The Brown Daily Herald T uesday, F ebr uar y 12, 2008
Volume CXLIII, No. 15
U. starts Cuba abroad program Fall term will coincide with revolution anniversary By Caroline Sedano Senior Staff Writer
Though the average American can’t travel to Cuba, 10 Brown students will have the opportunity to spend next semester in Havana studying with 10 Cuban students at the Casa de Las Americas, taught entirely by Cuban professors. “This is the perfect opportunity to look at the past, present and future of Cuba while sitting next to Cuban nationals,” said Kendall Brostuen, director of international programs and associate dean of the College. Brostuen began working with the Center for Latin American Studies a year and a half ago on this program, which may be an option for Spanish-speaking students every fall semester. The program— which will charge Brown’s tuition plus $1,000 for room and board — has already generated a lot of student interest, and Brosten said he expects it to be competitive. Brown has a license from the Department of the Treasury authorizing semester programs in Cuba for its students, Brostuen said, meaning students can travel only by going through Brown’s program. There were once more University programs that allowed students to travel and study in Cuba, Brosuten said, but the Treasur y tightened the restrictions on Cuban study abroad programs in 2004. Many schools could not maintain their programs due to these changes, and now only a handful of schools, including the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Har vard and Sarah Lawrence College have programs for students in Cuba, Brostuen said. Brostuen said the University ad-
heres “scrupulously” to the restrictions, informing the Treasury when faculty or graduate students travel to the country. Adrian Lopez-Denis, a postdoctoral fellow in international humanities who was born in Cuba and came to the United States in 2000, said Cuban study abroad programs flourished during the Clinton administration but became harder and harder to maintain during the Bush administration. “The issue is not connected to study abroad programs specifically but tied to the Cuban-American relations, which are ver y intense,” Lopez-Denis said. He added that while “academically these restrictions on the programs are good news,” because those approved programs would likely be good ones, he said he regrets that “not as many people are going to have access.” Lopez-Denis, who said he came to Brown last semester because he knew this program was in the making, will be in Cuba during the next fall semester and will teach one of the four classes that students will take. He first became involved in American programs in Cuba when he was a student, he said. “That’s why I insisted for the Cuban students, because I am a product of a program just like this,” he said. Because the 10 American students will be taking their four classes together with Cuban students, Lopez-Denis said he expects there to be a unique opportunity for Brown students to see the city and experience the culture from the Cuban perspective. “Having Cuban students as classmates will make for a ver y fast foot in the door,” Lopez-Denis said. “Students will be exposed to the official views and the commoncontinued on page 6
s e e k ing a po t t e r y b a rn
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More than 100 students have joined a Facebook group that is urging the University to build a pottery studio. SEE CAMPUS NEWS, PAGE 5
Enrollment falls for first-year seminars By Michael Skocpol News Editor
When the University’s first-year seminar program was unveiled in 2002, it was hailed as a seminal success of President Ruth Simmons’ wide-ranging Plan for Academic Enrichment. Now, the flagship program may be losing some of the wind in its sails. According to preliminary figures provided by University Registrar Michael Pesta, first-year seminar enrollment dropped about 8 percent for the 2007-08 academic year, checking four straight years
Holbrooke ’62 talks campaign in study group By Chaz Kelsh Senior Staff Writer
Professor-at-large Richard Holbrooke ’62, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and former Herald editor-in-chief, conducted the first of three study groups for about 35 students at the Joukowsky Forum of the Watson Institute for International Studies Monday evening. Holbrooke, who ser ves as a policy adviser to the presidential campaign of Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., spoke about the campaign and its potential effect on U.S. policy on the war in Iraq. Holbrooke said he plans to direct the next meeting of the study group, which will be held on March 10, to other foreign policy issues that candidates must address. Holbrooke has ser ved as the U.S. ambassador to both Germany and the U.N. He served as assistant secretary of state to both Asia and Europe and was instrumental in brokering the 1995 Dayton Peace
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of expansion following the program’s inception . As of Feb. 4, the day before the end of online registration, a total of 817 students had enrolled in first year seminars in the Fall 2007 and Spring 2008 semesters, down from 891 during the 2006-07 academic year. If enrollment holds steady, it will be the lowest total since 2003-04, the second year of the program, when 750 students enrolled. (Subsequent changes in enrollment should be “minimal,” since the data were from near the end of shopping period, Pesta wrote in an e-mail to The Herald.)
Professor-at-large Richard Holbrooke ‘62, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, led the first of three study groups Monday evening. Accords that ended the war in Bosnia. For students, the study group was intended to “bring a perspective they might not normally get from a regular professor,” said Geoffrey
NOISE MAKERS Students living off-campus incite complaints from neighbors
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CAMPUS NEWS
Kirkman ’91, associate director of the Watson Institute. The institute has offered similar groups with former Chilean presicontinued on page 6
THE ZEN OF LAW Lawyer Charles Halpern speaks on activism and meditation
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continued on page 4
Simmons will deliver Union College graduation speech By Sophia Li Senior Staff Writer
Meara Sharma / Herald
James Valles, the associate dean of the college for curriculum, oversees the first-year seminar program for the Office of the Dean of the College. He said he did not believe the decline was a cause for concern or that it signaled flagging interest in the program. The decline in total enrollment, he said, was due to a “slight drop” in the total number of seminars offered. Fifty-six seminars were on the list provided by Pesta, compared with 63 offered in 2006-07. The data from previous years were provided by the Office of the
Speaking gigs
President Ruth Simmons will deliver this year’s commencement address at Union College, a small liberal arts school in upstate New York. Simmons, who will speak on June 15, will also receive an honorary doctorate in humane letters from Union, according to a Feb. 6 press release from the college. “She’s widely recognized as a leader in higher education,” said Phillip Wajda, director of media and public relations at Union. “She’s someone whom many people admire.” Wajda said Union invited Simmons on Dec. 6, and she accepted the invitation on Jan. 11. “We’re extremely fortunate that she’s chosen to accept our invitation,” he said, “and we’re very excited to hear her message to the
cpac. c pac run. Sean Quigley ‘10: GOP can’t take the conservative vote for granted
Simmons’ other commencement speeches: 2007: Spelman College 2006: Miami Dade College, Morehouse College 2005: U. of Vermont 2004: Tougaloo College, U. of Toronto 2003: U. of Southern California 2002: George Washington U., Washington U. campus community.” Marisa Quinn, assistant to the president, said Simmons decided to accept the college’s invitation because several Union alumni she knew “have spoken very highly of it.” Simmons has not decided on a topic for the speech yet, she said. continued on page 6
tomorrow’s weather Cold and wet again. Is it too late to sign up for the Cuba trip?
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