Monday, November 2, 2009

Page 1

Daily Herald the Brown

vol. cxliv, no. 97 | Monday, November 2, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891

Student dies in rooftop fall while abroad By Sydney Ember Senior Staf f Writer

Courtesy of Brown

An artist’s rendering of the reinvented Richmond Street around a renovated medical school education building. Today, the Jewelry District site is mostly desolate around the University-owned property.

Downtown, big ideas are soon to be tested By Brigitta Greene Senior Staff Writer

In fewer than two years, Brown’s new Medical Education Building will welcome its first class of students. But looking at the building now, it is hard to tell. The block-long former factory sits waiting, its 165 windows staring blankly out onto Richmond Street. And though the Med Ed building sits just under a mile from Faunce Arch, few University students now find themselves strolling past its en-

Faculty missing ombudsperson to manage conflicts By Nicole Friedman Senior Staff Writer

A staff position responsible for hearing and addressing the concerns of faculty and postdoctoral students will remain vacant this year after a failed search to fill the spot coincided with a hiring freeze instituted last year. For the past three academic years, the University employed a part-time ombudsperson in a pilot program, who worked with faculty members to “mediate and try to resolve issues,” said Professor of Physics Chung-I Tan, chair of the Faculty Executive Committee. Typical duties of the position included moderating disputes and acting as

inside

continued on page 2

News.....1-6 Sports.....7-8 Ar ts........9 Editorial..10 Opinion...11 Today........12

www.browndailyherald.com

trance — not to mention anywhere within the Jewelry District itself. The Jewelry District, once a bustling manufacturing center but now a neighborhood in flux, lies between Brown’s College Hill campus and the Alpert Medical School’s partner hospitals downtown. Over the past decade, the University has looked to the area as an outlet for growth beyond College Hill. Administrators view the planned opening of the new Richmond Street facility in 2011 as continued on page 4

TOWN/BROWN

The Herald examines Brown’s multifaceted relationship with the city it calls home.

Last in a five-part series.

Arun Stewart ’11, a student whom professors and friends described as “brilliant,” “passionate” and “incredibly hip,” died Friday in Beijing, where he was studying abroad. He was attending a rooftop gathering with friends near Tsinghua University when he lost his footing, according to an e-mail from President Ruth Simmons sent to the community Saturday night. “At this point, few details have emerged,” said Marisa Quinn, vice president for public affairs and University relations, adding that the incident was being investigated by local authorities. She said the accident occurred approximately 10 miles from Tsinghua. Stewart was pursuing a degree in East Asian Studies, following what people who knew him called an intense passion for Chinese language and culture. Driven by a desire to perform, Stewart wanted to perfect his Chinese so he could convey humor to his audience through Chinese dialogue called “cross-talk,” said Lingzhen Wang, associate professor of East Asian Studies and Stewart’s adviser. “He was one of the very few brightest students I have ever taught,” Wang said. “I saw in this kid a very ambitious plan for the future.”

Wang, who taught Stewar t twice in classes on Chinese cinema and 20th-centur y Chinese literature, said Stewart wanted to perform as a popular entertainer in China, using language to unite people across cultures. He was also fascinated by Chinese poetry and late imperial literature, she said, which enhanced his cultural understanding because he had read the works he was studying in their original form. Stewart’s enthusiasm spilled beyond the classroom. He was granted a fellowship through the Department of East Asian Studies before he traveled to Beijing. Wang said Stewart and three other students went to Shanghai to do a project on Chinese food, restaurants and migrants and study local business owners. The group was working on a detailed report that Wang said was a project Stewart was completing for Brown while studying abroad. “The interest he had in the humanities in general really made him a quite unique and outstanding student,” she said. “I just hope there are more students at Brown who will approach different cultures the way he has approached it.” “He loved to tease and be teased,” said Professor of Comparative Literature Dore Levy, who taught Stewart and three other stucontinued on page 6

Edible car competition heats up with Food Network star airs in 30 countries and chronicles his adventures in the world of culinary competitions. Gravity and inertia don’t figure “I have five days to learn a into most toddlers’ calculations particularly daunting skill that as they meddle with their mashed revolves around food before takpotatoes. But for participants in ing on professionals,” Blumer this year’s Edible Car said — professionals FEATURE who, in this case, were Competition, playing with food means fun Brown’s own engineerwith physics. ing students. In Barus and Holley last week, Brown’s Society of Women Engi- Edible engineering neers and the Division of EngiLast Friday, the teams first neering pitted 20 teams against scrambled to divvy up a buffet each other to assemble a func- of potential car parts, including tional, stylish and entirely edible pumpkins, Life Savers, zucchini car in just one hour. and rice cakes. Unlike the first But this year’s contest, only the edible car contest, held in spring second ever, included Brown stu- 2008, the cars could only utilize dents and faculty — and Bob Blum- the ingredients that SWE proer, host of the Food Network show continued on page 3 “Glutton for Punishment,” which By Jenna Steckel Contributing Writer

Quinn Savit / Herald

The Food Network filmed this year’s Edible Car Competition, which took place last week in Barus and Holley.

News, 3

Sports, 7

Opinions, 11

international faces More students from abroad are studying in the U.S. than ever before

B lu s t e ry D e f e at Football loses in overtime to Princeton after three missed field goals

healthy debate Sean Quigley ’10 tries to put the protest back in Protestant

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

herald@browndailyherald.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.