friday, april 16, 2010

8
www.browndailyherald.com 195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island [email protected] News..... 1–4 Arts.......... 5 Editorial....6 Opinion..... 7 Today ........ 8 DOWN WITH BARRIERS Tobias ’12 on apartheid, past and present Opinions, 7 THE PLAY’S THE THING Shakespeare on the Green’s open-air productions of “As You Like It” and “Hamlet” Arts, 5 WELCOME, PRE-FROSH We badmouth other schools in the hopes you’ll decide to come here instead Editorial, 6 INSIDE D aily Herald THE BROWN vol. cxlv, no. 50 | Friday, April 16, 2010 | Serving the community daily since 1891 Corp. fellow investigated for kickbacks BY ALICIA CHEN SENIOR STAFF WRITER The Quadrangle Group — a private investment firm co-founded by Steven Rattner ’74 P’09, a member of the Corporation’s board of fellows and a former Herald editor-in-chief — has reached a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission and New York Attorney General An- drew Cuomo concerning a corruption investigation, the New York Times reported Thursday. Quadrangle was accused by the SEC and Cuomo of giving kickbacks to state pension fund advisers in re- turn for investing with the group, according to a press release from Cuomo’s office. The group will pay $7 million to the state of New York and $5 million to the SEC, those of- fices reported. Rattner, who left Quadrangle last year to become President Obama’s “car czar,” was not included in the agreement and is still under inves- tigation by the Attorney General’s office. In a press release, Quadrangle emphasized that it “neither admitted nor denied any allegations” and that the “matters under investigation re- lated solely to the actions of former Quadrangle employees.” According to the attorney gener- al’s press release, Quadrangle stated, “We wholly disavow the conduct en- gaged in by Steve Rattner, who hired the New York State Comptroller’s political consultant, Hank Morris, to arrange an investment from the New York State Common Retirement Fund. That conduct was inappropri- ate, wrong, and unethical.” Engineering school will mean balancing act BY SARAH FORMAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER With a New Curriculum that offers nearly unadulterated academic free- dom and a Division of Engineering that requires 21 courses from its bachelor of science concentrators, the University is in the midst of the same difficult balancing act as several other schools nationwide: expanding engineering offerings while maintaining a commitment to the liberal arts. After the faculty voted last week to approve the creation of a new School of Engineering, which would replace Brown’s current division, that balance is set to become a little more complicated. ‘Training whole people’ “It’s very important that students have choice here,” said Iris Bahar, director of undergraduate programs in engineering and associate profes- sor of engineering. “You can come in, kind of explore and then make your decision about what you’re going to concentrate in.” Without strict distribution re- quirements or a core curriculum, engineering students have “an ex- ceptional opportunity” to discover Over 700 visit the Hill for a taste of Brown BY ANA ALVAREZ SENIOR STAFF WRITER After a record number of applications and months of student planning, A Day on College Hill welcomed over 700 prospective students to the sunny Brown campus. The two-day event, which gives admitted students a taste of life at Brown, officially began Thursday afternoon. Many prospective stu- dents had been on campus since Wednesday for Third World Wel- come, a program focused on minor- ity students. During ADOCH, admitted stu- dents are able to meet future class- mates, pick through a variety of classes to attend during “shopping period,” stay a night in a Brown resi- dence hall and attend many informa- tive and social events. But what admitted students might have enjoyed the most on Thurs- day is the weather. Unlike last year, ADOCH volunteers did not have to welcome students with umbrellas and ponchos, said Sarah Evelyn ’12, a volunteer for the ADOCH Planning Committee. Volunteers were very thankful for the clear skies and warm temperatures, Evelyn said. While the weather on Friday “might take a turn for the worse,” it’s the “first day that really matters,” said Eddie Re ’12, co-coordinator of the planning committee. For the first time, the planning committee paired prospective stu- dents with hosts that shared similar interests, Re said. When students volunteered to host, they were asked to fill out a survey of their academic and extracurricular interests, which were then matched with those of prospective students, he said. Be- cause of this, Re added, “hosting ran very well.” “The only thing that has sur- prised me so far is how smoothly everything is going,” Re said. After registering with ADOCH volunteers at Sayles Hall, prospec- tive students followed colorful chalk signs to the Pembroke campus, where they were served a barbecue dinner. There, admitted students were “already chatting with each other and being social,” said ADOCH volunteer Colby Jenkins ’12. The dinner was followed by a welcoming ceremony with Presi- dent Ruth Simmons and Dean of Admission Jim Miller ’73. Students sat under a heated white tent on the Main Green and laughed along with Simmons as she welcomed the class. Throughout the rest of the night, prospective students attended talent shows, heard a cappella arch sings and mingled with other admitted students over ice cream. “So far Ruth Simmons is one of my favorite academic administrators that I’ve met in my life,” said William Ryan, a prospective freshman. Ryan, who is still considering other universities, said that he has found Brown “more chill and less pretentious than all of the Ivy League Passion, propriety and wolves in P.W.’s ‘Red’ BY KRISTINA FAZZALARO SENIOR STAFF WRITER John Racioppo ’11 is a wolf — or at least he is this weekend in Produc- tion Workshop’s newest play, “Red,” which opens Friday night in T. F. Green Hall. Written and directed by Daria Marinelli ’10, “Red” is a mature retelling of the traditional Little Red Riding Hood story. The play doesn’t offer exposi- tions on how big the wolf’s teeth are. Nor does it paint the wolf in a purely wicked light, and Diane, played by Abby Colella ’12, the play’s own “Little Red,” is no angel either. “Red” chooses to paint the world not in the black-and-white terms of good and evil so often seen in childhood fair ytales, but in the var ying shades of gray that define reality. “The play is about growing up and making choices when there aren’t any right decisions,” Marinelli said. When she started writing the play, Marinelli said she did not know that Nick Sinnott-Armstrong / Herald President Ruth Simmons welcomed potential members of the class of 2014 on the Main Green. Nick Sinnott-Armstrong / Herald Abby Colella ’12 and John Racioppo ’11 as Diane and Red share a tender moment while Mariagrazia LaFauci ’12 sleeps in P.W.’s latest production. continued on page 2 continued on page 3 continued on page 3 ARTS & CULTURE Gala planners have not paid Westin in full BY ALEX BELL SENIOR STAF F WRITER Organizers of Saturday’s Gala have not paid more than the $5,000 de- posit they had originally paid to the Westin Providence hotel, despite a contractual obligation to pay the remainder of a $20,000 minimum payment by Wednesday, Senior Director for Student Engagement Ricky Gresh wrote in an e-mail to The Herald Thursday night. The Gala, originally scheduled to be at the Westin, was moved to Andrews Dining Hall last week af- ter members of the Student Labor Alliance raised concerns over a labor dispute at the hotel that led its workers to call for a community boycott of the hotel. But the contract with the hotel still holds the event’s organizers — Class Board and Key Soci- ety — responsible for a $20,000 minimum fee for food and other services at the event, even though it will not be held there, Ted von Gerichten, associate counsel for the University, told The Herald continued on page 5 continued on page 3

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The April 16, 2010 issue of the Brown Daily Herald

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Friday, April 16, 2010

www.browndailyherald.com 195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island [email protected]

News.....1–4Arts..........5Editorial....6 Opinion.....7Today........8

Down with BarriersTobias ’12 on apartheid, past and present

Opinions, 7the Play’s the thingShakespeare on the Green’s open-air productions of “As You Like It” and “Hamlet”

Arts, 5welcome, Pre-froshWe badmouth other schools in the hopes you’ll decide to come here instead

Editorial, 6

insi

deDaily Heraldthe Brown

vol. cxlv, no. 50 | Friday, April 16, 2010 | Serving the community daily since 1891

Corp. fellow investigated for kickbacksBy alicia chen

Senior Staff Writer

The Quadrangle Group — a private investment firm co-founded by Steven Rattner ’74 P’09, a member of the Corporation’s board of fellows and a former Herald editor-in-chief — has reached a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission and New York Attorney General An-drew Cuomo concerning a corruption investigation, the New York Times reported Thursday.

Quadrangle was accused by the SEC and Cuomo of giving kickbacks to state pension fund advisers in re-turn for investing with the group, according to a press release from Cuomo’s office. The group will pay $7 million to the state of New York and $5 million to the SEC, those of-fices reported.

Rattner, who left Quadrangle last year to become President Obama’s “car czar,” was not included in the agreement and is still under inves-tigation by the Attorney General’s office. In a press release, Quadrangle emphasized that it “neither admitted nor denied any allegations” and that the “matters under investigation re-lated solely to the actions of former Quadrangle employees.”

According to the attorney gener-al’s press release, Quadrangle stated, “We wholly disavow the conduct en-gaged in by Steve Rattner, who hired the New York State Comptroller’s political consultant, Hank Morris, to arrange an investment from the New York State Common Retirement Fund. That conduct was inappropri-ate, wrong, and unethical.”

engineering school will mean balancing actBy sarah forman

Senior Staff Writer

With a New Curriculum that offers nearly unadulterated academic free-dom and a Division of Engineering that requires 21 courses from its bachelor of science concentrators, the University is in the midst of the same difficult balancing act as several other schools nationwide: expanding engineering offerings

while maintaining a commitment to the liberal arts.

After the faculty voted last week to approve the creation of a new School of Engineering, which would replace Brown’s current division, that balance is set to become a little more complicated.

‘Training whole people’“It’s very important that students

have choice here,” said Iris Bahar,

director of undergraduate programs in engineering and associate profes-sor of engineering. “You can come in, kind of explore and then make your decision about what you’re going to concentrate in.”

Without strict distribution re-quirements or a core curriculum, engineering students have “an ex-ceptional opportunity” to discover

over 700 visit the hill for a taste of BrownBy ana alvarez

Senior Staff Writer

After a record number of applications and months of student planning, A Day on College Hill welcomed over 700 prospective students to the sunny Brown campus.

The two-day event, which gives admitted students a taste of life at Brown, officially began Thursday afternoon. Many prospective stu-dents had been on campus since Wednesday for Third World Wel-come, a program focused on minor-ity students.

During ADOCH, admitted stu-dents are able to meet future class-mates, pick through a variety of classes to attend during “shopping period,” stay a night in a Brown resi-dence hall and attend many informa-tive and social events.

But what admitted students might have enjoyed the most on Thurs-day is the weather. Unlike last year, ADOCH volunteers did not have to welcome students with umbrellas and ponchos, said Sarah Evelyn ’12, a volunteer for the ADOCH Planning Committee. Volunteers were very thankful for the clear skies and warm temperatures, Evelyn said.

While the weather on Friday

“might take a turn for the worse,” it’s the “first day that really matters,” said Eddie Re ’12, co-coordinator of the planning committee.

For the first time, the planning committee paired prospective stu-dents with hosts that shared similar interests, Re said. When students

volunteered to host, they were asked to fill out a survey of their academic and extracurricular interests, which were then matched with those of prospective students, he said. Be-cause of this, Re added, “hosting ran very well.”

“The only thing that has sur-

prised me so far is how smoothly everything is going,” Re said.

After registering with ADOCH volunteers at Sayles Hall, prospec-tive students followed colorful chalk signs to the Pembroke campus, where they were served a barbecue dinner. There, admitted students were “already chatting with each other and being social,” said ADOCH volunteer Colby Jenkins ’12.

The dinner was followed by a welcoming ceremony with Presi-dent Ruth Simmons and Dean of Admission Jim Miller ’73. Students sat under a heated white tent on the Main Green and laughed along with Simmons as she welcomed the class.

Throughout the rest of the night, prospective students attended talent shows, heard a cappella arch sings and mingled with other admitted students over ice cream.

“So far Ruth Simmons is one of my favorite academic administrators that I’ve met in my life,” said William Ryan, a prospective freshman.

Ryan, who is still considering other universities, said that he has found Brown “more chill and less pretentious than all of the Ivy League

Passion, propriety and wolves in P.w.’s ‘red’By Kristina fazzalaro

Senior Staff Writer

John Racioppo ’11 is a wolf — or at least he is this weekend in Produc-tion Workshop’s newest play, “Red,”

which opens Friday night in T. F. Green Hall. Written and directed by Daria Marinelli ’10, “Red” is a mature retelling of the traditional Little Red Riding Hood story.

The play doesn’t offer exposi-tions on how big the wolf’s teeth

are. Nor does it paint the wolf in a purely wicked light, and Diane, played by Abby Colella ’12, the play’s own “Little Red,” is no angel either. “Red” chooses to paint the world not in the black-and-white terms of good and evil so often seen in childhood fairytales, but in the varying shades of gray that define reality.

“The play is about growing up and making choices when there aren’t any right decisions,” Marinelli said. When she started writing the play, Marinelli said she did not know that

Nick Sinnott-Armstrong / HeraldPresident Ruth Simmons welcomed potential members of the class of 2014 on the Main Green.

Nick Sinnott-Armstrong / HeraldAbby Colella ’12 and John Racioppo ’11 as Diane and Red share a tender moment while Mariagrazia LaFauci ’12 sleeps in P.W.’s latest production. continued on page 2

continued on page 3continued on page 3

arts & cUltUre

Gala planners have not paid westin in fullBy alex Bell

Senior Staff Writer

Organizers of Saturday’s Gala have not paid more than the $5,000 de-posit they had originally paid to the Westin Providence hotel, despite a contractual obligation to pay the remainder of a $20,000 minimum payment by Wednesday, Senior Director for Student Engagement Ricky Gresh wrote in an e-mail to The Herald Thursday night.

The Gala, originally scheduled to be at the Westin, was moved to Andrews Dining Hall last week af-ter members of the Student Labor Alliance raised concerns over a labor dispute at the hotel that led its workers to call for a community boycott of the hotel.

But the contract with the hotel still holds the event’s organizers — Class Board and Key Soci-ety — responsible for a $20,000 minimum fee for food and other services at the event, even though it will not be held there, Ted von Gerichten, associate counsel for the University, told The Herald

continued on page 5

continued on page 3

Page 2: Friday, April 16, 2010

sudoku

George Miller, PresidentClaire Kiely, Vice President

Katie Koh, TreasurerChaz Kelsh, Secretary

The Brown Daily Herald (USPS 067.740) is an independent newspaper serv-ing the Brown University community daily since 1891. It is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, excluding vacations, once during Commencement, once during Orientation and once in July by The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. Single copy free for each member of the community. POSTMASTER please send corrections to P.O. Box 2538, Providence, RI 02906. Periodicals postage paid at Providence, R.I. Offices are located at 195 Angell St., Providence, R.I. E-mail [email protected]. World Wide Web: http://www.browndailyherald.com. Subscription prices: $319 one year daily, $139 one semester daily. Copyright 2010 by The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. All rights reserved.

editorial Phone: 401.351.3372 | Business Phone: 401.351.3260Daily Heraldthe Brown

FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010THE BROWN DAILY HERALDPAGE 2

CamPuS newS “It can turn you into a monster or back into a human again too.”— Daria Marinelli ’12 on the power of love in “Red”

welcome class of 2014! Visit The Herald at the activities fair, or stop by our open house, 1–2:20 p.m., at 195 Angell St.

it would be a new take on the child-hood story.

“It’s not the seed of the play, but it lies tangent to it,” she explained. “There are echoes of the past story, but with some changes.”

For one, Diane is a grown woman, engaged to her town’s soon-to-be-mayor, Roger, played by Ted Cava ’11. The two live with her grandmother, played by Maria-grazia LaFauci ’12, in a small house on the edge of town. Isolated from their neighbors by the surround-ing woods, the family lives quietly and peacefully — on a good day. Unfortunately for Diane, today is not going to be a good day.

The play opens, fittingly, with the howling of a wolf. Diane rushes out of her house — barefoot and anxious to listen to the beast’s call. She speaks to the audience directly, explaining her predicament in loose, metaphorical language.

Diane was in love once — that much is clear — but that love, which she compares to a wild and ever-changing river, let her down. Her one constant has been Roger, her lifelong friend who is all about tradi-tion and propriety. He does things the way his father did them. There is a comfort between the two and their relationship is teasing, light and easy as breathing.

Enter Racioppo’s half-man, half-wolf character, Red, who shares a romantic past with Diane. Bound-ing onto the scene on all fours, Red returns to his former lover’s house to ask Diane for help. Roger has declared open season on wolves since his dear fiance has been kept up at night due to the inces-sant howling. Red fears the shoot-ers tremendously — he is the only wolf in these woods and he knows they won’t stop hunting until they find him.

Red begs Diane to let him stay, but the pair’s relationship is volatile. He cannot control his wolf side long enough to give Diane the stable, safe relationship she needs. But, at the same time, the two share something she and Roger do not — passion. Diane may love Roger, but it is a young love, sweet and relaxed. With Red, Diane can push aside all of the expectations that Roger, and the town may have of her and simply be herself. Their love is explosive and temperamental, but still comfortable in that Red knows her and accepts all of her.

Diane must choose — the howl-er or the mayor — and it’s not so easy a decision. As Marinelli said, the play is about the “transformative power of love. It can turn you into a monster or back into a human again too,” she said.

This is literally the case for Red,

who can only fully become human when Diane willingly kisses him due to a curse he claims Zeus has placed on him. At all other times, Red is in a state of limbo — he thirsts for fresh meat, sheds all over Diane’s bathroom, nuzzles her leg and bounds around with the grace and strength of a wolf.

Racioppo said he spent a lot of time looking at videos of wolves, as well as studying a source closer to home, his dog. Racioppo had to see how these characteristics would “fit a human body and, then, how you keep the wolf characteristics when you’re playing a man,” he said.

Racioppo’s smart performance, which could have easily been over-acted, was captivating to watch. He truly brought the wolf to life. Where Racioppo brought out his animal side, Cava’s Roger was all about pro-priety, and his quiet performance of the text definitely delivered.

The star of the show, however, is Colella. Her Diane is both sweet and saucy at the same time as she grapples with her emotions throughout the play. Her sincere portrayal brings audience members into the action and keeps them on the edge of their seats as they await her decision.

“Red” is running April 16–19 at 8 p.m. with an additional performance on Saturday, April 17, at 10 p.m.

P.w.’s ‘red’ is a modern fairy tale continued from page 1

U P F O R D E BAT E

Max Monn / HeraldArthur Matuszewski ’11, a candidate for president of the Undergraduate Council of Students and a former editor of Post- magazine, participates in a candidate debate Thursday evening. He is running against Diane Mokoro ’11, currently the council’s vice president.

Page 3: Friday, April 16, 2010

CamPuS newSFRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 THE BROWN DAILY HERALD PAGE 3

“We are not training engineers, we are training whole people.”— Cherry Murray, Dean of Harvard’s School of Engineering

essayist John D’agata shares eclectic writingBy anish gonchigar

Staff Writer

Essayist John D’Agata read from his latest book, “About a Mountain,” to a crowd of about 60 people in the English department’s McCormack Family Theater Thursday night. D’Agata, a professor of English at the University of Iowa, merges ordinarily separate literary techniques, such as fictional storytelling, reporting and personal anecdotes, together into a book that a Los Angeles Times review described as a “meditation on post-millennial issues.”

“I think you need to stop the racist segregation of genres,” D’Agata joked to the audience.

D’Agata read from the end of “About a Mountain,” an excerpt that focused on the Yucca Moun-tain Project — the plan of the U.S. Department of Energy to store the nation’s nuclear waste in Yucca, a mountain 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas, where it is expected to decay for 10,000 years.

The author, whose writing wove together a set of eclectic topics that included the number nine and Nor-wegian inbreeding, linked the story

of the Yucca Mountain Project to his work for a suicide prevention hotline at the time he was writing the book. He then went on to de-scribe the suicide of Levi Presley, a 16-year-old Las Vegas resident. D’Agata had spoken to a young man who called the hotline earlier on the day of Presley’s suicide, and D’Agata immediately believed — mistakenly, as he later discovered — Presley was that young man.

Despite the heavy and tragic themes of his writing, audience members laughed in reaction to the absurdity of D’Agata’s work. The author also told audience members not to feel uncomfortable laughing during these moments.

Thursday’s reading, sponsored by the Program in Literary Arts and the Department of English’s Nonfic-tion Writing Program, was the final stop on D’Agata’s book tour of over a dozen colleges since his novel was published in February. D’Agata, who had spoken at Brown previously, said he appreciated the literary at-mosphere of the University.

“I don’t mean to flatter you, but I really feel I’m saving the best for last,” D’Agata said.

Rattner’s lawyer, Jamie Gorelick, was quoted by the Times and other media outlets saying, “Mr. Rattner does not agree with the characteriza-tion of events released today, includ-ing those contained in Quadrangle’s statement.”

The Chronicle of Higher Educa-tion reported last month that the University had invested with Quad-rangle, according to its 2008 federal tax forms. The University could not be reached for comment.

other disciplines, Rodney Clifton, interim dean of engineering, wrote in an e-mail to The Herald.

“That’s what the open curriculum is for,” said Francois Baldassari ’11, an electrical engineering concentra-tor. “I wanted to do more with college than just be an engineer.”

Baldassari said he took five class-es in each of his first five semesters in order to make room for courses outside of engineering that he “would not have been able to take anywhere else.”

Harvard, like other liberal arts universities offering engineering, strives to maintain a similar balance between hard sciences and liberal arts, according to Cherry Murray, dean of Harvard’s recently created School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

“We are not training engineers, we are training whole people,” she said, because global issues “can’t be addressed adequately without the en-tire body of culture, laws, sociology, business acumen and policy that is part of a liberal arts education.”

Shakespeare and thermoBecause of Harvard’s under-

graduate distribution requirements, Murray said that Harvard’s engineer-ing school reaches many students outside of the department.

Engineering is a vital part of any liberal arts education, since without a basic understanding of math, sci-ence and technology, students cannot understand how the world works, said Venkatesh Narayanamurti, for-mer dean of Harvard’s engineering school.

“If I’m supposed to know Shake-speare, you should at least know the laws of thermodynamics,” he said.

In redefining Brown’s engineer-ing division as a school with more lab space and course offerings, Ba-har said she thinks more students outside of engineering will be en-couraged to venture into Barus and Holley and explore the discipline.

“We want to make engineering more accessible,” she said, explain-ing that a school of engineering would be better able to reach out to other departments than the current division. “It’s not just a matter of giv-ing more to engineers.”

Over the last two years, the num-ber of students at Harvard choosing engineering as a concentration has increased by 57 percent, and there has been a 30 percent rise in the number of applicants interested in engineering, Murray said. Since its redefinition as a school, instead of a division, Harvard’s engineering pro-gram has also gained more faculty and more facilities, she said.

Because Brown’s engineering program is still too small to offer most introductory courses both se-mesters, it can be very difficult to switch into the division, said Allison Palm ’12.

Palm applied to Brown as a prospective engineer, but said she was not ready to take engineering courses until her freshman spring since her high school had not of-fered upper-level math and science. Since the courses she needed were only available in the fall, she could not begin the engineering track until her sophomore year, which means she will have to take five classes for most of her remaining semesters, she said.

A field on the riseNot only would more introduc-

tory classes help the engineering program welcome outside students, but they might also be necessary in order to handle the increasing number of concentrators.

Of the class of 2009, 240 students — about 17 percent — graduated with degrees in the physical sci-ences, among them 64 engineers, according to the Office of Institu-tional Research’s Web site.

Nearly twice as large a proportion — 30 percent — of the students ac-cepted to the class of 2014 indicated an interest in the physical sciences, according to an April 1 press release

from the Office of Admission.“Brown is not unique in its stu-

dents’ expressing a larger interest in engineering,” Bahar said.

Federal initiatives are pushing engineering as an answer to climate change and other global issues, con-tributing to some of that rise, Baldas-sari said.

Many minority students, including low-income and first-generation col-lege students, are also being drawn to the field because “they know they can get a job,” Murray said.

Partly in order to accommodate the growing body of engineering ap-plicants, many universities with a traditional emphasis on the liberal arts are expanding their engineer-ing offerings.

Every Ivy League institution ex-cept Brown now has its own school of engineering, though according to the University’s Web site, Brown was the first among them to offer any engineering program.

Stanford University boasts an engineering school second only to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, according to U.S. News and World Report rankings. In fact, only three out of U.S. News’ top 10 engineering schools are solely tech-nological institutes, suggesting that more engineering students want to “understand not only how things work, but also how the world works,” according to Narayanamurti.

Other departmentsAs Brown and other liberal arts

schools change the nature of engi-neering to include more of a focus on the liberal arts, Professor of Anthro-pology and former Vice President and Provost William Simmons ’60 worries that Brown will lose “part of its identity as a university college,” he said.

“I would have to wonder the de-gree to which the engineering cur-riculum is compatible with the rest of what Brown is doing,” he said. “They’re basically becoming a profes-

School would make engineering more accessiblecontinued from page 1

continued on page 4

u. invested in embattled firm

continued from page 1

Monday.“Discussions with the Westin

are ongoing,” Gresh wrote in the e-mail. “I am pleased to say that talks have been amicable, and I look for-ward to a positive outcome.”

He wrote that the Westin is “cur-rently not holding Brown or the stu-dent groups to the due date.”

Von Gerichten said the process of negotiations would likely be more along the lines of a “business discus-

sion” rather than a legal debate.Neil Parikh ’11, president of the

2011 Class Board, told The Herald Wednesday that he and other stu-dents were not privy to the nego-tiations, and were told instead to focus on planning Saturday’s Gala in Andrews.

A spokesman for the Procacci-anti Group, which owns the Westin, declined to comment Wednesday on whether any payment had been made or when the due date for pay-ment was.

westin not holding Class Board to deadline on Gala

continued from page 1

Page 4: Friday, April 16, 2010

FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010THE BROWN DAILY HERALDPAGE 4

CamPuS newS “No one sits around as a child and dreams of being homeless.”— Jessica Salter, Vice President of Development at Amos House

sional school.”Elena Albright ’11, a biology

concentrator, said she was happy with the proposed growth in engi-neering.

“Brown is plenty prestigious, but if it’s going to attract another set of the country’s brightest students,” she said, “it’s a good thing.”

Neither she nor computer sci-ence concentrator Joseph Browne ’10 said they thought that placing more emphasis on engineering would take away funding or interest in their de-partments.

The faculty’s resolution last week discouraged the idea that other de-partments would be hurt by the change, as it insisted that “steps will be taken to ensure that the move to school status increases rather than impedes faculty and student teaching and research collaborations between Engineering and the rest of the Uni-versity.”

Drop it lowThe faculty’s resolution did not

contain any reference to one of the major problems within the current division: attrition.

Students and faculty gave varying

estimates of the number of students who leave the department, but Bahar said she thought it might be around 20 percent.

“I don’t think that’s higher than other schools,” she said. “Attrition is a fact of engineering.”

The advising program and course structure may be partly to blame for the attrition rate, said Gregory Lowen ’12, a Meiklejohn adviser in engineering.

He said that he thought his advis-ing partner was too focused on “try-ing to force engineers to stay in” to really help explain all of the different options — including restructuring some of the standard course sched-ules — to his advisees.

“They’re confused, they don’t know what to do,” he said.

Baldassari said he was also un-derwhelmed by his advisers, and said that his freshman adviser “gave me my PIN number, and that was it.”

Universities need to continue working to address attrition, both by providing more flexible course modules and by reworking their cur-riculums, Narayanamurti said.

“We need far more engineering graduates than we actually gradu-ate,” he said.

teach-in spotlights homelessness in r.I.By clare De Boer

Contributing Writer

“Being poor, and its corollary, being homeless, is a crushing burden to bear,” Gregory Elliot, professor of sociology, told an intimate audience in MacMillan 115 at the Rhode Island Hunger and Homelessness Teach-In on Thursday evening. At the teach-in, sponsored by the Community Health Departmental Undergradu-ate Group and Kappa Alpha Theta, three panelists discussed the social and psychological con-sequences of extreme poverty before answering audience ques-tions.

“The worst form of violence is poverty,” Elliot said, echoing Mahatma Gandhi. The poor, and particularly the homeless, “feel invisible,” said Jessica Salter, vice president of development at Amos House, Rhode Island’s largest

soup kitchen and a provider of professional training and support for the homeless.

When “you get the message everyday that you don’t matter to the powers that be,” one way to “compel mattering is to do socially disruptive things,” Elliot said.

This explains why “90 percent of people who come to (Amos House’s) programs have a crimi-nal record,” said Salter.

Elliot noted society’s danger-ous distinction between the “de-serving” and the “undeserving” poor — the former whose situa-tion is no fault of their own, and the latter who are held respon-sible for their situation and are therefore disqualified from public empathy.

“No one sits around as a child and dreams of being homeless,” Salter said, “we have to be less comfortable keeping people at arms length, or things just don’t

change.”Asher Oser, a rabbi whose

synagogue is in partnership with Crossroads Rhode Island, the state’s largest service provider for the homeless, is engaging with the issue by providing meals for 350 homeless people each Sunday. His program addresses “matter-ing and delinquency” not only by providing for the homeless, but also by accepting volunteers who have been turned down to perform community service as punishment elsewhere.

“If you can give individuals the skills and the opportunities, most people do really want to take the steps to change their lives,” Salter said.

After the discussion, many of the students signed a petition to increase funding for the Sup-plemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which will be sent to Governor Donald Carcieri ’65.

Students in attendance said they thought the panelists were insightful.

“It was really informative to hear three different perspectives on homelessness and think about the issue on so many dif ferent levels,” said Marie Ripa ’12.

Danielle Crumley ’12 said, “It helped me to understand the cy-clical nature of poverty.”

continued from page 3

attrition remains a problem for engineers

Page 5: Friday, April 16, 2010

Shakespeare on the Green takes the show outsideBy alexys esParza

Contributing Writer

Shakespeare meets the outdoors this weekend as Shakespeare on the Green, a student group that puts on outdoor performances of Shakespearean plays, performs two of his classic works, “As You Like It” and “Hamlet.”

Kate Doyle ’12, director of “As You Like It” and features edi-tor of Post- magazine, described performing Shakespeare on the campus green as a “nice, fresh, dif ferent way to do things” and as a “whole different style of per-formance.”

The actors in “As You Like It” maximize their use of the open space of Lincoln Field, somer-saulting and wrestling across the green. The audience sits at the bottom of the hill, facing Sayles Hall, which creates a two-level stage on the hill. The actors take full advantage of the sloping setup, running up and down the hill and hanging from trees.

Due to the limited number of cast members, some actors take on multiple roles, which illumi-nates the versatility of the actors involved and fosters an intimate setting between the actors and the audience.

“The play lends itself well to

a ’60s theme,” Doyle said. The actors’ costumes are all ’60s in-spired, including colorful prints and floral dresses. Various Beatles songs played during set transi-tions and scene introductions add to the 1960s mood.

The actors play of f of each

other quite well, creating a light, fun and enjoyable atmosphere for the audience. There are many co-medic moments throughout the play that are well represented by the actors’ interactions with one another.

Like “As You Like It,” and most

Shakespearean plays, “Hamlet” has constantly been recreated and reinterpreted by actors and audi-ences alike.

Margaret Maurer ’13, who is directing the Shakespeare on the Green production, wrote in an e-mail to The Herald, “One of the major goals that we had with ‘Ham-let’ was to revitalize it, to make it into a play that everyone — no matter what their previous expo-sure, if any, to the play — could see as though for the first time.”

The Hamlet actors and the audience meet at the Van Wickle Gates and proceed to various green spaces around campus.

Rather than utilizing one set space as the stage, Maurer wrote, “The play moves during the per-formance to a different location every night, so even night to night the play is a completely unique experience.”

Shakespeare on the Green’s productions provide the audience with a fresh look at two of Shake-speare’s most famous plays.

“That’s what theater should be,” Doyle said. “Theater for fun.”

Shakespeare on the Green is run-ning April 16–19 at 8 p.m. “As You Like It” will run on Saturday, April 17, at 3 p.m. 10 p.m.

FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010THE BROWN DAILY HERALDPAGE 5

artS & Culture “That’s what theater should be. Theater for fun.”— Kate Doyle ’12, director of “As You Like It”

Max Monn / HeraldBen Jones’13 and Alex Wankel ’11 star in Shakespeare on the Green’s production of “As You Like It.”

schools I’ve visited.” And, he added, if he does come

to Brown, he hopes Simmons will be his “mom away from home.”

Kyle McNamara, another prospec-tive freshman, said that after taking the physical sciences tour, which fo-cuses on Brown’s science facilities, earlier in the day, he was surprisingly impressed with science at Brown.

“I didn’t know how far science was at Brown, but they seem to have a good handle on things,” he said. Now, McNamara added, he’s almost cer-tain that he will enroll in Brown as an engineer.

Natalie Mehra, also an admit con-sidering Brown, said she was “really surprised” when she got in, given the record number of applicants for the class of 2014. Mehra, who said she has already found Brown “really nice, really friendly, warm and welcoming,” added that of all of Brown’s qualities, the New Curriculum is what appeals to her the most.

Mehra said she is especially glad she came to ADOCH because it gave her a better picture of student life.

“I thought I might not fit in with people here, but now I definitely see I will,” she said.

Pre-frosh praise u.

continued from page 1

Page 6: Friday, April 16, 2010

editorial & lettersPAGE 6 | FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010

The Brown Daily Herald

A L E x Y U L Y

welcome, ’14s

C O R R E C T I O N S P O L I C YThe Brown Daily Herald is committed to providing the Brown University community with the most accurate information possible. Correc-tions may be submitted up to seven calendar days after publication.

C O M M E N T A R Y P O L I C YThe editorial is the majority opinion of the editorial page board of The Brown Daily Herald. The editorial viewpoint does not necessarily reflect the views of The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. Columns, letters and comics reflect the opinions of their authors only.

L E T T E R S T O T H E E D I T O R P O L I C YSend letters to [email protected]. Include a telephone number with all letters. The Herald reserves the right to edit all letters for length and clarity and cannot assure the publication of any letter. Please limit letters to 250 words. Under special circumstances writers may request anonymity, but no letter will be printed if the author’s identity is unknown to the editors. Announcements of events will not be printed.

A D V E R T I S I N G P O L I C YThe Brown Daily Herald, Inc. reserves the right to accept or decline any advertisement at its discretion.

letter to the editor

editorial

We fondly remember A Day on College Hill as a time of great excitement and anticipation. The ADOCH planning committee has put in a lot of hard work and done a great job of setting up informative and enter-taining events, and you should absolutely make the most of this brief introduction to life at Brown.

On top of the events, we especially encourage prospective freshman to seek out some informal in-teractions with current students. Don’t be shy — the overwhelming majority of people here are extremely friendly and willing to talk extensively about why Brown is such a great place. Pick out someone who looks interesting and strike up a conversation. Ask them where they’re from and what they’re studying. We’re confident that talking to current students will make you even more excited about coming here than you already are.

For those ADOCH attendees who have settled on Brown, this visit is just a small taste of the awesome things to come. We won’t harp on the open curriculum or the fact that the Princeton Review rated Brown’s students the happiest in the country. But for those of you still deciding, we would like to offer a bit of objective, unbiased advice.

Dean of Admission Jim Miller ’73 told The Herald last week that students who turn down Brown usually attend Princeton, Yale, Harvard or Stanford instead. Having spent some time here, we know quite well what a disastrous decision it would be to choose one of those other, far less reputable schools over Brown. So let’s consider Brown’s biggest “competi-tors” one by one.

Princeton recently implemented a policy to stop grade inflation and cap the number of A’s that can be given in any class. It’s safe to say that Princeton

won’t be challenging Brown for the top spot in the happiest students ranking any time soon.

“The nightmare scenario, if you will, is that you apply with a 3.5 from Princeton and someone just as smart as you applies with a 3.8 from Yale,” a Princeton senior told the New York Times in January. If this is the kind of thing you want to hear yourself saying in four years, then Princeton’s your choice.

Anyone considering Yale should immediately search YouTube for a video called “That’s Why I Chose Yale.” Note that this video is an official pro-duction organized by Yale’s admissions office. One current Yale professor — who also attended Yale for his undergraduate and graduate studies — told the New Yorker, “It’s the God-damnedest thing I’ve ever seen.” Maybe so, but watching it could very well help you make this important decision.

Somehow the geniuses at Harvard managed to mess up the school’s finances so badly that it can no longer afford to serve hot breakfast in upperclass-men dorms on weekdays, the Times reported last October. Are you really ready to give up eggs, bacon pancakes and French toast?

If you choose Stanford purely on the basis of weather, we probably won’t blame you. But the Daily Beast’s recent rankings of the most stressful colleges — in which Stanford placed number one — should give you some serious hesitation.

So there you have it — what you thought was a difficult decision is actually quite clear. Have a great day on College Hill, and we hope to see you all again in September.

Editorials are written by The Herald’s editorial page board. Send comments to [email protected].

u. cuts show poor prioritiesto the editor:

Your article on how the im-pending staff cuts will impact the institutional knowledge and skills at Brown’s libraries (“University librar-ies face staff cuts,” April 8) is just the tip of the iceberg. The University’s cutting of 60 staff positions, on top of 31 positions cut last year, is just another example of the poor priori-ties of the Simmons administration and the Corporation.

The construction of Brown’s new Life Sciences building cost a total of $67 million — nearly five times the savings of eliminating these posi-tions. In the meantime, tuition is being increased by 4.5 percent at a time when general inflation is barely above zero. Students — and their parents, for that matter — should be marching in the streets and demanding a reorientation of the University’s priorities.

Some cuts, like the layoffs at the Swearer Center that will severely limit Brown’s positive role in the Rhode Island community, are par-ticularly damaging for a university still reeling from the public rela-tions disaster that was President Simmons’ ten-year tenure on the Goldman Sachs board. How ironic

that another article from last week (“Brown group opposes proposed changes at Hope,” April 6) was about a Swearer Center-initiated student group helping to fight against roll-back of positive reforms at Hope High School, and the accompanying reductions in staff. I support and laud these students’ efforts, but they should also be fighting closer to home!

As an alum and resident of the city of Providence who pays more than $2,400 per year on property taxes for a condo in the West End while Brown pays almost nothing in property taxes on its sprawling campus, I am embarrassed to see the University undervalue some of its longtime employees, particularly those who have worked with stu-dents to have a positive impact on the community.

Hopefully, the University will reverse its decision to lay off these employees and slow down its real es-tate acquisition and building binge. It does not serve students, faculty and staff or the broader community of Brown’s neighbors.

Peter ian asen ’04April 13

senior staff writers Ana Alvarez, Ashley Aydin, Alexander Bell, Nicole Boucher, Alicia Chen, Kristina Fazzalaro,

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correction

A photo accompanying an article in Thursday’s Herald (“Pre-frosh invade campus,” April 15) was incorrectly credited. The photo was taken by Nick Sinnott-Armstrong.

Page 7: Friday, April 16, 2010

FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 | PAGE 7

opinionsThe Brown Daily Herald

If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, don’t call it a chicken. Yet this is exactly what those who constructed a makeshift wall on the Main Green last week were doing. The wall stood as a protest to both “Apartheid in the Occupied Territories” of Israel/Palestine and the U.S.-Mexico border fence.

Whatever you may think about South Af-rica, Israel/Palestine or the U.S. southern border, the fact is that these situations are very different. Building a wall that conflates the nuances of the three, rather than having a civilized discussion about the effects of certain policies, paints history with a broad brush. It serves to poison the discourse by making weak associations.

The fact is that while some similarities do exist — there were fences in all these places — there are more fundamental differences among these situations. One of the most im-portant is that the U.S. and Mexico are two separate countries. The system of apartheid in South Africa worked to separate people within a single country based on race, while the fence on our southern border separates peoples liv-ing in different countries. It is internationally agreed that nations have the right to control who can cross their borders. This right is es-sential for protecting countries from terrorists, criminals and drug smugglers.

These two examples show how the situation

is strikingly different whether the separation is between peoples in different countries or with-in a single country. When fences attempted to divide a unified country, as in South Africa, it made sense to protest, support sanctions and encourage divestment. However, when fences serve to maintain existing national boundar-ies and provide security, as in the case of the U.S.-Mexico border, protests and divestment campaigns are misguided.

Given the importance of distinguishing between fences within a nation and fences between nations, how can we understand the situation in Israel/Palestine?

Israelis and Palestinians are very much two different peoples, with their own individual national aspirations. They differ in religion, language and culture. More importantly, they consider themselves to be separate nations. A two-state solution has majority support among both Israelis and Palestinians in polls con-ducted of both populations.

The leaders of the Palestinian Authority and the Israeli government both support a two-state solution. They agree that any solution will be based on the pre-1967 borders, give or take a few land swaps. The groundwork for a

major breakthrough is there. The international consensus has continu-

ally been for the creation of separate states for Israelis and Palestinians. The Peel Commis-sion of 1937 recommended separate Jewish and Arab states. The United Nations in 1948 voted on a resolution establishing the creation of two separate states. Even today, leaders from all across the world, from President Obama to the Arab League, have endorsed some version of a two-state solution.

Given the overwhelming belief that a two-state solution is the best way to resolve the conflict in Israel/Palestine, it is clear that the

situation is much more similar to the fence separating the U.S. and Mexico than the state of affairs in apartheid South Africa.

If the students who made the comparison between apartheid and the U.S.-Mexico bor-der really believe their own rhetoric, then they must accept that they are citizens of an apartheid state, currently dividing the U.S. and Mexico. If I believed I were living under a system of apartheid, I would make sure I was doing everything in my power to end it before I started criticizing a foreign country for doing the same thing. Anything otherwise

is pure hypocrisy.The problem with repainting history is the

tendency to subsume the individual nuances of different situations. The situation in Israel/Palestine is very different from the border fence between the U.S. and Mexico or the systematic segregation along racial lines in apartheid South Africa.

You do not have to agree with everything that the U.S. or Israeli governments do, but sincere criticism and protest go a lot further than name calling and guilt by association. It is easy to write off those we disagree with as acting like “Hitler” or “Stalin,” as the Tea Partiers do, but doing so is not intellectually honest. Instead, we should be debating policy respectfully. By associating the U.S. and Israel with the policy of apartheid in South Africa, those students on the Main Green chose to polarize the debate by brushing over impor-tant distinctions.

The image that the word “apartheid” brings to mind is a harsh one. Those using such load-ed language must make a clear and concise argument explaining why the word applies. Conflating apartheid in South Africa with the U.S.-Mexico border and Israel/Palestine situ-ations diminishes the suffering that millions of South Africans endured. It is an affront to them and to every self-respecting person who values historical accuracy.

Ethan tobias ’12 likes the view from this side of the Van Wickle gates. He

can be reached at [email protected].

no apartheid here

I worry that often lost in the familiar heroic histories of grassroots political movements is the reality that today’s moral consensus on the justice of their causes belies just how unthink-ably controversial these movements were back when they were actually being waged. The unanimous agreement that allows us to exalt these movements in retrospect — I’m thinking, for example, of the effort to end South African apartheid — makes it seem impossible that these issues were ever contentious. Sure, there was always an external target that needed to be compelled to change, but beyond that, the moral certainty of our present narratives can make it seem like everyone else was always united in agreement.

Of course, the consensus is always new, and whatever the issue, there has never been any shortage of people at the time willing to defend the most backwards, antiquated and overtly racist or sexist views. Even in the United States, the campaign for divestment from South African apartheid was a battle for minds. It met active opposition domestically, far outside of the white South African ruling class. Countless people — Americans — defending what was a fairly mainstream political position wound up unambiguously on the wrong side of history. Brown itself resisted the divestment call for a time in the late 1980s. But we forget these things as the terms of acceptable political de-bate shift over the years.

The danger of the illusion of moral con-sensus is that we start vainly searching for it in present political movements as well. Rather than understanding that today’s controversies could well be tomorrow’s moral certainties, we take contentiousness to mean that popular causes now are simply not as compelling as the indisputable causes of decades past and thus not worth supporting. But views will change, and one student’s perfectly normal opinions today might end up completely repulsive in the eyes of their grandchildren.

As we think about ongoing grassroots

movements, then, we must remember that the student activists who supported movements like South African divestment were not simply volunteers doing the legwork for a foregone conclusion — they were courageous support-ers of an unpopular position. Thus, for all of the controversy that today surrounds calls to divest from companies profiting from Israel’s illegal occupation of the Palestinian territories, this divestment movement could, in retrospect, become the moral imperative of our time.

The moral equivalence is well established by those who were heavily involved in the South African anti-apartheid movement. Archbishop

Desmond Tutu writes, “Yesterday’s South Afri-can township dwellers can tell you about today’s life in the Occupied Territories.” Elsewhere, he has written that the situation in the Occupied Territories “reminded me so much of what happened to us black people in South Africa.” Nelson Mandela has made similar comparisons. So did pro-apartheid officials in the old South African government, though they had slightly different intentions.

Divesting from companies profiting from the occupation, then, is as urgent now as it was to divest from companies profiting from

South African apartheid in the 1980s. And as Tutu would remind us, we should not for a moment be put off by the controversy sur-rounding the issue.

Divestment is so imperative because it is a rare way of compelling governments to reform their ways when they otherwise operate with impunity, accountable to no one — as was the case with apartheid South Africa. The simple force of law has proved inadequate in the case of the Israeli occupation of Palestine. Israel’s government has disregarded binding legal decisions from both the International Court of Justice and its own Supreme Court that declare

the Separation Wall and other aspects of the occupation illegal — the Israeli Supreme Court has no recourse but to hold its own government in contempt time after time.

The Israeli government exhibits such wan-ton disregard for the rule of domestic and in-ternational law because there is no mechanism to force it to obey; it can count on the support of the United States government and the pri-vate companies that facilitate the occupation. Divestment, though, grants the international community the enforcement power it sorely needs; it is a way to compel Israel to respect both the law and basic human rights in the Occupied Territories.

Like the movement to divest from South Africa, the movement to divest from companies profiting from occupation draws broad and diverse international support. Brown Students for Justice in Palestine, the organization leading the campaign here, counts among its members Palestinians and Israelis, Muslims and Jews (like me). But perhaps most important are the members who are neither, who are driven to the issue not by the self-interest of identity, but by sheer force of moral conviction. They see unconscionable events in the Occupied Territories — events supported by their own University’s investments — and in divestment they see a way to do something about it. And like their predecessors who fought against apartheid in South Africa, history will bear them out.

Simon liebling ’12 is from new Jersey. He can be reached at [email protected].

The right side of history

The movement to divest from companies profiting from Israel’s illegal occupation of the Palestinian territories could, in retrospect, become the moral

imperative of our time.

The situation in Israel/Palestine is very different from the border fence between the U.S. and

Mexico or the systematic segregation along racial lines in apartheid South Africa.

ETHAN TOBIASopinions coluMnist

SIMONLIEBLING

opinions coluMnist

Page 8: Friday, April 16, 2010

friDay, aPril 16, 2010 PAGE 8

Today 45

Teach-in addresses homelessness

Shakespeare al fresco

The Brown Daily Herald

49 / 42

toDay, aPril 16

4:30 P.m. — “Audience, Aesthetics,

Assumptions: Putting the Groove into

Classical Music,” - Steinert Hall

7:00 P.m. — Latino Gala, Andrews

Dining Hall

tomorrow, aPril 17

2:00 P.m. — Tamora Pierce Book

Reading and Signing, Brown

Bookstore

8:00 P.m. — RED, a new play at PW,

T.F. Green Hall

Dot comic | Eshan Mitra and Brendan Hainline

frutopia | Andy Kim

hippomaniac | Mat Becker

sharPe refectory

lUnch — Hot Pastrami Sandwich,

Zucchini Fritters, Onion Rings

Dinner — Manicotti Piedmontese,

Breaded Pollock, Roasted Butternut

Squash

verney-woolley Dining hall

lUnch — Chicken Finger Friday,

Peanut Butter & Jelly Bar, Blondies

Dinner — Grilled Mustard Chicken,

Toasted Ravioli with Italian Salsa,

Chocolate Cinnamon Cake Roll

Diamond to the class of 2014 and prospective stu-dent William Ryan, who told The Herald Brown was “more chill” than other universities. Just wait until February.

Coal to Art Speigelman P’13 for letting us put a photo of him smoking on the front page. Don’t you know there are impressionable young pre-frosh around?

Cubic zirconium to the Wickenden Street “snuggery” Duck and Bunny — we like the sound of it, but aren’t those illegal now in this state?

Coal to the Rhode Island state senators who want to ban tanning for minors. How will this state ever produce another Pauly D now?

Cubic zirconia to the majority of you who told us you were attractive in our recent poll. We applaud you for your confidence, and would give you diamonds, but it looks like you think you’re pretty enough all on your own.

But diamonds to the majority of you who said you’re in favor of eliminating tableslips. Our domination of your breakfast table will soon be complete!

A muddy old diamond to the College Hill ’Dependent for being good sports at kickball last weekend. You

said the rain and mud conflict with your “aesthetic ideology” — looks like win-ning does, too.

Coal to UFB Secretary Tyler Rosen-baum ’11 for telling the board that it needs to “improve relationships” with the community. We don’t think your board’s lack of communication is the reason you’re all single.

And coal to Sofia Pellon ’10, who has “been notic-ing recently a lot of the people (she’s) living with are coupled up.” What did you think all those extra tooth-brushes were for?

Want more D&C? Check out a retro-diamond at blogdailyherald.com, and write your own at diamondsandcoal.com.

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today toMorrow

diaMonds and coal

m. lacrosse will host Yale Saturday

at 1 p.m. The Bulldogs come after de-

feating Penn and Dartmouth, putting

them 2-2 in Ivy League play.

w. lacrosse will host two games

this weekend, starting today at 4 p.m.

against Cornell, and continuing 1 p.m.

Sunday against Boston College.

m. tennis hosts Harvard today at

2 p.m. The team will then travel to

Hanover, N.H., to face off against Dart-

mouth Sunday at noon.

w. tennis features the opposite

schedule from the men as it visits Har-

vard today at 2 p.m., returning home to

face Dartmouth Sunday at noon.

equestrian competes in Hanover,

N.H. all day Saturday.

Baseball and softball travel to Cam-

bridge for a four-game series against

Harvard Saturday and Sunday.

Both m. and w. crew will race in

Massachusetts Saturday. The men will

take on Northeastern and the women

will go head-to-head against Boston

University.

excelsior | Kevin Grubb