The Brown Daily Herald Wednesday, S eptember 24, 2008
Volume CXLIII, No. 77
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
In debate over Obama’s past, U. history revisited School reform was overseen by Brown By Michael Bechek News Editor
Justin Coleman / Herald
A member of SDS, soaked in fake blood, represents the child of an Argentinian leftist allegedly ordered killed by the CIA in 1978.
SDS protests CIA, Raytheon recruiters Group simulates dead bodies By NICOLE DUNGCA Staf f Writer
Protesting the presence of representatives of the CIA and defense contractor Raytheon to recruit on campus, members of Students for a Democratic Society simulated dead bodies in the back of Sayles Hall
during Tuesday’s crowded Career Fair. About seven protesters covered themselves in fake blood and held the names of people said to have been killed in connection with either the CIA or Raytheon. About 16 others handed out literature to passersby at the fair, which was sponsored by the Career Development Center. Five lied down near the adjacent booths of the two organizations, slightly obstructing the paths of students
and creating some traffic in the back of the room, while two others were positioned near the entrance of the hall. Protesters passed out small slips of paper that said “Raytheon Kills” because it produces weapons and is the fifth-largest military contractor in the world. The paper also declared the CIA to be “a human rights abuser” because of its “long history of illegal continued on page 8
Houston wins MacArthur ‘genius’ grant By Sarah Husk Contributing Writer
Professor of Anthropology Stephen Houston, an expert in Mayan civilization, has been awarded a prestigious “Genius” grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the organization announced Tuesday. Houston, the Dupee Family
professor of social science, was one of 25 MacArthur fellows announced this year. In addition to bragging rights, the grant comes with $500,000 — paid in installments over a five-year fellowship and with no specific stipulations as to how the money must be used. Focusing primarily on the iconography and inscriptions found in artifacts from the ancient Mayan
civilization, Houston examines illustrated or inscribed archaeological objects with other pre-Columbian texts written by the Mayan peoples as means of exploring the political and social aspects of the culture. Drawing from these sources, Houston has been able to, as the foundation stated on its Web site, “reconstruct the political and social continued on page 9
With an eye toward environment, some profs. going paperless By Kelly Mallahan Contributing Writer
In the rush of shopping period, students in political science courses may not have noticed anything missing on the first days of classes. But since the department committed to becoming greener, professors are handing out fewer printed syllabus to their students. Both convenience and concern for the environment have motivated a movement from traditional paper resources to electronic ones. The University’s online programs, like MyCourses and Online Course Reserve Access, have helped to facilitate this trend. According to Professor of Political Science James Morone, chair of the department, the introduction of MyCourses was a major factor in the political science department’s shift away from paper. “We were thrilled when that system came in,” Morone said. The De-
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partment of Political Science began posting syllabi on MyCourses “maybe two years ago,” and since then has instituted a departmental policy not to give out paper copies, he added. “Brown as an institution really helped us go paperless,” Morone said. For his department, moving syllabi online was a decision largely motivated by the environment. “I think the faculty were delighted because of the environmental factor,” Morone said. “We have a green political science department.” For other professors, the decision to use more online resources has been motivated by convenience. Associate Professor of History Tara Nummedal eliminated paper course packets in her classes and “switched entirely over to OCRA last spring.” “There are a lot of reasons to put readings online,” she said, and hers were not primarily environmental.
what rankings? Freshmen around the country say U.S. News and World Report can influence them — to a point.
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In the early part of 1995, Vartan Gregorian, the president of Brown, flew to Chicago to meet with the board of directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, a school reform initiative to which he had just awarded $49 million of a large gift he had helped arrange. When he arrived, the board was excited to introduce the man it had selected to be its first president — a young lawyer named Barack Obama. “They had said to me beforehand,” recalled Barbara Cervone, the national director of the Annenberg Challenge, who accompanied Gregorian on the trip, “‘You’re not going to believe this guy.’ ” Gregorian and Cer vone were
impressed by the charismatic attorney and law school professor, who would chair the board meetings — which included presidents of major universities and foundations — for the next five years. “At the time, he was seen as a really bright, community-centered ... engaging, personal guy,” said Cervone, who oversaw the Chicago project and similar ones nationwide from her office at Brown between 1995 and 2000. Touted by some board members as a “rising star,” she added, Obama also brought an understanding of the minority experience in the city. (In fact, Gregorian had specifically urged the challenge’s early leaders, in choosing the board of directors, “to engage people who reflect the racial and ethnic diversity of Chicago,” according to a 1994 letter.) The case of the school reform continued on page 6
Bank bust changing plans Lehman collapse yields uncertainty by Colin Chazen Senior Staff Writer
For weeks now, a Brown alum working at Lehman Brothers’ Tokyo office has been living in an apartment with no furniture. Lehman’s bankruptcy, the largest in U.S. history, had left his job in limbo and his fate uncertain. “I have been living in the eye of a hurricane, witnessing a global financial meltdown from within,” he wrote in an e-mail to The Herald — insisting, like many interviewed for
this article, on anonymity. “I had no idea whether my company would survive or if my employment would be sustained.” Closure came Monday when Nomura Holdings, Japan’s largest securities company, purchased Lehman’s Asian assets and said employees would keep their jobs. After days of watching “worried, confused” co-workers “scramble to meet with headhunters,” he wrote, the alum found out about the deal and about his job from Bloomberg News. Lehman’s bankruptcy has proved especially frustrating to its employees and former interns, many of whom are Brown alumni and students, becontinued on page 4
T H e S uit e lif e
Han Xu / Yale Daily News
Yale seniors Simone Berkower, left, and Yoojin Cheong were housed in a hotel while their dorm was renovated. See Higher Ed, Page 3
continued on page 4
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CAMPUS NEWS
not technically a bike Student keeps his 12-foot canoe in storage in a bike room for special occasions.
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OPINIONS
The Final Challenge Students say goodbye to Spike’s by consuming copious quantities of hot dogs.
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
12 SPORTS
Soccer Shutout UCLA and Penn State unable to score against goalie Brenna Hogue ‘10.
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