The Brown Daily Herald M onday, N ovember 26, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 114
12 more students targeted by RIAA for file sharing
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
URC considers budget, student activities fee
B ig T en bounced
By Nick Werle Senior Staff Writer
The Recording Industry Association of America, a trade group representing the country’s major record labels, sent pre-litigation letters to 12 Brown students who the RIAA alleges were engaged in illegal file sharing. These letters, which the University received on Nov. 14, were sent as part of the organization’s 10th wave of such notices — in April, a group of 12 Brown students received similar letters. The letters notify students that if they do not pay a penalty online within 20 days, the RIAA will file a lawsuit. The 12 letters sent to Brown this month were some of the 417 letters sent to students at 16 campuses across the country. Although the letters were sent to a range of schools, Brown’s peers appear to have been hit particularly hard: Six of the eight Ivy League schools received letters this month. Eleven of the 12 Brown students contacted by the RIAA were undergraduates who were allegedly downloading from their dorm rooms. The other was a summer student. The letters are part of an ongoing campaign by the RIAA to target university students engaging in illegal file-sharing. “I think universities are an easy target because we provide a lot of bandwidth for our students,” said Director of Information Technology Security Connie Sadler. “We consider ourselves an Internet service provider for students who live in the dorms. ... It’s easier for them to work with and target universities than to target Internet service providers in general because other ISPs provide continued on page 4
By Chaz Kelsh Staff Writer
But stem cell research has been met with as much controversy as promise. The traditional
Complaints about funding for student activities dominated last Monday night’s open forum of the University Resources Committee. The URC, comprised of students, faculty and staff, advises the president and the Corporation on the University’s annual budget. The open forum, held in Salomon 001, was the URC’s second of the semester and lasted less than a half hour. Provost David Kertzer ’69 P’95 P’98, who chairs the URC, led the forum, which was attended by about 20 people. The limited turnout may have been due to a concurrent University meeting, the Task Force on Undergraduate Education’s forum, featuring Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron and President Ruth Simmons. Graham Anderson ’10, the first speaker, argued that student activities should receive University funding beyond the student activities fee, citing the recent cut of the Critical Review’s print run due to the budgeting constraints of the activities fee. The student activities fee, paid by all undergraduates, makes up the budget for the Undergraduate Finance Board, which then distributes funds to student groups. Kertzer responded to Anderson’s concerns by saying the University has implemented some changes intended to increase the funding available to student groups, such as removing club sports from UFB’s responsibilities. Clay Wertheimer ’10, an at-large member of the Undergraduate Coun-
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Kori Schulman / Herald Damon Huffman takes a shot against Northwestern on Saturday. The men’s basketball team knocked off the Wildcats in their own gym for its second victory of the season.
Breakthrough may end stem cell research war By Chaz Firestone Senior Staf f Writer
If James Thompson and Shinya Yamanaka are right, presidential hopefuls will soon have one less “war” to talk about. The two molecular biologists and their teams at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Japan’s Kyoto University, respectively, announced last Tuesday they had reprogrammed regular human skin cells to mimic stem cells, sidestepping the usual ethicallycharged process of destroying human embryos. “It is earth-shattering,” said Professor of Biology Ken Miller ’70 P’02, who also commented
on the news for PBS NewsHour. “The barriers of cost, technology and getting regulatory approval have now dropped by an order of magnitude.” Stem cells are found in developing organisms and have the unique ability to transform into any other cell type the organism needs — in humans, this amounts to over 200 cell types, including heart muscle, insulin-secreting cells of the pancreas and even neurons in the brain. In the last decade, these blank slates of development have been targeted for therapeutic use, with hopes that stem cells could one day repair damaged tissue or even grow organs for transplant.
Courtey of anl.gov
The moral issues surrounding embryonic stem cells (pictured) will no longer be under the microscope if the new method of producing them from skin cells can be perfected.
ROTC exchange with PC Curriculum requirements are offdown to a lone student limits for Task Force, Bergeron says By Michael Skocpol Senior Staff Writer
Among Brown’s nearly 6,000 undergraduates, Adam Swartzbaugh ’09 is unique — he’s the lone student currently enrolled in the Army Reserve Officer Training Corps program at Providence College. Since 1971, when Brown’s own ROTC program was ended amid protests against the Vietnam War, the Providence College’s Patriot Battalion has served students interested in preparing for military leadership. But since the mid-1990s, Brown undergrads’ participation in the program has dwindled down to almost nothing. Last spring, some debate over the program arose on campus as a student group formed to advocate for ROTC’s return to campus, while others came out against the idea. Currently, fewer Brown students participate in ROTC than students at
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any other school in the Ivy League, which itself trails other institutions across the country in participation figures. Among the Ancient Eight, only Cornell and Princeton universities have an active Army ROTC program on campus (the University of Pennsylvania has a Navy ROTC program) — the others, like Brown, send students to programs at nearby schools. ROTC programs require students to complete militar y leadership courses, field exercises and physical training while in school and pledge to serve in the officer corps following graduation. ROTC students are eligible to receive merit scholarships up to full tuition. ROTC’s purpose — according Lt. Col. Paul Dulchinos, who heads the Providence College program — is to inject leaders who have a liberal arts education into an officer corps continued on page 9
THE NUDE CREW Some students earn extra cash by posing as nude models for art classes at Brown and outside groups.
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CAMPUS NEWS
By Franklin Kanin Senior Staff Writer
Before packing their bags to head home for Thanksgiving, some students made a pit stop at Marcuvitz Auditorium in the Sidney Frank Hall for Life Sciences last Monday night to meet with members of the Task Force on Undergraduate Education, where discussion focused on the troubled state of undergraduate advising. The task force, which is undertaking a broad review of the College and its curriculum, comprises 10 faculty members and four undergraduates and will release a preliminary report of its findings early next semester for campus review. Last week’s open meeting was intended for students to give the committee feedback and receive answers to any questions they might have before the preliminary report is written.
ROBBED AT GUNPOINT A student was robbed by two men, one armed with a gun, near campus early Saturday morning.
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OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
Meara Sharma / Herald
Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron and UCS President Michael Glassman fielded questions.
In her opening remarks, Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron assured the audience that the task force has never discussed intro-
EMPOWER GOES GREEN In a pair of guest columns, members of emPOWER discuss environmental policy on campus and beyond.
ducing requirements to the open curriculum. continued on page 4
12 SPORTS
M. HOCKEY FALLS The men’s hockey team was out of its league when it took on the University of New Hampshire.
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