neglected,’ for example.” Glassman said he hopes the discussion will serve as a chance for students to interact with Simmons about the plan, and not just listen to the president describe the plan. UCS members have already been given background information on the plan so they will be knowledgeable about the topics of the discussion. “The intention is to avoid, ‘What’s the Plan for Academic Enrichment?’ We really want to spend time having people talk to her and giving her feedback,” Glassman said. Simmons will be accompanied by other University administrators, including Executive Vice President for Planning and Senior Adviser to the President Richard Spies, Assistant to the President Marisa Quinn, Interim Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services Russell Carey ’91 MA’06 and Associate Vice President for Campus Life continued on page 6
CORNELL CASH Cornell is investing $20 million to help develop public transit and affordable housing in Ithaca.
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CAMPUS NEWS
FAITH ON CAMPUS
Is God losing ground in the crusade for college students’ faith? More and more collegeaged Americans are identifying themselves as atheist, agnostic or nonreligious, according to a recent survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press. But this trend may not hold water at Brown. Atheists on Brown’s campus have not noticeably increased over recent years, and the percentage of Brown students who actively identify as “atheist/agnostic” is actually smaller than the national numbers reported by Pew, accord-
second in a series on religious life at the University
Chuck Norris to roundhouse kick bookstores this month By Nick Werle Senior Staff Writer
Ian Spector ’09 is not a fan of Chuck Norris, the fetishized action star who has been the subject of thousands of jokes over the last few years. “I haven’t to date seen any movie with him except for Dodgeball,” Spector said. “But that doesn’t really count.” For most people, it might not be notable to have never seen an episode of “Walker, Texas Ranger,” but Spector is the creator of the famous Web site “Chuck Norris Random Fact Generator,” and is releasing a book, “The Truth About Chuck Norris: 400 Facts About the World’s Greatest Human,” Nov. 29 that includes the best “facts” from his database. Though several imitations have sprung up on the Web, peddling jokes about Chuck Norris’ viril-
THE UEL’s DISCONTENT Some students and professors are organizing to save the Urban Environmental Lab.
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OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
Oona Curley / Herald
“Chuck Norris Fact Generator” creator Ian Spector ’09 is releasing a book of the “facts.”
ity and fighting skills, Spector’s is widely acknowledged as the first. Indeed, he has been featured in numerous newspapers and on tele-
CAMBIER RESPONDS Adam Cambier ‘09 responds to critics of his recent oped on Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron.
vision shows including “Nightline” and a VH1 special on Internet sucontinued on page 6
12 SPORTS
m. WATER POLO FALLS Men’s water polo lost over the weekend to St. Francis College at the Northern Division Championship.
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