The Brown Daily Herald T uesday, F ebr uar y 26, 2008
Volume CXLIII, No. 23
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
Huckabee tells Rhode Islanders he’s not done yet By Simon van Zuylen-Wood Senior Staff Writer
WARWICK — Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee dropped by Rhode Island yesterday, telling supporters at a Warwick rally that he was not going to give up his long-shot campaign just yet. The former Arkansas governor spoke to a few hundred chanting
supporters at the Crowne Plaza Huckabee then began his Hotel here, focusing a 40-minute speech by telling voters he would speech on tax policy and family not end his run for the Republican values. presidential nomiHuckabee nation, which Sen. METRO opened the John McCain, Rrally by showAriz., has all but ing off the laid-back and playful wrapped up. demeanor that has become the “I never believed you get to the trademark of his campaign. Before finish line by quitting before you his speech, he played two songs on get to the finish line,” Huckabee a bass guitar. told his impassioned supporters,
who rarely took a break from cheering on their candidate. Though Huckabee often referred to his underdog status in the Rhode Island primar y elections, which will be held March 4, he focused mainly on promoting himself as his party’s quintessential candidate. On abortion, Huckabee said he continued on page 7
Segall ’01 makes House bid
Senior class gift may get big boost
By Isabel Gottlieb News Editor
By Melissa Shube Staff Writer
An anonymous donor has challenged the Class of 2008 to set a new participation record for its senior class gift. If 72 percent of seniors donate, the donor will contribute $25,000 to the Brown Annual Fund to go along with the seniors’ gift, said Johanna Corcoran, the fund’s assistant director for student programs. Just less than 10 percent of seniors have donated so far, for a total of 122 gifts. “We’re on a good pace so far. We’re going to get most of our gifts near the end of the year,” said Gordon Pels ’08, co-chair of the senior class gift committee. The 72-percent goal would set a new record for participation. The previous record is 68 percent, currently held by the Class of 2005. The Class of 2006 achieved 65 percent participation, and 64 percent of seniors contributed in 2007, according to the Brown Annual Fund Web site. President Ruth Simmons is contributing to the class gift as well. She plans to donate $20,008, a dollar more than the $20,007 she contribcontinued on page 9
Rahul Keerthi / Herald
The Brown Taiko group has been drumming on campus since 2004. The group currently has seven members.
Taiko keeps beat of Japanese tradition By Catherine Straut Staff Writer
On a quiet Tuesday evening, in a seemingly empty T.F. Green Hall, sounds echo down the hallways and shake the walls as a group of students throw their weight against a set of enormous drums. Building these drums and learning to play them has been the focus of
the Brown Taiko group since its inception in 2004. Taiko drumming was brought to Brown by Raiki Machida ’07, who learned it in middle school in Singapore and went on to train intensively in northern Japan after high school. When he arrived at Brown, Machida raised funds and created the group, which has been performing and making drums
ever since. “In the past two years, it’s kind of blown up,” Machida said. “I’m pretty excited about that.” The group currently includes six Brown students and one Rhode Island School of Design student. Taiko has been a par t of Japanese culture for more than continued on page 6
U.S. and Caribbean nations share goals, diplomat says By MattHEW Varley Staff Writer
Suman Karumuri / Herald
Roland Bullen, deputy chief of mission to the U.S. Embassy in the Dominican Republic, spoke in Macmillan 117 Monday night.
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METRO
Bed bugs are back Blood-sucking mattressdweller seeks host for parasitic relationship
Courtesy of Josh Segall
Josh Segall ’01 may soon be in Congress.
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CAMPUS NEWS
The United States supports Caribbean nations as they transition economically and politically into the 21st century, U.S. Ambassador Roland Bullen told an audience in Macmillan 117 Monday night, kicking off Caribbean Heritage Week. “A resonant commitment to democracy, the rule of law and the promotion of private sectorled, market-driven economies” is shared by the United States and English-speaking Caribbean countries, said Bullen, the deputy chief of mission of the U.S. Embassy in
1337-letes Students will face stiff international competition at programming finals
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OPINIONS
the Dominican Republic. Bullen, a Grenada native, is the former U.S. ambassador to Guyana and has served throughout the Caribbean in a 30-year foreign service career. His lecture, co-sponsored by the Third World Center and the Center for Latin American Studies, focused specifically on American relations with the Caribbean Community, a 15-member economic coalition. Though Bullen said “the Caribbean and the United States have had a long and vitally beneficial relationship over many decades,” continued on page 4
Defending suburbia Matt Prewitt ’08 thinks suburb-hating is thinly veiled classism
While a student at Brown, Joshua Segall ’01 used his organizing savvy and penchant for policy to build support for Al Gore, among others. Now, he’s putting that skill to more personal use. On Feb. 7, Segall, a 29-year-old lawyer, announced he is running for the U.S. House of Representatives. If he wins the seat in Alabama’s 3rd Congressional District, he would be the only alum currently serving in Congress. Segall, a native Alabaman, is currently the only Democrat in the race. If he wins the June 3 primary, he will run against the Republican incumbent, Mike Rogers, on Nov. 4 for the seat, which represents east-central Alabama, from the suburbs of Montgomery northward along the Georgia border, past Talladega and into rural Cherokee county. After Segall formally announced his candidacy, he immediately garnered the support of Alabama Democratic Lt. Gov. Jim Folsom Jr. Folsom’s support is significant, Segall said, because there is still time for other Democrats to enter the race, yet Folsom has already chosen to throw his support behind a young candidate. Beyond building support among Alabama’s political elite, Segall’s history as an organizer and “policy wonk” at Brown have helped him build a network of supporters — many of whom have more ties to College Hill than to rural Alabama. An organizer at Brown As head of the group of Democratic students on campus, called the College Democrats, Segall was able to generate a new level of political interest in the student body, those who knew him at Brown say. Mushtaq Gunja ’00, who was on the board of the College Democrats with Segall, said the group was not particularly active before Segall’s leadership, but “he really spent a lot of time and energy trying to make it a big deal.” continued on page 9 tomorrow’s weather Snow falls as steadily as the beating of Taiko drums in T.F. Green Hall
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