Wednesday, January 30, 2008

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The Brown Daily Herald Wednesday, J anuar y 30, 2008

Volume CXLIII, No. 6

UCS focuses on going green

Since 1866, Daily Since 1891

Advising at center of task force report

A v o i d in g a bina r y

By Marielle Segarra Staf f Writer

Students, faculty can react at Feb. 4 forum

Now that the University has announced plans to reduce its carbon emissions, the Undergraduate Council of Students is looking for other ways to make Brown green. Along with setting greenhouse gas reduction goals to 42 percent below current levels by 2020, the University has begun to take further steps toward environmental progress, UCS President Michael Glassman ’09 told The Herald. UCS advocated for the emissions reduction goal, Glassman added in an e-mail to The Herald. The University will also work with UCS and other students and faculty to hold a “Brown is Green” conference in late April, said Lauren Kolodny ’08, UCS vice president. The conference aims to “start a dialogue” between campus groups working for environmental change, Kolodny said. Co-coordinator Dan MacCombie ’08.5, said the idea for “Brown is Green” sprang from a meeting with Marisa Quinn, assistant to the president, and several faculty members and students to discuss opportunities for uniting environmental activist groups on campus. The conference coordinators are hoping to enlist the help of Ira Magaziner ’69 P’06 P’07 P’10, who works as the chairman of the Clinton Foundation Policy Board and with the Clinton Global Initiative, “offering recommendations to governments as to how to make green changes,” Kolodny said. Glassman said Magaziner expressed interest in visiting the University during the semester to speak with students and make suggestions as to how Brown can

By George Miller Senior Staff Writer

these cases students are informed they did not pass inspection and are re-inspected soon after, Forsberg said. ResLife warns students they will be inspected 24 hours before their room inspection. “They found a power cord they didn’t like, and I put it in the closet. They came back later and that was that,” Jonathan Milestone ’11 said. Forsberg said he is aware that students may be attempting to get

The Task Force on Undergraduate Education released its preliminary report today, the first comprehensive evaluation of the New Curriculum in almost twenty years. Its recommendations, while wide-ranging, contained few surprises. The 48-page report, titled “The Curriculum at Forty: A Plan for Strengthening the College Experience at Brown,” is not final, members of the task force emphasized. It recommends culminating “capstone” experiences for all concentrators, Meiklejohn advisers for sophomores and increased faculty advising. “This is just a draft,” said task force member Kathleen McSharry, associate dean of the College for writing and issues of chemical dependency. “We need the entire community to be a part of the report.” The final report, due out in June, will form the backbone of the University’s self-study due this fall to its reaccreditation agency, the New England Association of Schools and Colleges. The task force, as it mentions in its report, sought feedback from students and others, including at a forum in November and through student surveys and a myCourses Web site. “I was very impressed by the student response in November,” said Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron, who chairs the task force. “People care.”

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Min Wu / Herald

Brown is considering a policy shift to allow upperclassmen to room in co-ed doubles. See Higher Ed, page 3

As inspections continue, so do violations By Caroline Sedano Senior Staff Writer

The Office of Residential Life has not seen much change in dorm health and safety violations, and students are still hiding things that violate its fire safety policies. “They never do much other than walk in and then walk out,” Leiszle Ziemba ’09 said. ResLife searches every room on campus once a year by plain sight inspections — meaning they don’t open drawers. “I’ve never really heard of anyone getting a big violation,

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but there are the horror stories of people being fined like $500 or something.” The only violations that warrant a fine are candles and halogen torchiere lamps. In January 2007, The Herald reported that nearly 20 percent of rooms had health and safety violations in the 2005-06 school year, totaling about $1,800 in fines. For the most part, however, the more common violations are wall hangings and extension cords, said Thomas Forsberg, associate director of housing and residential life. In

Student groups stump for their favorite candidates By Noura Choudhury Staff Writer

Though Rhode Island’s primary is still more than a month away, students are already turning out to support their favorite candidates. Political groups across campus are gearing up for Feb. 5 ­— Super Tuesday ­— when 24 states will hold primaries or caucuses. The goal of Brown Students for Barack Obama was to “hit the ground running,” said Herald Opinions Columnist Max Chaiken ’09, chapter coordinator. The group held its first meeting of the semester last week with 60 students in attendance, where approximately half of the attendees were newcomers to the group, and it has seen an increase in its number of listserv members

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HIGHER ED

since last semester. The group is part of a national organization founded early last year and is the most active chapter in the state, holding events almost daily since the start of the semester. “Our focus from last semester to this semester has changed a bit,” Chaiken said. “Primarily just because of the change in what we need to be doing to get Barack elected. That’s really the primary goal.” Though Brown Students for Barack Obama focused last semester on increasing its visibility on campus with events such as an open mic night at Blue State Coffee, the group is now focused on expanding Obama’s appeal to voters. Student volunteers hold phone banks on an almost nightly basis

ZIPPITY DOO DA Brown’s Zipcar contract may soon allow 18-yearolds to rent cars by the hour

www.browndailyherald.com

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CAMPUS NEWS

Kim Perley / Herald

Students and College Hill residents prominently display their allegiance to presidential candidates.

LOL! TALK 2 BROWN The Bruin Club seeks to expand its AIM networking program for prospective students

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OPINIONS

THE WHOLE ELEPHANT Nearing graduation, Chloe Lutts ‘08 argues in defense of liberal learning

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

tomorrow’s weather Sunny as student groups’ outlooks for their favored presidential candidates

sunny, 42 / 27 News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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