The Brown Daily Herald T hursday, N ovember 8, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 106
Simmons speaks frankly at UCS meeting
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
Pataki stresses the need for political common ground By Irene Chen Senior Staff Writer
Tai Ho Shin / Herald
Former New York Gov. George Pataki seemed right at home Wednesday when he spoke to a half-full Salomon 101 audience that responded enthusiastically when the former governor asked how many people were from his home state. He then jokingly asked the Yankees fans in the crowd if he had missed the World Series this year. (The Yankees have won more World Series championships than any other baseball franchise but were not featured in this year’s match-up). Pataki also referred to his slight discomfort of speaking at Brown as a member of the Republican Party. But he was comforted, he said, when he stepped into Blue State Coffee and found common ground simply with a good cup of coffee. “I was a little nervous because I was a conservative Republican from New York ... and I was told that when Hilary Clinton spoke here, she was booed because she wasn’t liberal enough.” In March 2006, about a half-dozen activists protested Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., before she delivered a speech in Meehan Auditorium. Pataki served three terms as governor of New York, beginning in 1994 and stepping down in 2006. Pataki’s speech, a part of the Noah
Former New York Gov. George Pataki delivered the annual Krieger Lecture in Salomon 101 Wednesday, addressing “A House Divided: A Look at Politics at the State and National Level.”
continued on page 5
By Sam Byker Staff Writer
President Ruth Simmons addressed a general body meeting of the Undergraduate Council of Students in Leung Gallery Wednesday night, taking questions on the Plan for Academic Enrichment in an open forum that touched on several contentious issues. The plan was approved by the Corporation in 2004 as the University’s blueprint for improving campus infrastructure and strengthening Brown’s academic profile. University officials have committed to releasing status reports approximately every six months. Feedback received at last night’s forum will be incorporated into the next report, due in January. Assistant to the President Marisa Quinn spoke first, citing several milestones the plan has already reached — Brown’s student-faculty ratio has decreased from 10-to-1 to 9-to-1, its need-blind financial aid policy now provides funds to 43 percent of Brown’s freshman class and applications to the Graduate School have jumped by 75 percent. “If you look back at the plan, all of this was aspirational,” Quinn said. “Now we’ve achieved so much of it.” Before opening the floor to questions, Simmons offered a brief statement praising UCS for its role in shaping the plan. UCS Corporation Liaison Martin Bell ’10 spoke first. “I had two friends who have now transferred from Brown” due to the closure of the Smith Swim Center, Bell said. A new facility isn’t expected to open until 2010. “I have to wonder, would it take this long at Princeton or Harvard?” “It would take longer there,” continued on page 6
UCS votes to increase student activities fee by $54 By Franklin Kanin Senior Staff Writer
After a heated dispute over parliamentary procedure, the Undergraduate Council of Students voted last night to recommend that the University Resources Committee increase the student activities fee by $54. The increase would bring the total fee from $146 to $200 per year.
The resolution also requested that the URC and Interim Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services Russell Carey ’91 MA’06 advocate the increase and that if the URC elects not to fully fund the requested increase, the committee present UCS with a written explanation. The body also resolved to change the name of the Social Fund — allocated to Category II and III groups
— to Baseline Funding. UCS Student Activities Chair Drew Madden ’10 proposed the resolution, which other council members sponsored and co-sponsored. While many members supported raising the fee, the council began its debate after Corporation Liaison Martin Bell ’10, a co-sponsor of the resolution, objected to passing the resolution in order to force a roll call vote.
During the debate, members questioned whether raising the student activities fee would be the best way to raise money for student groups and whether UCS had adequately solicited student reaction to the proposal. UCS Vice President Lauren Kolodny ’08 implored the council to vote in favor of the increase. “I continued on page 6
Too skinny for Brown? When eating disorders weigh students down, deans intervene By Elif Ince Contributing Writer
Rahul Keerthi / Herald
Eating disorders and disordered eating are major risks to students, affecting their academic, social and personal lives.
INSIDE: www.browndailyherald.com
post- blogs post- gets d’s, d-listed and drugged, in an epic quest for winter break and glory
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METRO
Yana had always been a perfectionist. She was the valedictorian of her high school, a straight-A student at Brown and one of the few students who did all of her reading before class. When fear of gaining the infamous freshman 15 crept in during her first semester on College Hill , her reaction, like most of her freshmen girlfriends, was to start dieting. As the semester went by, while her friends complained about the soft-serve they couldn’t avoid after dinner at the Ratty, Yana (her name has been changed in this article for privacy) found herself restricting more and more of what she ate. By the spring semester, Yana was waking up before class every morning to go to the Keeney gym. By the time bumpin’ teach Providence City Council considers the ethics of firing and rehiring, or bumping, local teachers.
summer came, she was throwing the slice of bread she had grabbed for breakfast into the trash after taking a bite out of it.
CHECK-UP Last in a series on the state of health at Brown “I recall thinking: ‘I wanted to be a doctor before I came to Brown, now I don’t. I used to be the smartest in my class, now I’m not. I had so many friends in high school, now I don’t,’ ” she said, remembering the transition from high school to college. “So many things were changing. I was changing. Eating was the only thing I still had control of.” When she came back to Brown for
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OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
dumbledore adore Lily Shield ’09 celebrates Dumbledore’s sexuality but wonders why the revelation didn’t come sooner.
her sophomore year, Yana weighed exactly 24 pounds less than she had the year before. Her friends were talking about her dramatic weight loss and her suite mates were tired of answering questions about her health, when her mother finally persuaded her to try day-treatment at a Providence psychotherapy clinic. “I accepted just to make my mom happy,” Yana said. “I didn’t think I had a problem.” After three days of sitting in group therapy with drug addicts and alcoholics, Yana told her doctor she wanted to leave. The doctor proposed calling Brown Health Services so Yana could schedule a monthly checkup to make sure she didn’t lose more weight. Yana took the phone and asked for a “weigh-in.” continued on page 4
12 SPORTS
lunge at the big one The men’s and women’s fencing teams brought home 11 medals from Saturday’s tournament.
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