Daily
Herald
the Brown
vol. cxlvi, no. 34
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Community reacts to closing of four elementary schools
Committee on ROTC updates community
By elizabeth carr and Rebecca ballhaus Staff Writer and City & State Editor
Delsa Marfeo answered the phone Monday night to unwelcome news. Her son’s school would likely close at the end of the year, a representative
By Shefali Luthra Senior Staff Writer
continued on page 3
city & state
Rebecca Ballhaus / Herald
Flynn Elementary (above) is one of four Providence public schools that would be closed as part of emergency budget cuts made in response to the city’s fiscal crisis.
To fundraise and to educate, U. looks East By Mark Raymond Senior Staff Writer
The University is looking to strengthen its relationship with China in an effort to expand its presence and appeal to a growing base of potential donors. In the past year, the University has actively increased its outreach efforts by developing its partnership with the Chinese University of Hong Kong and planning for the upcoming Year of China. “We have a growing number of Chinese alumni, non-Chinese alumni living in China and applicants from the country,” wrote President Ruth Simmons in an e-mail to The Herald. “In that regard, our presence in China will certainly grow, and demands from
our alumni to have meaningful programs and relationships in China will continue.” While fundraising is not the primary goal of partnering with China, it is a positive consequence of the University’s outreach, Simmons wrote. “A strong alumni presence in China will naturally mean that our alumni club activities and fundraising efforts there will increase,” she wrote. Professor of Physics ChungI Tan, who is leading the Year of China effort, said he hopes the Year of China engages both students and alums to a greater degree than previous yearlong efforts. He said past initiatives, such as the years of Africa, Latin America and India, failed to reach
By Katherine Sola Senior Staff Writer
In one continuous shot, the camera follows a car painted with the Palestinian flag blaring Arabic songs down the main thoroughfare. As
Arts & Culture
Freddy Lu / Herald
John Stein, senior lecturer in neuroscience, showed off a miracle berry — which enhances perceived sweetness — at a celebration yesterday evening for the Science Center’s one-year anniversary.
inside
a large portion of the student body. Tan also acknowledged the influence the Year of China will have on the ability to foster interest beyond Brown’s campus. “Next year we will be focusing on campus activities, but it will be a stepping stone for our future goals with China,” he said. “It will make Brown better known and will help us reach out to our alums.” “Alums and parents and the broader Brown community exist in that part of the world, and the more we can engage them, the greater the opportunity we will have to ask them to appreciate what Brown is doing and contribute to Brown,” he added.
Pre-nat’l
U. recruits pregnant women for national study
News, 8
the camera passes through the local cafe, the cafe’s owner pulls a child inside. She slams the door shut as military trucks and armed soldiers arrive, shots ringing out. The sudden descent from song — provocative but nonviolent nationalism — into gunfire is shocking. This scene is from Najwa Najjar’s “Pomegranates and Myrrh,” the opening film in this year’s Pal-
continued on page 4
Kennedy appointed visiting fellow By Aparna Bansal Senior Staff Writer
estinian Film Festival screened last night at the Avon Cinema. Yasmine Elmasri displays an impressive emotional range as Kamar, an independent Palestinian Christian dancer who marries a man named Zaid at the beginning of the film. Shortly after, Israeli soldiers arrive in the middle of the night to confiscate his olive farm, and Zaid is accused of punching a soldier during a confrontation. He is beaten and imprisoned, and Kamar faces a daunting legal struggle to free her husband and save the land. As Zaid falls into a depression, she turns to her dance troupe for solace and forms a bond with the handsome choreographer continued on page 3
continued on page 3
continued on page 2
LGBTQuestion
Tea Power
Marriage equality is not enough
Finding fascism in American politics
opinions, 7
Monday. Though their choices have not yet been approved by the Providence School Board, communities are already reacting to the news. Flynn Elementary School, Asa Messer Elementary School, Asa Messer Annex Elementary School and Windmill Elementary School were chosen for closure on the basis of physical quality of facilities, student performance, potential costs of school renovations and ease of transferring students. Parents were alerted in different ways to closings, some receiving direct notice from administrators and others hearing second-hand
Former U.S. Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., accepted a two-year appointment yesterday as a visiting fellow in the Brown Institute of Brain Science through 2013. He will have an office in the institute’s headquarters and will give two annual lectures, according to a University press release. Kennedy has had a long-standing relationship with the University and has “been a tremendous supporter” of its research in the neurosciences, said Edward Wing, dean of medicine and biological sciences. Kennedy “is committed to research and care for people with medical illnesses,” Wing said, adding that he is “very excited” about the appointment. “Millions of people live with disorders of the brain and central nervous system, and hundreds of thousands of American soldiers and veterans have suffered traumatic brain injuries,” Kennedy said in the press release. “Finding treatments and cures for their suffering is a national emergency with a scientific challenge akin to our efforts to go to the moon that galvanized the country half a century ago. I can imagine no better place to pursue this mission than from within the thriving community of
Palestinian film festival opens with dance, violence
Ta s t e t h e m ag i c
news...................2-3 CITY & State.....4-5 editorial..............6 Opinions...............7 SPORTS...................8
of the Providence School Department told her — and it remains to be seen where he will end up. Providence Mayor Angel Taveras and Public School District Superintendent Tom Brady announced their recommendations for the closings of four city elementary schools
Opinions, 7
weather
Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron presented on behalf of the committee examining the University’s policy on the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at yesterday’s Brown University Community Council meeting. Following her presentation, other representatives of the committee and various student groups discussed arguments for and against reinstating the program. Bergeron presented an update on the committee’s activity since early last month, when it was established by President Ruth Simmons. So far, the committee has discussed possible pros and cons of reestablishing an ROTC program at the University. “We have been educating ourselves,” Bergeron said. She noted that the University will not need to offer academic credit for ROTC classes. When the University initially eliminated the program in 1969, one of the main concerns was that ROTC classes could bypass the University accreditation process. If the University were to reinstate ROTC, it would probably be a Navy-specific program, Bergeron said. The University would maintain its current exchange program with Providence College, which offers an Army-specific program.
Since 1891
t o d ay
tomorrow
51 / 37
57 / 42