Daily Herald the Brown
vol. cxliv, no. 113 | Tuesday, November 24, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891
Med school softens Under new law, bars may close later new PLME policy By Brigitta Greene Senior Staf f Writer
By Ellen Cushing Senior Staf f Writer
After stirring opposition from students, the University has reconsidered a policy shift that would strip undergraduates in the Program for Liberal Medical Education of their reserved spots at Alpert Medical School if they choose to apply to other medical schools. According to an e-mail sent to PLMEs Monday by two top med school deans, students who “apply out” will in fact be guaranteed a spot in a med school class
at Brown, though they may be deferred for a year. The initial policy change, which was announced earlier this month, drew anger from some students who criticized the new system, particularly because it affected current as well as future students enrolled in the program. According to the e-mail, students will now be asked to inform the Med School whether they intend to apply out by Sept. 15 of their senior year. Those students continued on page 4
Poll: 17 percent of students say they have cheated had copied answers off another student’s quiz, test or exam. Only 0.4 percent admitted to having Four out of five students say they submitted someone else’s work have not committed any of sev- as their own in a paper, presentaeral types of academic cheating tion or lab report. in the last semester, The vast maaccording to a rejority — 80.1 perHERALD POLL cent — said they cent Herald poll. Of the 687 unhad played by the dergraduates sur veyed, 12.4 rules. percent admitted they had cop“We do take academic integied answers off another student’s rity seriously,” said Christina homework, while 4.2 percent said Furtado, assistant dean for upthey had used outside resources perclass studies, who oversees in their own work without proper citation, and 2.3 percent said they continued on page 2 By Anne Simons Senior Staf f Writer
It’s a typical weekend scene: 2:01 on Saturday morning. From Kartabar to Spats to Viva, the doors of Thayer Street’s bars are locked shut, with hundreds of patrons filing out onto the street. Now imagine the future. It’s 3:01 on Saturday morning. From Kartabar to Spats to Viva, the doors of Thayer Street’s bars are locked shut, but most patrons have already trickled out — and those who are left are markedly more sober than they were just an hour before. New state legislation, passed by the General Assembly during last month’s special session, authorizes the city to delay the closing time of bars and clubs to 3 a.m. on weekends, but prohibits the sale of alcohol past the old closing time, 2 a.m. continued on page 5
Julia Kim / Herald
Bars like Spats Restaurant on Angell Street may be allowed to remain open until 3 a.m. on weekends, although alcohol sales must stop at 2.
For alum, a shortcut to punditry By Matthew Klebanoff Staff Writer
A regular reader of the Washington Post and a political junkie to boot, Jeremy Haber ’06 wouldn’t have imagined a month ago that he would one day land among the top four finalists in the newspaper’s “America’s Next Great Pundit Contest.” Haber, who is currently enrolled in a joint J.D. /M.B.A. program at Harvard, learned about the competition
through the Post’s online edition. “The political implications of the 2010 Census for the 2012 presidential (election) was something I had
FEATURE been thinking about writing up as an op-ed,” Haber said. When he saw a promotion for the contest, he finally mustered up the motivation to write the piece. Haber’s submission, “The num-
bers don’t look good for Democrats,” argues that congressional redistricting due to population growth in the South and Southwest will ultimately aid Republicans in their campaign to regain the White House. One possible cause of the region’s population increase, Haber wrote, is the influx of undocumented immigrants. “I just thought it was an under-reported story and liked the continued on page 2
Loss stings, but m. soccer already looking to 2010 sat back and allowed the Bears (113-5) to make a furious second-half comeback that fell just short when The men’s soccer team’s season Carolina scored one more goal in ended abruptly Sunday, but the the last minute of the game to players left the field with their heads advance to the third round of the held high. tournament. “From day one, I knew this The Bears handled Stony group of players was Brook in a 1-0 doublecapable of doing what over time thriller in Sports we did and better than the first round of the what we finished,” said goalkeeper tournament at Stevenson Field on Thursday night. Paul Grandstrand ’11. No. 5 seed North Carolina ended The Seawolves and the Bears the men’s soccer team’s dreams of matched each other’s intensity, and a national championship when the the great play from both sides sent Tar Heels downed the Bears, 2-0, the game into overtime. Sean Rosa on Sunday afternoon in Chapel Hill, ’12 scored the golden goal in the N.C. in the second round of the 103rd minute to seal the victor y NCAA tournament. for the Bears, knocking in a Jon UNC (14-2-3) took a 1-0 lead in continued on page 7 the 20th minute. But the Tar Heels By Katie Wood Assistant Spor ts Editor
Jonathan Bateman / Herald
inside
Midfielder Nick Elenz-Martin ’10 battles for possession during the Bears’ first-round battle against Stony Brook last week at Stevenson Field in the NCAA tournament. The team was knocked out Sunday by North Carolina.
News.....1-4 Metro........5 Sports.....6-7 Editorial..10 Opinion...11 Today........12
www.browndailyherald.com
Metro, 5
Sports, 6
sweet deal Thayer’s pizza parlor has a new owner, name, menu
bad news bears The women’s hockey team dropped two conference games over the weekend
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
editor’s note The Herald will not publish a print edition Wednesday. Publication will resume on Monday, Nov. 30. herald@browndailyherald.com