Daily
Herald
the Brown
vol. cxlvi, no. 87
Monday, October 17, 2011
Since 1891
UCS names Hundreds join Occupy three to movement downtown advisory committee By Sophia seawell Staff Writer
By Sahil Luthra Senior Staff Writer
The Undergraduate Council of Students confirmed three student representatives and an alternate to the Campus Advisory Committee at an emergency meeting last night. The committee will assist the Corporation’s Presidential Search Committee in identifying President Ruth Simmons’ successor. The UCS Executive Board unanimously selected Brandon Broome ’12, Raj Dhaliwal ’12 and UCS Vice President David Rattner ’13 as representatives and Paul Tran ’14 as an alternate. A UCS quorum approved the all-male selection. UCS President Ralanda Nelson ’12 announced the application process for the committee in a campuswide email Oct. 3, and applications were due Oct. 6. Broome, Dhaliwal and Tran were selected from a pool of 57 applicants, 15 of whom were finalists, according to a statement from UCS spokesman Sam Gilman ’15. Rattner was selected as the Executive Board’s representative through a separate process from a pool of five members. Undergraduate representatives of the advisory committee will be tasked with identifying what the student body wants to see in the University’s next president. They continued on page 5
Several hundred protesters, including students involved in Occupy College Hill, joined the growing Occupy movement Saturday evening in Burnside Park downtown. The movement, which began with the
city & state Occupy Wall Street protests in New York City, opposes growing economic disparity and corporate greed. “One percent of the population has all the wealth, and I would like to see it spread out,” said Providence resident Catherine Rhodes, who set up a tent prior to the Occupy
Providence rally with the intention of camping in the park, which is next to Kennedy Plaza. Several other protesters had similar plans, and some said they intended to stay Sunday night as well. “That 1 percent is overrepresented in the political system,” said Joseph Freitas, who was interviewed with Rhodes. “I really want to find ways to disconnect money from politics,” said Jim Barfood. Barfood, who is middle-aged, said he attended the rally in part to dispel the notion that the Occupy movement is strictly youth-based. The rally was relatively informal.
Courtesy of Caroline Sagalchik
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Professor of Applied Mathematics Chip Lawrence joined the growing number of Occupy Providence protesters Saturday in Burnside Park.
Masturbator Bears wallop Princeton in shutout win spotted at win of the year. The struggling Newhall-Caballero ’11.5 led anTigers (1-4, 1-1) failed to keep other stellar offensive perfor- Brook and their Ivy record unblemished after mance, going 22-31 for 229 yards Wide receiver Tellef Lundevall ’13 a win over Columbia Oct. 1. and a touchdown. Wide receiver caught a touchdown and threw Head Coach Phil Estes credited Alex Tounkara-Kone ’11.5 turned Angell Football
By ethan mccoy Sports Editor
for another as Brown dominated Princeton 34-0 Saturday at Brown Stadium. It was the first shutout for the Bears (4-1, 1-1 Ivy) since 1990. Shutting a team out “just gets us fired up,” said linebacker Dan Smithwick ’12. “We definitely take pride in shutting down an offense like that and putting that goose egg up on the scoreboard.” The victory is the Bears’ third in a row and their first conference
defensive coordinator Mike Kelleher for drawing up the highly effective defensive game plan, which he said kept a threatening Tigers offense “out of rhythm” for the entire game. “With our defense and our game plan, the coaches had us ready,” Smithwick said. “We expected and anticipated what they were going to run, and we were in the right position.” Co-captain quarterback Kyle
in his strongest performance since the season opener, catching five passes for 97 yards, while Lundevall and Jimmy Saros ’12 hauled in six catches apiece. The rushing attack continued to progress, contributing 194 yards. Perhaps most importantly, the offense did not turn over the ball for the third straight game. “They matched up really well
their support, their involvement in their children’s lives and for being role models for students. Simmons briefly discussed the University’s position as one of the happiest schools in the country and noted that many of her acquaintances are thrown off by the rating. “So often, we don’t trust the fact that we can be gloriously happy and exultant,” Simmons said. “I’m glad our students can stand up in a public space and articulate their ideas without descending into the vortex of insults,” she said to applause. At the end of her speech, Simmons opened the floor to ques-
The recent public masturbation spree on College Hill continued last night with an incident at the corner of Angell and Brook streets. Alejandra Ceja ’12 was sitting at the kitchen table of her friends’ apartment at 9:34 p.m. when a man appeared outside the window. He saw her, removed his pants and underwear and began to masturbate, she said. Ceja said she is used to seeing people outside the window, which opens onto a driveway between student residences, and initially thought the man was a friend. When she realized what was happening, she ran from the window and yelled to call the police. The man then ran away. Erika Kohnen ’12, who lives at the house, also witnessed the incident. “I didn’t see his face,” she said. “I only saw the action.” At 9:35 p.m., Kohnen called the Providence Police Department. Ceja called the Department of Public Safety at 9:49 p.m. Both Providence and Brown police officers arrived at the scene just after 10 p.m. Ceja said she was surprised it took Providence police almost 30 minutes to arrive. “If the aim is to catch him, they’re not doing what they need to,” she said.
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Tom Sullivan / Herald
inside
Beautiful weather greeted visiting families during Family Weekend.
Arts..........................2 SPORTS....................3 editorial...............6 Opinions................7
Stormy Bard Troupe impresses during Family Weekend
Arts & Culture, 2
Speaking for the last time to parents on Family Weekend, President Ruth Simmons relied on a superlative. “Brown has the most supportive parents, unmatched by any of its peers,” she said. Simmons’ speech, before a crowd of more than 100 students and parents Friday, was engaging and casual. She joked with the audience, mentioning Saturday morning’s homecoming win against Princeton and poking fun at Provost Mark Schlissel P’15, a Princeton alum, for sitting at the back of the stands, wearing orange and black. She also thanked parents for
Occupy
Rosenbloom ’13: movement too simple Opinions, 7
weather
Simmons lauds parents at final Family Weekend By Caroline Flanagan Arts & Culture Staff Writer
By Lucy Feldman Senior Staff Writer
t o d ay
tomorrow
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