Monday, February 2, 2009

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Daily Herald the Brown

vol. cxliv, no. 9 | Monday, February 2, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891

Hundreds meet to talk human rights

Research policy being reviewed

steelers ’ bo w l

by Hannah Moser Senior Staff Writer

Students and health professionals from around the country convened in Andrews Hall this weekend to discuss topics including genocide in Darfur, torture at Guantanamo Bay and how best to advocate for human rights. About 350 people, from as far away as Stanford University and as nearby as Providence College, took part in the annual student conference of the organization Physicians for Human Rights, which was highlighted by a keynote address from Stephen Lewis, former U.N. special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, and a town hall with Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I. Following the Saturday morning opening keynote by Lewis, the co-director of AIDS-Free World, an international advocacy organization, students attended a panel on “realizing the right to health,” then broke into workshop sessions in SmithBuonanno Hall and the BioMedical Center that focused on advocacy training and human rights issues in health care and in war. In a workshop called “Accountability for Perpetrators of US Torture,” Nathaniel Raymond, the director of Physicians for Human Rights’ “Campaign against Torture,” emphasized the part of the physician’s oath that swears to “do no harm.” Raymond and John Bradshaw, the organization’s chief policy officer, outlined potential methods to hold government officials responsible for detainee abuse at sites like the militar y prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Bradshaw pointed out that, a year ago, finding “accountability” for abuses at Guantanamo Bay was an abstract hope for the future. But, he said, if there are going to be attempts to hold government officials to account, they must be undertaken in the next year or not at all. The issue is “completely within the hands” of people who feel strongly about its outcome, he said. Attendees had the opportunity to present research on a human rights issue at the student expo held in Andrews. Harb Harb, a student at the University of Iowa’s Carver College of Medicine, presented his research on health care accessibility in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, a project for which he surveyed 750 Palestinian refugees. Although “you hear about health care being a right,” Harb said, the situation on the ground many places

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News.....1-4 Arts........5-6 Spor ts...7-9 Editorial..10 Opinion...11 Today........12

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By Sydney Ember Senior Staff Writer

Brown’s policy on conflict of interest in research is under review, Vice President for Research Clyde Briant told the faculty at its monthly meeting in December. The revised policy, which is not yet available, will be brought to the faculty and the Corporation this month. The review was initiated at the request of the Corporation in light of recent national concern regarding the relationships of researchers and faculty members with industry. “There’s just no news yet about what it’s going to contain,” said Professor of Philosophy James Dreier, who chairs the Faculty Executive Committee. “I think people are kind of concerned and interested and want to see it, but I don’t know how there could be a specific reaction to it yet.” He added that he is unsure how Kim Perley / Herald

Students take in the Pittsburgh Steelers’ 27-23 Super Bowl victory over the Arizona Cardinals.

See Campus News,

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‘Stuff White People Like’ founder explains intuitions By Lauren Fedor Senior Staff Writer

What do sushi, yoga, pea coats, Asian girls and Barack Obama have in common? According to Christian Lander, the provocative and popular blogger-turned-bestselling-author, they’re all “stuff white people like.” Lander, who was working as a copywriter in Los Angeles when he got the idea for his immensely popular blog and later bestselling

book, “Stuff White People Like: A Definitive Guide to the Unique Taste of Millions,” spoke on Friday to an enormous crowd in Wilson 102 as part of the ongoing Eureka! Lecture Series. Students filling every space of the auditorium — including windowsills and stairways — listened for more than an hour as Lander explained how a single instant message conversation spurred what has become a pop culture phenomenon. In January 2008, Lander and

a friend were instant messaging about one of their favorite television shows, “The Wire,” when Lander’s friend said that he did not trust any white people who did not watch the program. The conversation soon shifted as the two began coming up with alternative activities that white people might be doing instead of watching the show. The men offered ideas like going to therapy, watching plays, getting divorced and doing yoga. Lander was so amused by the conversation

that he started a WordPress blog based on it. Lander continued writing and adding to the blog, and within a few days he had written more than 20 posts. He decided to send a link to his site to some of his friends — mainly students and other graduate-school dropouts. Soon after, he began receiving feedback from his friends, who had shared the site with others. continued on page 2

To Havana and back Students reflect on Cuban experience

year, returning to the United States days before Cuba commemorated the 50th anniversary of Fidel Castro’s socialist revolution. In four By Sophia Li months the students spent abroad, Features Editor Cuba’s seas swelled with the force of multiple hurricanes, and its peoWhile the stragglers still on campus ple surged with hope inspired by in late December were shoving President Barack Obama. their belongings into Depar ting from Miami at the end of suitcases to catch early FEATURE August, the students flights home, 11 other Brown students were packing their had little idea of what to expect bags, too — to return to the United of a nation so shrouded in mysStates after the inaugural semes- tery: a patchwork of myths about ter of the University’s new study Castro, communism and Cuban abroad program in Cuba. health care filtered through the The students left Havana less continued on page 4 than two weeks before the new

Courtesy of Stephan Meylan ’10

The OIP’s new study abroad program in Cuba offered students a fresh perspective on the long-isolated communist nation.

Arts, 5

Sports, 7

Opinions, 11

prof. art at hillel Professor of Visual Art Leigh Tarentino’s work on display at Hillel

m. hockey loses Men’s hockey suffers losses to Quinnipiac and Princeton

public school woes Boris Ryvkin ’09 wants students to be put first in R.I. public school reform

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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