Thursday, November 20, 2008

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The Brown Daily Herald T hursday, N ovember 20, 2008

Volume CXLIII, No. 117

UCS calls for ending enforcement of prereqs

Amid pomp, archaeologists bury capsule

Provost ‘concerned’ about proliferation of A’s

By Jenna Stark Senior Staff Writer

by Mitra Anoushiravani Senior Staf f Writer

The shiny metal “torpedo” seemed out of place in the daylight of the Main Green. So too did the men and women gathered around it wearing ivy wreaths and carrying spice “offerings.”

FEATURE A standard-bearer marched to the beat of a snare drum as four young men carried the artifact on two support beams, as if carrying a ritual sacrifice to an altar. The torpedo — in reality, a time capsule — was ceremoniously buried Wednesday morning beneath Rhode Island Hall, which is currently undergoing major renovations. The ritual antics, organized by the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, which will occupy the revitalized building, were meant to lighten the mood of what is usually an austere ceremony. “We’ve been treating the renovation of Rhode Island Hall very much as an archaeological project,” said Susan Alcock, professor of classics and director of the institute. When the project manager of the renovations, which will not be finished for another year, brought up the idea of burying a time capsule, “our eyes lit up immediately,” Alcock added. Shawmut Design and Construction’s Nicole Blais, the project man-

Since 1866, Daily Since 1891

Jenna Stark / Herald

A group of archaelogy buffs mock-ceremonially bury a time capsule. ager, said a time capsule has been buried in construction projects at other schools. “Given that it’s an archaeological project, it sounded appropriate” to use one, she said. The vessel — “gigantic” (by

time capsule standards) at three feet long by 12.75 feet wide, Alcock said — was buried amid pomp and circumstance at 10 a.m. following a procession down Waterman and continued on page 4

RIPTA to cut $2m from budget to address shortfall of only $1.8 to $2 million. The original proposal was amended following a request from Gov. Donald Carcieri ’65 Facing a big budget deficit and high that RIPTA take no dramatic action fuel prices, the Rhode Island Public until the state legislature reconvenes Transit Authority’s board of directors in January, Therrien said. approved service reductions for 47 of Only one bus route, no. 24 “West the state’s bus routes this week. Bay Shopper,” servicing a senior citiThe service reductions are “much zen home once a week, will be commore minor” than originally pro- pletely eliminated. The rest will see posed, according to Mark Therrien, either a decrease in bus frequency or RIPTA’s assistant general fewer hours of operation. manager. Along with the “We are not abandoning METRO elimination of 20 drivers, the communities,” Therrien cuts, approved on Monday, should said. “No area will be left out in the save RIPTA $900,000 by the end of cold.” the current fiscal year in June, he RIPTA officials reviewed over said. 8,500 trips to gauge ridership and But the reductions will come no- instanced of overcrowding, Therrien where close to addressing the author- said. Route reductions were chosen ity’s estimated $8 million deficit, and if data showed a recent decrease in RIPTA officials said more dramatic ridership. action must be taken by January. “In Yet RIPTA’s announcement Monthe end, it’s left up to the governor day that it could cut service “came and the legislature,” Therrien said. out of left field,” said Vale CoferRIPTA held public hearings as Shabica ’09, a member of Students for late as Oct. 7 on its original proposal a Democratic Society. RIPTA board for $12 million in service reductions members, he said, had repeatedly and the elimination of 140 jobs, but emphasized in meetings with SDS Monday’s reduction represents a members that no service cuts would dramatically scaled-down version of continued on page 4 that proposal, calling for a reduction

The Undergraduate Council of Students passed a resolution at its general body meeting Wednesday expressing disapproval of the enforcement of prerequisites on Banner, and heard Provost David Kertzer ’69 P’95 P’98 express his opinions on topics ranging from grade distribution to the economy. The council also rejected a different resolution that would have endorsed an end to officially observing Columbus Day at the University. Kertzer, when asked what he thought about recent data from the Office of Institutional Research that showed that the number of A’s surpassed 50 percent of all grades given in the 2007-2008 academic year, said, “I don’t think it’s a good thing. I think it’s a problem.” The University, he said, was approaching a grading system that was all but “A’s or no credit.” Kertzer added that there was much debate among the faculty about grading, and that he was determined to take the issue seriously. Asked if he would approve of discontinuing the enforcement of prerequisites on Banner, Kertzer said he did not understand the logic of having prerequisites without their being enforced. He said he thought

it was reasonable that if a student wanted to take a course but had not fulfilled the prerequisites, he or she would need to speak to the professor. He also said he was working with the Dean of the College’s office to improve sophomore advising, and briefed UCS members on what the economic downturn would mean for the University. Just as many of the University’s peer institutions are making substantial changes to their budgets, Brown is no different, he told the council. “We need to find a way to tighten our belts and keep our eye on what is really essential about a place like Brown, which is the education we provide,” he said. He added that he was concerned about students’ ability to pay tuition and that he recognized “the need for more financial aid.” The general body overwhelmingly passed a resolution stating that prerequisites should not be enforced through Banner and that academic departments should re-evaluate their current prerequisites. Tyler Rosenbaum ’11, chair of the council’s academic and administrative affairs committee and a Herald Opinions Columnist, said he was optimistic about the support shown by the Faculty Executive Committee, which he said was “who we need to go through” to effect the resolution. Rosenbaum added that the results of a UCS/Brown continued on page 13

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By Brigitta Greene Contributing Writer

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POSTRolls with SNL’s Simon Rich, talks Thanksgiving and reflects on Sex Power God

www.browndailyherald.com

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CAMPUS NEWS

Kim Perley / Herald

Kappa Alpha Theta held a fashion show Wednesday night to benefit volunteer advocacy for abused children.

monologues coming Students will produce Eve Ensler’s play “The Vagina Monologues” this spring

15

OPINIONS

convention unquestioned Suzannah Kroeber ’11 asks why we need gender-specific bathrooms in the first place

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

16 SPORTS

hey, it’s something... The winless men’s hockey team manages a tie against ranked ECAC rival Harvard

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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