Monday, September 28, 2009

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Daily Herald the Brown

vol. cxliv, no. 73 | Monday, September 28, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891

Church hosts ‘Columbus’ discussion

sn u f f ed o u t u nder the li g hts

Koyama ’11 and local cultural leader debate U.’s calendar change

By Seth Motel News Editor

By Anne Speyer Senior Staff Writer

When the faculty voted in April to rename Columbus Day on the University calendar to sidestep the historical figure’s controversial legacy, local leaders from the mayor to the governor protested the decision, saying it was disrespectful to Providence’s Italian-American community. At a Sunday night panel discussion hosted by St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church on George Street, the Brown student who led the anti-Columbus charge and a representative from the Providence branch of the Sons of Italy met to reflect on the name change. The panel, entitled “Goodbye, Columbus!” and attended by local parishioners and Brown students, was designed to “foster engagement” over the question of Columbus’ place in American history, said Father John Alexander, rector of the parish. Reiko Koyama ’11, who petitioned Brown’s Faculty Executive Committee during much of the last academic year, squared off against Valentino Lombardi, a Sons of Italy representative. The Rev. Deacon Michael Tuck of St. Stephen’s, who works for the chaplain’s office at Brown, opened the discussion by reading an excerpt from a speech given by President continued on page 4

Jonathan Bateman / Herald In a matchup of last year’s Ivy League co-champions, the Bears fell to Harvard Friday night, 24-21. A late rally by Bruno ended on an incomplete hail-mary pass.

See

article, page

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Festival city’s biggest green party By Jenna Stark News Editor

Saturday’s sun shone on an unlikely scene near Kennedy Plaza. Children scampered by in colorful animal masks, musicians jammed on a stage and vendors clamored for the attention of passersby. The inaugural Providence Sustainability Festival was held all day downtown, bringing together students and grandparents, activists and local business owners to teach and learn about environmentalism in the area. The festival was designed to educate the Providence community about environmental living, said Bradley Hyson, executive director of the Apeiron Institute for Sustainable Living. The institute, which created and sponsored the festival,

seeks to transform Rhode Island into a environmentally sustainable state. The festival opened with an “earth-honoring ceremony” led by Chief Kenny Black Elk from the Cherokee tribe. The ceremony was

FEATURE meant to show the Native American perspective on living in harmony with the earth, according to the festival’s Web site. Pitching their tents in the early morning and staying until evening, the festival’s vendors educated attendees about maintaining a sustainable lifestyle. The vendors showcased products such as environmentally friendly plumbing and landscaping services, pizza-making

ovens and toxin-free cleaning products. “For each festival (the Apeiron Institute) invites people who are somehow involved in sustainability issues in one way or another,” said Senior Lecturer of Classics Peter Scharf, who is also on the board of directors at the Apeiron Institute. RiverzEdge Arts Project, a program for “educationally and economically disenfranchised youth,” according to its Web site, sold Tshirts made with eco-friendly ink and cloth. The Apeiron Institute has held similar festivals at its Center for Sustainable Living in Coventry, for the last eight years, said Mark Kravatz, director of sustainable business decontinued on page 2

Liberian VP offers hopeful view for troubled nation By Ben Schreckinger Senior Staf f Writer

inside

The outlook for Liberia, the war-torn West African nation, is promising, the country’s vice president, Joseph Boakai, told a crowd of about 60 students and members of the Liberian diaspora Sunday afternoon. Boakai spoke for about half an hour in Salomon 101 about the challenges of rebuilding his country and proposed a partnership between Brown and Liberia to that end. Between 1989 and 2003, Liberian governments and rebel factions fought two civil wars. In a country of fewer than four million people,

News.....1-4 Arts........5-6 Spor ts...7-8 Editorial..10 Opinion...11 Today........12

www.browndailyherald.com

In shopping craze, profs have the last word

See Q&A, page 4 hundreds of thousands died and millions were displaced — both internally and externally — during the conflicts. Despite the many obstacles, Boakai said he firmly believed that “no countr y has a better chance of reconstructing its war-ravaged past,” adding that United Nations Secretar y General Ban Ki-moon expressed similar optimism about the country’s recovery in a meeting Saturday. Rhode Island has the largest pop-

Dung Hanh Nguyen Vu / Herald

As students crammed into a secondfloor classroom in J. Walter Wilson last Monday, Associate Professor of History Michael Vorenberg started his seminar with an apology. Though Banner had allowed 20 students to pre-register for his class — HIST 1970H: “American Legal and Constitutional History, 1780-1920” — there was a snafu. Banner was supposed to require Vorenberg’s written permission to join the class, but the system had not enforced that restriction. Because of the mistake, Vorenberg said, prior registration on Banner would not assure anyone a spot going forward. Vorenberg e-mailed pre-registered students about the problem before the class to notify them, he said, but some students later informed him that they did not receive the message. The glitch in registering for the class “really wasn’t a Banner problem,” Vorenberg explained in an e-mail, adding that he was not sure where the error occurred. He guessed there was some miscommunication between the Office of the Registrar and him or the Department of History. As rare as such situations might be, the University does not have a set protocol for dealing with them. Vorenberg, for his part, told the students assembled that day that prioritizing the class list based on seniority, concentration and other factors was within his purview as the professor. However, the ambiguity can be problematic. “Students who thought they were in the course because Banner said they were, and then they heard from me that they weren’t in it, they might well be frustrated,” Vorenberg wrote in his e-mail. Over the two-week shopping period at the start of each semester, professors can exercise considerable discretion over the enrollment in their classes, including attendance requirements, how and when to enforce course caps and when Banner registration closes. The process can cause uncertainty for students. The registrar’s office consults with departments between each December and again the following

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Joseph Boakai, Liberia’s vice president, said he had a “firm belief” that his country could bounce back from a history of civil war.

Arts, 5

Sports, 7

Opinions, 11

risd’s new exhibit Early modern engravings down the hill at RISD museum

tough competition The field hockey team wins one — but drops to 0-2 in league play

still waiting Anish Mitra ’10 says Brown needs to find an ‘A-list’ artist for Spring Weekend

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

continued on page 2

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