Daily Herald the Brown
vol. cxliv, no. 8 | Friday, January 30, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891
Morey ’99 suits up for second Super Bowl
SPOTLIGHT
By Benjy Asher Spor ts Editor
A look at Brown’s collection of books from Hitler’s library
Hitler in the Hay stacks By Emmy Liss Features Editor
Shelved in the walk-in basement vault of the John Hay Library is a second-edition copy of “Mein Kampf.” A yellowing bookplate on its inside cover features a menacing eagle with wings outstretched and a banner spread above its head reading “Ex Libris.” With its talons, the eagle clutches a branch and a circular medallion inscribed with a large swastika. Below the image, a harsh, angular font spells out the name of the book’s owner: “Adolf Hitler.” Tour groups parading past the Hay are told of Abraham Lincoln’s funereal flowers and the extensive toy soldier menagerie, but rarely is it mentioned that Brown possesses the nation’s second-largest collection of books from Hitler’s personal library.
Herald File Photo
Sean Morey ’99 in a Brown football game in Oct. 1998.
The Herald, then-Head Coach Mark Whipple ’79 said of Morey, “We don’t have a single senior that’s a receiver. We’re counting on Sean Morey ... to lead our receiving corps and he’s only a sophomore.” In addition to Morey’s outstanding physical skill set, current Head Coach Phil Estes remembers his former receiver’s constant drive to become a smarter football player. Morey showed himself to be a continued on page 8
Gaza panel draws large crowds BY EMILY ROSEN Contributing Writer
inside
A 300-strong crowd turned out in MacMillan 117 last night to hear a panel of Brown faculty and alums address the conflict between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. The event, “Gaza: Implications and Reconceptualizations,” was organized by the student group Common Ground and brought together academics and experts from a wide range of disciplines. Scholars in anthropology, history, Judaic studies, French studies and comparative literature discussed the roles of the media, international humanitarian law and the United States in the conflict. Each participant discussed a facet of the conflict for about 10 minutes and then fielded questions from audience members. Professor
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Qidong Chen / Herald
After initially struggling to make it off the bench, Sean Morey ’99 can finally enjoy his stay at the top. On Sunday night, the former Bruno superstar will suit up for his second Super Bowl in four years. In a Super Bowl match-up defined by inspiring Cinderella stories, Morey’s Arizona Cardinals will take on his former team, the Pittsburgh Steelers. The game will be the Cardinals’ first Super Bowl appearance in franchise history. It will feature such rags-to-riches stars as Arizona quarterback Kurt Warner — who has won a Super Bowl ring and two MVP awards after playing college football at Division I-AA Northern Iowa — and Pittsburgh defensive end James Harrison, the first undrafted player in NFL history to win a Defensive MVP award. Likewise, for Morey, a special teams captain and, for the first time in his career, a Pro Bowler, success was not instant at the professional level. At Brown, Morey was a standout from the start, earning 1995 Ivy League Rookie of the Year honors his freshman year. He went on to become a three-time selection to the All-Ivy first team and in his junior season was named Ivy League Player of the Year and a first-team All-American. In the Sept. 30, 1996, issue of
The collection was a gift from the nephew of Colonel Albert Aronson, who arrived in Berlin in May of 1945, one of the first Americans to reach the German stronghold. Russian soldiers had already liberated the city and collected many of the Third Reich’s possessions. Within the Fuhrerbunker — Hitler’s last known hideout — Aronson found 80 assorted volumes remaining from Hitler’s extensive book collection. The colonel “liberated the books, so to speak,” said Samuel Streit, director of special collections at the Hay, and brought them home to the United States with him. For decades, the volumes lay in Aronson’s attic. He died in the mid-1970s and bequeathed the collection to his nephew. A Brown alum who elected to remain anonymous in all library
records, Aronson’s nephew contacted the Hay. Joking that the titles were “not exactly coffee table books,” according to Streit, Aronson’s nephew acknowledged the historical value of his collection. But he was “understandably nervous,” Streit said. “He wanted them to be used responsibly.” Placing his trust in the rare book specialists at the University, Aronson’s nephew donated the collection to Brown in 1979. The 80 volumes were catalogued and shelved at the Hay, just like any other books. There was no press release about the new acquisition, “but it’s not a secret that we have them,” Streit said. Even after three decades, the books have attracted little attention. One scholar, however, recently paid Streit and the collection a visit. continued on page 2
Simmons at World Economic Forum in Switzerland President Ruth Simmons has joined 2,500 other world leaders in business, government and education at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, this week. The meeting — whose theme, “Shaping the Post-Crisis World,” suggests the ominous background to the week’s discussions — began Wednesday and will continue through Sunday. Simmons moderated a discussion on nonprofits at the forum Thursday. The debate “focused on identifying new partnerships, involving youth, reaffirming our missions and setting sound priorities,” she wrote in an e-mail to The Herald.
Though Davos gives Simmons the opportunity to rub elbows with prominent Brown alums, including potential donors, and other international supporters, Simmons wrote that she “can’t promise a big gift.” At last year’s meeting, Simmons announced a $5.75 million gift from Israeli businessman Idan Ofer P’12 that funds a scholarship for Brown students from sub-Saharan Africa. Though the forum is dominated by political and business leaders — like Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and philanthropist Bill Gates — Simmons wrote that the forum also allows leaders of universities around the world to discuss the economic crisis. She has met with Indian and African educators and will make a presentation today on improving universities in subSaharan Africa, she wrote.
News, 3
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Peanut Butter Pulled
Sports Weekend W. basketball, m. hockey, w. tennis face league challenges at home this weekend.
sans Comic? Michael Fitzpatrick ’12 writes that The Herald should expand the comics section.
By George Miller Metro Editor
Quinn Savit / Herald
A seven-member panel of faculty and alumni discussed the Gaza conflict
Emeritus of History Abbott “Tom” Gleason moderated the sevenmember panel. Critical of the media’s role in and coverage of the conflict, Professor of Anthropology Catherine Lutz said there was more to the
war than military gains or losses. “Contemporary war is waged as a campaign of public relations,” she said. During her portion of the talk, continued on page 2
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