Daily Herald the Brown
vol. cxliv, no. 53 | Thursday, April 16, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891
3,000 more Caught removing poster, UFB candidate quits tickets made available for Weekend board member of the Undergraduate Council of Students and another student close to the election process. Both sources asked to remain anonymous. The withdrawal leaves Vasconez as the only candidate for that position still on the ballot. The two sources said Elections Board Chair Lily Tran ’10 and ViceChair Zachary Langway ’09 told Parikh Tuesday night that he could withdraw his candidacy or choose to face a hearing before the full board.
By Seth Motel Staff Writer
By Sydney Ember Senior Staff Writer
The Brown Concert Agency is selling 3,000 additional Spring Weekend tickets because clear weather is forecast for Friday and Saturday, Stephen Hazeltine ’09, the group’s administrative chair, said Wednesday. The new tickets, 1,500 for each of the two concerts, will be offered first to Brown students. About 250 of those tickets were sold Wednesday, said Daniel Ain ’09, BCA’s booking chair. The remaining tickets will be on sale at the Faunce House box office today from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. exclusively to Brown students, and from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. to Brown and Rhode Island School of Design students. Any tickets that remain after those sales will be made available to the public Friday and Saturday at a ticket booth on the corner of Brown and George streets. BCA was able to release the additional tickets because it was confident the concerts could be held on the Main Green, which has a larger capacity than Meehan Auditorium, the rain location. The group announced that both concerts would be held outside in an e-mail to students Wednesday. “We wanted to make sure everyone has a chance to hear about it,” Ain said. The group sold a total of 6,000 tickets to Brown students online last month. The new tickets will boost the total number of available passes by 50 percent. “We’re very pleased,” Hazeltine said. “There is absolutely no rain in continued on page 3
Neil Parikh ’11, a candidate for Undergraduate Finance Board vice-chair, withdrew from the race Tuesday night after he was caught removing one of his opponent’s publicity posters, according to multiple sources. Parikh, president of the Class of 2011, was seen removing a sign for his opponent, Juan Vasconez ’10, from a Wriston Quadrangle door, according to both a former executive
Parikh chose to withdraw his name later that night, the sources said. Senior Director for Student Engagement Ricky Gresh discussed the actions with certain members of the board on Wednesday, the two students said. The Herald was unable to reach Gresh late Wednesday night. The former UCS executive said Vasconez’s sign was posted in a way that violated the election rules. There might have been confusion over which spots on campus were
By Jyotsna Mullur Staf f Writer
It’s a rite of passage for all firstyear medical students — a course in human anatomy, in which they dissect the dead to understand the living. But after their handson experience with mortality, the students organize a ceremony that provides closure to their first brush with the fragility of the human body. Matt Weisberg / Herald
The University is working with local day care providers to open eight new infant care slots to aid faculty and staff.
Staff hope for increased child care his position. The infant care center — with a capacity of just 20 children and a waiting list of over a year — is currently the only one of its kind to cater exclusively to Brown faculty, staff and students. “We get two to three calls a day looking for childcare,” said Mary Castrignano, the center’s director. “We’re now accepting enrollment for May 2010.”
By Brigitta Greene Senior Staf f Writer
It’s a quiet morning on the Taft Avenue Daycare Center playground, nestled behind the Brown Stadium. Among the many children enjoying their morning playtime, baby Max sleeps peacefully in his strawberry beanie. Less than three years old, he has no idea how many parents wish their children could be in
The only other facility that gives preference to the University community, the Brown/Fox Point Early Childhood Education Center on Hope Street, reserves about 60 percent of its space — 44 of 76 slots — for faculty, staff and students, and caters to children between the ages of three and six, said Chris Amirault, executive director of the continued on page 9
Tax Day TEA Party.” The name was both an acronym for “Taxed Enough Already” and an allusion to the BosMore than 2,000 protesters gath- ton Tea Party of 1773. The protesters, some dressed in 18th ered on the steps of the METRO State House Wednesday century garb, carried signs afternoon at a rally against with slogans proclaiming “runaway” government spending “Obama is our King George!” and and taxes. “Fatherland security: I want my The rally, one of hundreds hap- country back!” pening simultaneously across the continued on page 6 country, was called the “Providence by Anne Speyer Staff Writer
Anne Speyer / Herald
inside
Protestors gathered at the State House Wednesday to condemn increased government spending and taxes.See video at browndailyherald.com.
www.browndailyherald.com
continued on page 3
Med students put the dead to rest, at last
Thousands protest taxes at TEA Party
News.....1-4 Metro.....5-6 Spor ts...7-9 Editorial..10 Opinion...11 Today........12
permissible for posting campaign signs, according to a third student close to the process, who confirmed that Parikh had removed a poster. “Elections Board doesn’t have any institutional memory, so each year, members just make up their own rules,” the student said. The Elections Board has established a four-page set of guidelines, Langway said. Though the guidelines do not specify the procedure for re-
Metro, 5
Sports, 7
No longer Bumpin’ Local schools plan to abolish a teacher-placement practice known as “bumping”
FLIPPING OUT Victoria Zanelli ’11 is The Herald’s Athlete of the Week
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
FEATURE This year, 96 students at Alpert Medical School dissected and studied 24 donated cadavers, said Dale Ritter, who directs the human anatomy course at Brown. Students are given little identifying information about the cadavers, he said — nothing more than their cadaver’s official cause of death and age at expiration. “Especially early on, we tend not to focus on the other information,” Ritter said, adding that additional information makes it even more difficult for beginning medical students to dissect their first human body. The student-organized ceremony — a tradition that began almost 20 years ago — commemorates not only the cadavers’ lives, but also the contribution to medicine they made after death, he said. The ceremony was once an hour-long affair held in a large lecture hall at the end of the course. But in recent years, it has become an informal, quiet event that takes place in the course’s anatomy lab, Ritter said. Amanda Westlake MD’12 helped organize this year’s cercontinued on page 2 The Herald will not publish a print edition Friday, April 17, in observation of Spring Weekend. Check online for updates. Print publication will resume on Monday. herald@browndailyherald.com