Friday, February 22, 2008

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The Brown Daily Herald F riday, F ebr uar y 22, 2008

Volume CXLIII, No. 21

Since 1866, Daily Since 1891

Corporation to review financial aid, set tuition

K n ockdow n , d r a gout

meeting since Harvard announced its new package in December, and the 54-person, bicameral body is expected to make some sort of financial aid decision this weekend. President Ruth Simmons told the faculty at a Feb. 5 meeting that next year’s budget may include a larger draw from the endowment and an increase in financial aid. As the Corporation deliberates financial aid changes Saturday, Students for a Democratic Society plans to demonstrate for better access to education outside University Hall Saturday — the first planned student demonstration related to the body’s agenda in recent memor y. The Corporation will meet Friday for a “retreat” strategy session at the Westin Hotel downtown. It will also hold an afternoon session on Friday to discuss the financial

By George Miller Senior Staff Writer

Ashley Hess / Herald

The heavy equipment worked on dismantling the moribund Smith Swim Center this week.

Bolton, Holbrooke ’62 face off over U.N. at Janus Forum By Michael Skocpol News Editor

Former U.N. ambassadors John Bolton and Professor-at-Large Richard Holbrooke ’62 outlined contrasting visions of the United Nations and its role in U.S. foreign policy to a crowded Salomon 101 Thursday afternoon. Bolton criticized the U.N.’s ineffectiveness, while Holbrooke highlighted its importance as a forum to advance U.S. interests. The U.N. is flawed and often corrupt, Bolton said. The only solution

to render it more effective and accountable is to allow member states to contribute funds voluntarily and for specific purposes they approve. Too often, the U.N. also seeks to exert influence on issues that should be left to the domestic political process, said Bolton, who was appointed to his post by President Bush in 2005. Holbrooke, a Clinton appointee, said the U.N. is “a flawed but vitally important institution” whose effectiveness and influence is only continued on page 7

Food is more than the sum of its parts, writer argues By Allison Wentz Staff Writer

Michael Pollan has a simple nutritional tip: “Don’t eat anything your great-grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food.” Pollan, a writer and professor of journalism at the University of California at Berkeley, shared this pointer with a full audience in Salomon 101 Thursday night during a lecture in which he argued that nutritional facts and science don’t always provide the best guide for how we should eat. Pollan spoke about and signed copies of his new best-selling book, “In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto.” He summed up his new book in seven words: “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.” “We had very good advice on how to eat before we had a science of food,” Pollan said, citing culture as what should determine what foods to eat. He also devised some proverbs of his own.

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ARTS & CULTURE

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Freshman hockey player faces child porn charges By Max Mankin Senior Staff Writer

Harrison Zolnierczyk ’11, a forward on the men’s ice hockey team, is facing charges in Canada in connection with accusations that he produced, recorded and distributed a pornographic video involving a teenage girl on YouTube, the Providence Journal and

Canwest News Service, a Canadian wire ser vice, have reported. In a written statement, the University said Zolnierczyk will not participate on the men’s hockey team this season. He will remain enrolled at the University, the statement said. Zolnierczyk has “been forced to withdraw from the hockey team, the team he loves playing on,” his

Vancouver-based lawyer, Richard Fowler, told The Herald. Zolnierczyk last played in a game against St. Lawrence University on Feb. 16 at Meehan Auditorium. He has appeared in 16 games this season. He is facing charges of voyeurism and production, possession continued on page 7

SPOTLIGHT

These guys meat for fun, make dough too By Franklin Kanin News Editor

Walking down George Street, students might notice a red Chevy Suburban parked near the Sharpe Refectory. It bears slogans and bumper stickers like “M.E.A.T.: Mankind Eating Animals Together” and a picture of a whale with a harpoon through its side. Many students are not sure what to make of this. “I actually just wondered what it is,” said Kaitlin Fitzpatrick ’10. “I have no idea what purpose it serves, or if it’s like promoting some food com-

pany or something.” Others assumed it is meant to be funny or satirical. “I didn’t really take it as anything serious. I just assumed it was a joke or something,” said Michael Cohen ’08. “I wasn’t really taken aback by it or anything.” But someone who spent last summer at Nobadeer Beach, on Nantucket, Mass., would know exactly what it was. For those beachgoers, the truck heralded

an impromptu social gathering abundant with food, funny T-shirts and two friendly college students and amateur entrepreneurs who made it their job to bring people together through barbecues. The truck is the vehicle of the M.E.A.T. Club. The two are Devin Wilmot ’10 and Kevin Meehan, a student at George Washington University, who started their “procontinued on page 4

Min Wu / Herald

Pollan spoke against “nutritionism.”

“Don’t eat anything with more than five ingredients,” Pollan said. “Don’t eat anything that won’t eventually rot.” Pollan named the problem in the American diet today “nutritionism,” the idea that “food is essentially the sum of its nutritional parts.” “We don’t feel confident to make decisions about this most basic animal function that is finding something to eat,” Pollan said, explaining

Senior Showcase Jose Macian’s ’08 new play uses sound and levels of drama to articulate issues of gender and class

www.browndailyherald.com

The Corporation, the University’s highest governing body, will have a full plate when it meets today and Saturday to discuss financial aid, review the Task Force on Undergraduate Education’s report and set the budget and tuition for the next fiscal year. “This is going to be a really interesting, exciting meeting,” Secretar y of the University Albert Dahlberg said. “The Corporation has some decisions to make.” Many people will have their eyes on financial aid spending. Many of Brown’s peers, including Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Dartmouth, Stanford and the University of Pennsylvania, have announced changes to their aid programs to ease the burden on students from low- and middle-income families. This is the first Corporation

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CAMPUS NEWS

diving to victory Men’s swim team brings in U. celebs to win housing lottery first-pick contest

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OPINIONS

career week angst Jonah Fabricant ‘10 looks forward to Career Week but not to choosing his career

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

snow 32 / 28

tomorrow’s weather Wintry weather makes students feel as if they are following the men’s basketball team to Ithaca

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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