Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Page 1

Daily

Herald

THE BROWN

vol. cxlviii, no. 94

since 1891

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2013

Keeney residents petition for access between houses PC students The U. separated Keeney to foster community, but some first-years said they feel isolated By MOLLY SCHULSON SENIOR STAFF WRITER

About 350 first-years have signed a petition asking University administrators to re-grant Keeney Quadrangle residents access to all three Keeney houses. This year was the first year Keeney — once contiguous, with all houses accessible to all Keeney residents — was split into three buildings. Residents can now only swipe into their own houses from outside and cannot travel between houses inside. The change was part of $56 million in housing renovations approved by the Corporation in February 2012 and was intended to foster more intimate

relationships among residents in each house, The Herald previously reported. Sam Barney ’12, who served as Residential Council chair when the Corporation approved housing renovations, said at the time that Keeney felt “too big and impersonal.” Jacob Kirschenbaum ’17 posted the petition, entitled “Declaration of Keeney Unification,” on the Class of 2017’s Facebook page Sunday evening to garner support. “It’s time for us to take charge of our first-year living experience,” Kirschenbaum wrote in the Facebook post, offering time slots for first-years to sign the document in Arnold Lounge Sunday and Monday evenings. The goal of the petition is not to acquire a particular number of signatures, Kirschenbaum said, but to begin a “discussion between administration, students and faculty about the policy » See KEENEY, page 2

protest canceled marriage talk After the fallout, the Board of Trustees amended the college’s anti-discrimiation policy By ABIGAIL SAVITCH-LEW STAFF WRITER

CITY & STATE

ALAN SHAN / HERALD

First-years signed a petition to grant all students housed in Keeney Quadrangle swipe access to the entire dorm complex.

Majority of undergrads support coal divestment Those for divestment were less likely to approve of President Christina Paxson By ZACH FREDERICKS CONTRIBUTING WRITER

LYDIA YAMAGUCHI / HERALD

Students with the Brown Divest Coal campaign held a rally on the Main Green before last semester’s May Corporation meeting. Herald file photo.

About 52 percent of undergraduates support goals promoted by Brown Divest Coal, and roughly 12 percent of students who support Divest Coal disapprove of President Christina Paxson — more than the rate of disapproval in the general population, according to a recent Herald poll. Students who support divestment were more likely to disapprove of the strategic plan, the document expected to guide Paxson’s presidential agenda. But the largest portion of students who gave opinions on

both issues reported they somewhat approve of both the strategic plan and of divesting University assets from companies that significantly profit from coal. Paxson indicated last spring that the University had assets in some of the 15 companies protested by Brown Divest Coal, but she did not specify which companies. The Corporation — the University’s highest governing body — may discuss the possibility of divesting assets from those companies at its meeting this weekend. Members of Brown Divest Coal, whose cause was endorsed last semester by the University’s Advisory Committee on Corporate Responsibility in Investment Policies, met with Corporation officials last May. After receiving a recommendation » See DIVESTMENT, page 2

Abyssinia provides hands-on dining experience

By SABRINA IMBLER SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Take a moment to recall finger-painting in preschool. The paint streaks on T-

inside

shirts, foreheads and friends — remember the chaos, the joy of working with

bare hands. Fast forward to now, when these simpler times seem all but gone. Luckily, a portal to this past exists. It is called finger-eating, and there is nothing childish about it. The paints are tonight’s dinner — a pandemonium of purple beets, collard greens and sunset-colored cabbage — and the canvas injera, the sour, fermented flatbread distinctive to Ethiopia. There are no forks or knives at Abyssinia, a two-floor escape to the cuisine of Ethiopia and Eritrea at 333 Wickenden St. Opened by a husband and wife who fled an Eritrean civil war, the restaurant offers cuisine that is at once surprising, exotic and fun to eat. With sultry lighting and cinnabar booths, the atmosphere screams date

night. But be warned — patrons will be licking sauce off their fingers for a considerable amount of the evening, so dinner dates should be chosen wisely — preferably those who would not mind or may even enjoy seeing their companions do that, repeatedly, until the check arrives. No matter what the dish, the injera will unify the meal, its muted sour tones deftly harmonizing with the spices of the meats, vegetables and legumes that take center stage. Abyssinia’s food arrives on a platter-sized disk of the bread, which soaks up sauce more effectively than a ShamWow. To refresh diners’ palate, all dishes come with rolls of fresh injera. The secret to ordering here is the

seductive combination plate: two meat entrees with a sampling of all the vegetable dishes, a wonderful compromise for two people that comes in at just under $30. The key wot, tender beef cubes simmered in smoky Ethiopian berbere sauce, is extraordinary. Its spice is aromatic, blossoming without dominating, thanks to a dollop of ayib, Ethiopia’s own cottage cheese-ricotta hybrid. Creamy and rich, the ayib tempers the heat of the berbere in a gorgeous symbiosis. While not groundbreaking in flavor or preparation, the ye’beg tibs, lamb cubes sauteed in olive oil and a smattering of peppers, are tender and flavorful, » See ABYSSINIA, page 4

Face the music

Crimson crush

Tweet talk

Student DJs help shape party atmospheres while developing personal styles

Men’s soccer scored one goal against Harvard but fell to the Crimson in the end

Sukin ’16 considers the implications of Twitter going public

FEATURE, 3

SPORTS, 5

COMMENTARY, 7

weather

The Wickenden Street restaurant offers Eritrean and Ethiopian vegetarianfriendly fare

When administrators at the Catholic Providence College canceled a lecture by a same-sex marriage advocate last month, students and faculty members unleashed a backlash that led to the university’s amending of its non-discrimination policy to include gender identity and sexual orientation. The debate over how to balance a religiously based education with academic freedom remains ongoing, as students hold discussions and protests in support of the school’s LGBTQ students. Nine departments at the Catholic university had agreed to co-sponsor a talk by John Corvino, same-sex marriage advocate and philosophy professor at Wayne State University, on “The Meaning of Gay Marriage.” But Sept. 21, five days before the planned lecture, Provost Hugh Lena emailed the faculty announcing the lecture’s cancellation. In his email, Lena quoted “Catholics in Political Life,” a document created by a coalition of U.S. bishops, which states, “Catholic institutions should not honor those who act in defiance of our fundamental moral principles.” He wrote that college policy required the event to include a presentation of the opposing viewpoint. Though Dana Dillon, professor of theology, had volunteered the previous week to give a response to Corvino’s lecture, Lena wrote that Dillon did not have enough time to prepare. Several days later, Lena announced that the Corvino lecture would be rescheduled for the spring semester as a debate with Sherif Girgis, a Princeton doctoral candidate studying philosophy, according to a press release from Providence College. Many Providence College students said they disagree with the administration’s decision to cancel the event, but they understand the complexity of the issue at hand. Activists demand policy change When students in a Public Community Service Studies class called “Community Organizing” learned the event was canceled, they decided they would hold an event on academic freedom to bring attention to the issue, said Omar Terrones, a sophomore in the class. The event was held Sept. 26, the date » See PC, page 4 t o d ay

tomorrow

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu