Daily
Herald
the Brown
vol. cxlvi, no. 57
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Since 1891
BUCC addresses ROTC, proposed team cuts DPS arrest records go to FBI By Margaret Yi Staff Writer
As of Sunday, only 766 students had responded to a survey issued by the Undergraduate Council of Students last week to collect student opinion on the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, said Katherine Bergeron, dean of the College and chair of the Committee on ROTC, at yesterday’s Brown Community Council meeting. The survey deadline — originally set for May 4 — will be extended in hopes that more students will offer their feedback. Surveys conducted by UCS usually average 1,500 respondents, said UCS President Diane Mokoro ’11. About 50 community members gathered in the Kaspar Multipurpose Room for the meeting to hear updates from the Committee on
ROTC and the Athletics Review Committee. Many in attendance expressed dissatisfaction with both committees, criticizing a perceived lack of transparency and the athletics committee’s recommendations. Bergeron began the meeting by summarizing the committee’s progress in reviewing the University’s stance on ROTC. In the past two months, there have been over 15 meetings and a wide range of responses from members of the Brown and Providence communities, she said. She also spoke with an assistant secretary of the Navy, who is interested in involving the University in a cross-institutional program, Bergeron added. This plan would allow Brown students to travel to
Hilary Rosenthal / Herald
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The Committee on ROTC (above) presented at yesterday’s BUCC meeting in the Kaspar Multipurpose Room as community members looked on.
By Jake Comer Senior Staff Writer
alums — a woman who accused him of rape in 2006 and her father — claiming that he was falsely accused and that Brown failed to give him a fair hearing because
Under a federal program recently activated by the state attorney general, anyone arrested by the Department of Public Safety will have their fingerprints and identity submitted to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to be run against federal law enforcement records. Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Kilmartin recently activated Secure Communities, a federal program that sends arrest records to the FBI and Department of Homeland Security. The program applies to all municipal police forces in the state, including the Providence Police Department, and suspects arrested by DPS are booked by the PPD. The majority of DPS activity does not rise to the level of making an arrest. But the department has arrested six people so far this year, according to Mark Porter, chief of police and director of public safety. Secure Communities — created by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in 2007 — is an agreement between the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security to share identifying information on arrested individuals, including their fingerprints, said Amy Kempe, a
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Campaign Emails underline rape procedures’ flaws one student has committed a lifelong consequences of expulover, U. Hall Accuser’s father felony against another. A rape in- sion. Unsurprisingly, the handling offered to mentor vestigation involves more complex of rape investigations on college evidence than a case of plagiarism campuses has been the subject of seeks money witness in or underage drinking — and the much controversy, both nationMcCormick case stakes are much higher. wide and at Brown. Currently, William McCormick elsewhere News analysis is suing the University and two Total gifts to the University have fallen since the seven-year $1.6 billion Campaign for Academic Enrichment came to a close Dec. 31, said Steven King ’91, senior vice president for University advancement, and the University is looking for ways to increase revenue. The question for leaders now will be how to “sustain the support and, in ways, increase it,” said Richard Spies, executive vice president for planning and senior adviser to the president. Though King acknowledged the “pullback” in gifts, he said his office will continue to push for new approaches to fundraising outside the “artificial marketing construct of the campaign.” “The plan continues — it doesn’t end here,” he said. Achieving the initiatives set forth in the Plan for Academic Enrichment will take time, Spies said. “No one ever thought that a campaign over a five- or seven-year period was just going to get everything done.” Prior to the campaign, the University raised about $80 million per year. By 2011, that figure had more than doubled to $200 million. The advancement office will try to maintain the current level of gifts, said Beppie Huidekoper, executive
inside
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news....................2-9 editorial............10 Opinions.............11
By Nicole Boucher News Editor
A rape case on a college campus is a unique phenomenon. It places university administrators in an unfamiliar position — that of attempting to determine whether
If a campus rape investigation wrongly exonerates a guilty student, the victim of a violent crime can be further scarred. If it wrongly finds a student responsible, an innocent person faces the
Top high schools find admissions success
Proud President
By David Chung Senior Staff Writer
Stephanie London / Herald
President Ruth Simmons spoke yesterday in Salomon 001 as part of Pride Series 2011.
Munchies
New meal plan caters to off-campus hunger
campus news, 3
Certified
Faculty considers language certificates Campus news, 4
Besides rigorous academic curricula, extracurricular opportunities, long histories of distinguished alums and growing national and international reputations, the Harvard-Westlake School and Phillips Academy have something else in common. Both institutions have sent more than 45 graduates each to Brown in the past five years, according to figures released by the schools’ college counseling departments. Top-tier private and magnet high schools boast high matriculation rates to the most prestigious colleges and universities. But these schools deny that the relationships between college counselors and college admission offices help boost their students’ chances of getting in. Harvard-Westlake, a college-preparatory day school in North Holly-
Sellout?
Have we traded learning for profit? opinions, 11
weather
By Amy Rasmussen Senior Staff Writer
wood, Calif., and Phillips Academy, a Massachusetts boarding school usually referred to as Andover, are two of a handful of high schools across the country that send more than onefourth of their students to Ivy League or highly reputable institutions. The all-male Collegiate School in New York City has sent 39.6 percent of its graduates in the past five years to universities falling under the “Ivy Plus” umbrella — the eight Ivy League universities, as well as Stanford University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Among the graduates, 14 have enrolled at Brown. Other New York private and boarding schools located throughout New England boast similar statistics. Trinity School on the Upper West Side of Manhattan — named “America’s Best Prep School” by continued on page 7
t o d ay
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