Daily Herald the Brown
vol. cxliv, no. 10 | Tuesday, February 3, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891
Planned budget cuts concern faculty By Nicole Friedman Senior Staff Writer
The proposed budget cuts outlined in President Ruth Simmons’ e-mail to the Brown community last week came as no surprise to some members of the faculty, who had already anticipated slowed hiring rates. But the cuts could make it difficult for the University to meet faculty and student needs, especially in popular departments, said Professor of Philosophy James Dreier, who chairs the Faculty Executive Committee. In her e-mail, Simmons announced a “reduction in the planned increase in the size of the faculty.” Faculty growth was a major component of the Plan for Academic Enrichment and the University now boasts a faculty of 689 members, compared with 589 in the 2002-2003 academic year, Dean of the Faculty Rajiv Vohra wrote in an e-mail
to The Herald. Dreier said this rapid faculty growth worried the committee last January. During its review of the Plan for Academic Enrichment, the committee found that faculty growth had not been matched by increased research funding, graduate school growth or infrastructure support, Dreier said. Some faculty members said that the postponement in Graduate School growth could hurt departments, especially those that already have few teaching assistants. Those without graduate programs, such as the International Relations program and the Center for Language Studies, could also feel the pinch as they depend on other departments for graduate TAs. “We’ll have to work closely with the grad school to make sure that continued on page 2
ta g tan g l e
Courtesy of Brown University
Patrick Corey ‘10 (left) and Kelly Glaser ’10 install energy efficient lightbulbs as part of Project 20/20, which is partly funded by Walmart.
$15k donation stirs controversy By Jenna Stark News Editor
The University spent $15,000 to register Vice President for International Af fairs David Kennedy ’76 for the Clinton Global Initiative’s annual meeting last September, according to a list released by the Clinton F oundation in mid-December. Questions were raised over the circumstances and purpose of the contribution — which appeared as a donation on the Foundation’s Web site — when the information was released. Despite the then-declining economic conditions, Kennedy’s registration fee was covered by the President’s office, said Marisa Quinn, vice president of public affairs and university relations.
“Fifteen thousand dollars is a fair amount of money,” Quinn said, adding that it allowed “for this tremendous opportunity to meet with people from around the world and engage in thoughtful dialogue on issues of interest to higher education and the broader society.” President Ruth Simmons also attended the annual meeting, but did not have to pay the registration fee as she was an “invited guest,” Quinn said. The University chose to send Kennedy to the meeting to “enhance Brown’s profile in the international community, and to make valuable connections with world leaders,” Quinn wrote in an e-mail to The Herald. Kennedy said the meeting provides “a terrific oppor tunity to
meet a wide range of people who could be helpful to the University in one fell swoop.” “There’s no conference like CGI,” he added. But the $15,000 registration fee, or so-called donation, has sparked some controversy, highlighted by a Dec. 23 Wall Street Journal column that raised questions about nonprofits making charitable donations to the Foundation, and mentioned Brown by name. The Herald had reported two months earlier that the University received $205,000 in grant money from the Foundation in September, through the Clinton Global Initiative University, a program started by the Foundation to promote leadership on college continued on page 2
Psychiatry resident talks cadavers By Britta Greene Senior Staf f Writer
Frederic Lu / Herald Many building around campus have been vandalized by graffiti.
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A body, bearing racist tattoos, is donated to a medical school for dissection. One shoulder bears a swastika. On the other is written “KKK.” Should the body be presented to the students for anatomical dissection? Should the tattoos be cut off first? Should students even be doing dissections when they could just use computer models of the human body? Arguing for the continued use of cadavers in medical training, Christine Montross MD’06, a resident in psychiatry, discussed these questions with thoughtful reflection and poetic eloquence before a small crowd in Salomon
101 Monday night. Her lecture, entitled “Dissection and Doctoring: What The Dead Teach Us About Healing The Living,” followed the 2007 publication of her book “Body of Work: Meditations on Mortality from the Human Anatomy Lab.” Montross argued that using cadavers in medical training prepares students for the physical and emotional stress they are likely to face in their careers. Human dissection is “at times awe-inspiring and at times profoundly upsetting,” she said, adding that calmness in the face of emotional distress is a “learned response.” Her own experience with dissection, she said, recorded in full in her book, was at first terrifying,
but in the end extremely valuable. She said she holds deep respect for those who donate their bodies to science, though she is unsure of whether she would do so herself. She went on to examine the evolution of attitudes toward medicine among medical students, many of whom enter the field out of altruism and empathy, she said. Over time, after prolonged lack of sleep, loss of personal time and continued exposure to emotionally traumatic experiences, many students begin to lose this empathy and personal connection to their patients, she said. She said students are often “depleted,” and that the fears of failure and inadequacy force members of the medical field to push continued on page 2
Metro, 5
Sports, 7
Opinions, 11
Medicine for Ri A new deal gives the Ocean State control over its Medicare program.
rough weekend The women’s basketball team suffered two tough losses over the weekend.
Nothing to ignore Nick Werle ’10 thinks restricting Morning Mail will reduce event attendance
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