The Brown Daily Herald F riday, N ovember 14, 2008
Volume CXLIII, No. 113
Eight in SDS to face hearing for conduct
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
RISD work fuels debate on expression
SPOTLIGHT
Palin-themed porn provokes controversy
Separation from U. on table for actions at Corporation protest
By Ben Hyman Arts & Culture Editor
By Joanna Wohlmuth Senior Staff Writer
Eight members of Students for a Democratic Society are facing the University’s most severe level of disciplinary proceedings as a result of events that took place during the group’s protest of a Corporation meeting last month. Seven of the students are each being charged with four violations of the non-academic disciplinary code, and the eighth faces slightly different charges, said Carly Devlin ’09, one of the eight students. Proceedings were originally scheduled to begin next Monday but have been postponed to allow for necessary preparation, Devlin said. Students are given time to review evidence against them as well as to submit their own before a disciplinary hearing. As the Corporation, Brown’s highest governing body, held its annual fall meeting in University Hall on Oct. 18, SDS members protested outside for open meetings, community referenda on decisions and control over the body’s agenda. While some members demonstrated on the green, five ran towards University Hall with a ladder, planning to use it to climb into the third-floor meeting. They were stopped by a Department of Public Safety officer before they were able to prop it against the building. While attention was diverted, 20 SDS members attempted to enter the building. Eight made it inside. Two of the charges the students face are concerned with entering University Hall without authorization and with injuries caused by their entrance, said Associate Dean of Student Life Terr y Addison. Addison would not elaborate on the injuries. Neither administrators nor SDS members would comment on what role the charged students played in the protest or what the exact charges are. Alleged violations of the nonacademic disciplinar y code are resolved based on the severity of the charges, said Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services Margaret Klawunn. The highestlevel offenses — those which can result in separation from the University — are settled through either administrative or University Disciplinary Council hearings, depending on the student’s preference. Charged SDS members will have these two options, Klawunn said. “If there has been any physical harm, then they generally go to that level,” Klawunn said. The offense must be “something exceptional” to continued on page 4
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ARTS & CULTURE
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Meara Sharma / Herald
Nutritious and delicious: David Gracer prepares to enjoy an insect. The maligned critters are good sources of nutrition.
Bugs: the other other white meat By Chaz Firestone Features Editor
The queen leaf-cutter ant Atta Texana is a very special find. She sees daylight only once a year, counts herself among the largest ants in the animal kingdom and, when
lightly toasted, has a sweet and nutty flavor with a crisp, baconlike texture. David Gracer orders them by the pound and eats them by the dozen. He eats them for taste, for nutrition and for planet Earth. And he wants you to join him.
No significant changes in store for Sex Power God By Nicole Friedman Contributing Writer
With 590 tickets available for Saturday’s Sex Power God dance, some students were willing to wait all night to ensure a spot on the guest list. “I slept an hour,” Julio Reyes ’12 said Wednesday morning after spending the night in Leung Gal-
ler y for a chance to buy tickets. “The floor was too hard.” Reyes, Ora Star Boncore ’12 and Gavriel Cutipa-Zorn ’12 were first in line when tickets went on sale at 9 a.m. for the annual dance hosted by the Queer Alliance. Reyes said he didn’t mind the sleepless night because he heard that “the party is something that you have to experience as a Brown
student.” Part raucous dance party, part rite of passage, the event has raised controversy in past years for the high number of intoxicated attendees receiving medical attention. The dance, QA’s “main and almost only fundraiser for the year,” is a safe space for sexual expression, said Event Coordina-
tor Zachar y Marcus ’10. Free condoms, lubricant, dental dams, glowsticks and pamphlets about sexual health-related topics will be available at the event. “I think having a dance like this and not providing safer sex materials would be irresponsible,” Marcus said. “If another organizacontinued on page 6
Students abroad in Tanzania out of class from strikes BY Jenna Stark Senior Staff Writer
Seven students in the Brown in Tanzania program are sweating out a strike this week after students protesting financial aid policies forced the University of Dar es Salaam, the program’s host school, to close indefinitely. More than 10,000 students have been ordered to leave the major Tanzanian university after many defied government demands to stop their three-day boycott of classes, according to the Citizen, a Tanzanian newspaper. Foreign students will be allowed to remain on campus, Associate Director of International Programs Ned Quigley said. Of the students currently enrolled in the “Brown in Tanzania” program, he said, six are from universities other than Brown. “We are monitoring the situation, and we expect that the students will receive a full semester of academic credit,” Quigley said.
horrific madness Sock and Buskin’s “The Changeling” focuses on lust, greed and pride
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Eat bugs, save the planet Gracer is about the closest thing there is to a professional eater of bugs. When he’s not teaching English at the Community College of Rhode Island,
A student artwork at the Rhode Island School of Design that included a Sarah Palin-themed pornographic video has inspired a public discussion on issues of creative freedom and artistic ethics. Yesterday, 75 RISD community members attended a forum to discuss last week’s unplugging of the video and its implications. The work was part of an electionthemed exhibition curated by a student committee. Painting major Allie Pisarro-Grant, who had originally proposed the exhibition, said she had hoped the show would spark lively conversation. But she had no idea that the work of fellow senior Ben Noam would incite a complex discussion in e-mails, blog posts and, ultimately,
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CAMPUS NEWS
Students are demanding that the government drop a cost-sharing policy that requires some students to pay some fees out of pocket. Protesters want government loans to cover 100 percent of tuition and accommodations, the Citizen reported. On Tuesday, Tanzania’s Minister for Education and Vocational Training Jumanne Maghembe said that given the country’s current economic climate, it would be impossible to comply with the students’ demands, according to the newspaper. Heavily armed anti-riot police have been patrolling the main campus of the university to prevent protestors from destroying property. “We hope that the strike will come to a quick close and all students will come back to classes,” Quigley said, adding that the Office of International Programs does not feel that the students’ safety is in “jeopardy.” No students from the Brown in Tanzania program could be reached before press time.
iranian uranium International Institute for Strategic Studies’ Mark Fitzpatrick spoke about Iran
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OPINIONS
Courtesy of Natalia Nazarewicz
Students at Tanzania’s University of Dar es Salaam read a notice in advance of a student strike that forced the school closed this week.
From Iraq to the rock Miranda Summers GS reflects on her experience as a Brunonian and Army veteran
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
12 SPORTS
Player of the Week Field hockey’s highest scorer, Leslie Springmeyer ’12, receives Ivy (and Herald) honors
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