march 10, 2009 issue
TRANSCRIPT
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8/14/2019 March 10, 2009 Issue
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www.browndailyherald.com 195 Anell Street, Providence, Rhode Island [email protected]
News.....1-4Sports......5Editorial. .6Opinion...7Today........8
Hockey rocks
M. hockey had an historic
weekend, beating Harvard twice
in the ECAC tornament
Sports, 5best (office) friend?
Some professors bring their
dogs to work and play in
academic bildins
News, 3corporation payoffs
Ben Bernstein 09 examines
the benefits given to unpaid
Corporation members.
Opinions, 7
inside
DailyHeraldthe Brown
vol. cxliv, no. 33 | Tuesday, March 10, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891
S: M j
by Monique Vernon
Contributing Writer
The serendipitous discovery o
a million-year-old gully on Mars
by Samuel Schon GS may indicate
that water was present on the
Red Planet more recently than re-
searchers previously thought.
Funded by NASA, the research
was published in the current is-
sue o Geology, an inuential
earth sciences journal. Images
rom HiRISE the High Resolu-
tion Imaging Science Experiment
were analyzed and provided
key photos o gullies scattered
throughout Mars. Schon, along
with Postdoctoral Research As-
sociate Caleb Fassett and Proes-
sor o Geological Sciences James
Head, sited through the data and
ound a gully located in eastern
Promethei Terra which they
were able to date to 1.25 million
years ago.
Schon said he and his col-
leagues had not set out to fnd
this specifc gully.Its a lot o geologic good
luck, Schon said. The team
simply stumbled upon the gully,
which was probably created by
the accumulation o melted water
that originated rom ice depos-
its nearby. The original crater
is thought to be the result o a
high-impact meteor crash.
Using a technique that in-
volved measuring the requency
and size o craters and the bound-
ary o the gully, Schon said he and
his team were able to pinpoint the
date o origin o the site.
According to the study, the
gully is located in a crater and
consists o multiple lobes the
components o the gullys depo-
sitional an which have been
determined to be o varying ages
C k
by Lauren fedor
SeniorStaffWriter
Though the new online ticketing
system or Spring Weekend was
met with mixed reviews rom stu-
dents, organizers are pleased with
sales thus ar, a representative rom
Brown Student Agency said yes-
terday.
Matt Garza 11, who designed the
ticketing Web site with Erik Naza-
renko 11, said that while he has
received some e-mail complaintsabout the service, the general re-
sponse rom the student body has
been positive.
Tickets or the Fri., April 17 and
Sat., April 18 concerts were made
available eclusively to Brown stu-
dents at 8:00 a.m. Monday. There
were 1,000 logins within the frst
minute o the site opening, Garza
said, and at press time, ewer than
200 o the 3,000 available tickets
remained or each perormance.
Garza said the site market.
brownstudentagencies.com
provided a much more eective
way or students to obtain tickets
than the conventional box ofcesystem.
No one had to wake up early to
get in line or miss class, he said,
adding, Students didnt have to
leave their dorm rooms. They were
able to use their credit cards, and it
was a much easier eperience.
Most o the complaints Garza
received were about the limited
number o ticket packages or both
Friday and Saturdays shows. The
packages sold or $25, while sepa-
rate tickets cost $15 each. Many stu-
dents wanted to purchase packages
to save $5, Garza said, but by 8:04
a.m. they had sold out.
Garza said there has always
been a limit on the number o dis-
counted packages sold, and that this
year several hundred packageswere available.
While the number o packages
oered was reduced slightly rom
last year, the extra money earned by
Brown Concert Agency rom indi-
vidual sales will go toward provid-
ing discounted tickets to students
with demonstrated fnancial need,
Garza said.
When Lizette Chaparro 12 tried
purchasing tickets at 8:00 this morn-
ing, she received a message that
read Web site could not be ound.
Ater multiple attempts at reresh-
ing the page, Chaparro discovered
that the packages were sold out.
She ended up buying two individualtickets one or her and one or a
riend or Saturday aternoons
concert.
The Web site lagged a little, she
Db b: k by Jyotsna MuLLur
StaffWriter
Students walking around campus
might encounter two frst-year girlswho look shockingly similar. Even
though their hairstyles are dierent,
people oten do a double take when
they meet Heather and Carly Arison
12 twin sisters rom Ohio who ar-
rived on College Hill last all.
People either reak out, or they
dont realize were twins, Heather
said.
Having a twin sibling at the same
school has its benefts, said Alicia
Hartley 10.
It was like having a built-in riend,
said Alicia, whose twin sister Ale is
also her teammate on the womens
rugby squad and a ellow residential
community assistant. We didnt have
the same nervousness when we frst
arrived here, Ale said.
Ross Marino 12 emphasized the
importance o simply having someone
who already knew him well. Right
o the bat, I had a riend, someone I
knew, he said.
Ross and his brother Alexander
both participate in Tae Kwon Do and
take two classes together, in econom-
ics and contemporary art. Ross said
he also fnds it helpul to have a study
partner.
But how did two siblings get into
a school whose acceptance rate hit a
low o 13.3 percent last year?
We dont have a policy about
twins, but in most cases we admit or
deny them admission together, wrote
Dean o Admission James Miller 73
in an e-mail to The Herald. Its not
zby sydney eMber
SeniorStaffWriter
Eorts to create a statewide Cen-
ter or Clinical and Translational
Sciences are pressing ahead ater
nearly three years o planning, as
the University and several partners
aim to secure a large grant rom
the National Institutes o Health
this all.
The new research collaboration,
which will be administered rom
Brown, is critical to bringing the
Alpert Medical School to the ore-
ront o medical education by org-
ing connections between advances
in medical research and clinical
practice, said Edward Wing, dean o
medicine and biological sciences.
Translational science is an
emerging feld that seeks to con-
nect innovative medical research
with the clinical side o patient care,quickly joining recent advances in
bench science to patient thera-
pies.
The center which includes
the University o Rhode Island
and local hospitals will provide
leadership in the feld o bench-
to-bedside research, mentoring
programs and eective means o
collaboration between research
teams and patient-care providers,
Wing said.
The partnership will allow or a
collaborative space or a wide range
o disciplines, such as biomedical
engineering, nanomedicine and
computer science.
It will oer opportunities or
undergraduates, graduate stu-
Jesse Moran / Herald
Browns efforts to partner with teachin hospitals in the creation of a new translational science researchcollaboration are movin forward after nearly three years of plannin.
Matt Weisber / Herald
Alex and Alicia Hartley 10 both play on the rby team and work as com-mnity assistants on opposite sides of camps.
continued onpage 3
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feature
Packaged deals gone in frst 4 minutes
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By Alexys espArzA
ContributingWriter
Though mononucleosis, a commonviral disease, seems to have aected
many on campus this semester, the
number o ailing students is consis-
tent with past years.
Tor Clark, physician assistant at
Health Services, said the number
o cases o mono on campus has
remained about the same as be-ore.
Clark said he actually asked a
couple other providers i they had
experienced an increase in cases,
and they didnt think so. He added
that the number o students with
mono is maybe somewhat more
in the winter, but its pretty steadythroughout the year.
Mono is probably less conta-
gious than a typical cold, Clark
said, adding that saliva spread is
the riskiest o direct contact.
Caused by the Epstein-Barr vi-
rus, mononucleosis spreads through
saliva and is sometimes called kiss-
ing disease, according to a National
Institutes o Health Web site. Com-
mon symptoms include ever, sore
throat, swollen lymph glands and, in
some cases, a swollen spleen.
Clark said inected students
should avoid consuming alcohol,
sharing cups and kissing. They mustalso avoid contact sports that are
likely to hurt the spleen, which tends
to be very sensitive and tender dur-
ing the period o inection.
As or recovery time, theres
no specifc amount that everyone
needs, Clark said, adding that ew
people are so severely sick that they
cannot attend classes or pursue their
other day-to-day activities.
Chelsea Macco 11, who has been
struggling with mono or well over a
month, said that when she frst got
a cold she went to Health Services,
only to be told that she would get
better soon.
But the ollowing week, she hadto go to Health Services again
this time almost in tears because
her throat hurt every time she tried
to eat.
Like Macco, Matthew Balatbat
11, who recently recovered, said
the symptoms o inection were hard
to deal with.
The worst part o (getting mono)
was my throat hurting and my glands
being huge, he said. That lasted or
about a week.
The students interviewed said
they were unsure as to how they
contracted the disease.
sudoku
Stephen DeLucia, President
Michael Bechek, Vice President
Jonathan Spector, Treasurer
Aleander Hughes, Secretary
The Brown Daily Herald (USPS 067.740) is an independent newspaper serv-ing the Brown University community daily since 1891. It is published Mondaythrough Friday during the academic year, ecluding vacations, once duringCommencement, once during Orientation and once in July by The Brown DailyHerald, Inc. POSTMASTERplease send corrections to P.O. Bo 2538, Provi-dence, RI 02906. Periodicals postage paid at Providence, R.I. Ofces are locatedat 195 Angell St., Providence, R.I. E-mail [email protected] Wide Web: http://www.browndailyherald.com.Subscription prices: $319 one year daily, $139 one semester daily.Copyright 2009 by The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. All rights reserved.
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DailyHeraldthe Brown
-THE BROWN DAILY HERALDPAgE 2
CMS wS This will help s become one of the best medical schools inthe contry. Edward Win, dean of medical and bioloical sciencesM
dents and postgraduate trainees
by providing a large educational
component through new masters
and Ph.D. tracks in clinical and
translational sciences, said James
Padbury, a proessor o pediatrics
who is one o the leaders o the
original proposal or the center.
The center will also serve as an
absolutely mandatory academic
home or spending a Clinical and
Translational Science Award a
National Institutes o Health grant
worth up to $25 million over a fve-
year period that the University
plans to apply or in October, hesaid.
The center is going to be a
clearinghouse a networking
agency, a research center, Pad-
bury said.
Members o the Universitys Di-
vision o Biology and Medicine are
hoping the new center will anchor
a successul application and und
this eciting research, he added.
Proessor o Medicine Timo-
thy Flanigan also helped drat the
proposal, which was approved at a
aculty meeting last week.
Translational science has al-
ready achieved some success in
the medical world. For example,
Padbury said, scientists have con-
ducted research on cellular trans-
port to increase understanding o
ovarian cancer. Medical practitio-
ners have been able to use new
techniques rom the research to
provide improved cancer therapy
or patients.
Given the extraordinary
advancements in medicine, it is
important to accelerate the pace
o those advances into clinical prac-
tice, Padbury said.
The approved proposal is a cul-
mination o planning eorts that
stemmed rom an NIH Clinical
and Translational Sciences AwardPlanning Grant that the University
received in September 2006.
The new center, whose adminis-
trative home will likely be in Arnold
Laboratory, will be unded in part
by BioMed, Wing said. The rest o
the unding will come rom grants,
donations and the endowment. But
Wing said the current fnancial situ-
ation has orced BioMed like
many University branches to
cut back on the budget or the next
fscal year, putting a damper on
many eisting plans.
We have to be very careul
where were going to put our re-sources, Wing said. But we cant
just pull back.
This is one o the areas that I
eel so strongly about, he added,
that this will help us become one
o the best medical schools in the
country.
In addition to increasing the
Medical Schools prestige, Wing
said the award will also provide
money to invest in grants or new
aculty projects and new laborato-
ries, such as a genomics laboratory
and a statistical core to assist the
centers researchers.
The clinical aculty and the hos-
pitals are very enthusiastic, Wingsaid. Its a real opportunity even in
this time o fnancial constraint.
Nancy Thompson, associate
dean o graduate and postdoctoral
training and a member o the cen-
ters executive committee, said the
center will provide a way to connect
people in the medical community
who may not necessarily come
across one another.
Its very exciting because it has
the inrastructure and means to
nurture these collaborations and
provide a basis that will move ideas
orward, she said.
continued frompage 1
wrote in an e-mail to The Herald,
beore adding I guess it is Spring
Weekend, ater all.
Anthony Urena 12 also woke up
early to purchase tickets, but ound
that it took orever to authenticate
his login and even longer to reach
the checkout page, he wrote in an
e-mail to The Herald.
I set out to buy a package, but
due to the long loading times and
the Web sites request o personal
inormation, the package was sold
out, he wrote.
Urena added that he was scared
that separate tickets would sell out
just as quickly, and ended up buy-
ing $15 tickets or both Friday and
Saturdays perormances.
Despite the rush, Garza said
there were no technical difcul-
ties with the Web site, and the prob-
lems students had logging on were
most likely the result o the crowded
Brown network not that the ticket
site couldnt handle the trafc.
Garza also said that though the
time stamp on receipts read an hour
earlier than the transactions actually
took place, the site was not active
at 7:00 a.m. as some students are
questioning.
The site is not on an automatic
timer, he said, adding, We were in
complete control. I physically clicked
(to open sales) at 8:00 a.m.
Even with the sporadic com-
plaints and student concerns, or-
ganizers were nonetheless pleased
with the system.
Were still very excited that stu-
dents were able to do this online,
Garza said.
And students saw the bright side
o the situation too.
Urena wrote that despite
the diiculties he encountered
with the Web site, It sure beats
waiting on long lines in this
terrible weather.
k k continued frompage 1
Online ticket sales for
Sprin Weekend contine
today. Brown stdents can
by separate tickets for Fri-
days and Satrdays shows
for $15 each, and sales will
open to RISD stdents for
the same price on March 16.
If tickets remain on March
18, BCA will offer them to
the pblic for $25 a show.
Fridays performance will
featre Nas, Sharon Jones,
the Dap-Kins and Deer
Tick. Satrdays concert will
inclde Of Montreal, Santi-
old and Tobab Krewe.
Thoh 3,000 tickets
have been made available for
each concert, BCA will sell
an additional 1,500 throh
conventional box office tick-
etin 48 hors before each
show if weather permits the
concerts to be held on the
Main green.
sg W ll l
Sales contine to Brown stdents only
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8/14/2019 March 10, 2009 Issue
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by eLisabetH aVaLLone
SportS StaffWriter
With 1:23 let on the clock and the
score tied 11-11, mens lacrosse captain
Jack Walsh 09 scored a quick-stick
goal o a eed rom captain Kyle Hol-
lingsworth 09, securing a 12-11 victory
or the No. 15 mens lacrosse team (3-
1) over No. 18 Denver this Sunday.
The win was Browns second o
the weekend, ollowing a 7-3 victory
on Friday aternoon against Quin-
nipiac.
The frst challenge going into the
weekend was to play two games in
three days at a high level. The second
challenge we aced was more o an
emotional one, reected Head CoachLars Tiany 90. We were coming o
o two ourth-quarter breakdowns,
surviving with a one-goal win against
Lehigh, and giving up a fve-goal lead
in the ourth quarter, only to lose to
Hostra by one. So the emotional chal-
lenge may have been more critical.
bw 7, q 3
On attack against Quinnipiac, An-
drew Feinberg 11 and Hollingsworth
combined or fve goals and an assist,
while captain Jordan Burke 09 made
10 saves in the net.
Ater an early goal by Quinnipiac
less than fve minutes into the game,
Brown built momentum with three
unanswered goals o its own. Fein-
berg had the frst goal o the series o
a quick pass rom deenseman Jake
Hardy 10, then Thomas Muldoon 10
and Hollingsworth each netted a goal,
giving the Bears a 3-1 lead at the end
o the frst quarter.
The Quinnipiac deense, and goalieKevin Benzing, stymied the Bears in
the second quarter, and with just over
a minute let to play, the Bobcats cut
Browns lead to just one goal.
Hollingsworth posted his second
goal o the game, the only goal o the
third quarter, to secure a two-goal lead
going into the fnal quarter.
The Bears dominated the ourth
quarter, quickly cushioning their score
with three goals in the frst thirteen
minutes or a 7-2 lead. O the three
goals, Feinberg had two, and Nic Bell
09 the third.
We have to give a lot o credit
to their goalie he was simply out-standing, Tiany said. We have an
inexperienced deense, and limiting
them to three goals was certainly a
step in the right direction, as we defne
who were going to be at that end o
the feld.
bw 12, dv 11
The transition to play Denver, a
top-twenty program, with one day o
rest was certainly an obstacle. But the
Bears proved resilient, capitalizing on
six o eight extra-man situations to pull
out the 12-11 win.
Feinberg again had three goals
and added three assists, coupling with
Brady Williams 09, who netted threemore goals. Hollingsworth supported
the attack with our assists, and a goal
o his own, while Burke was strong
in the net or the Bears, tallying ten
saves.
The Bears dominated rom the
start, as Feinberg put away two goals
and Reade Seligmann 09 added athird or a 3-0 lead only fve minutes
in. However, the Pioneers retaliated
with three goals o their own, leav-
ing the score tied with 5:48 let in the
frst quarter. Williams answered with
his frst o three goals, and Jimmy
Wittpenn 11 secured a 5-3 lead or
the Bears, scoring o a one-on-one
drive.
The second quarter went into a
lull with a series o turnovers, missed
shots, and strong deense rom both
teams. Late in the hal, Seligmann
ed the ball to Williams on the crease
or another goal, but Denver scored
shortly aterwards to end the hal witha 6-4 lead or the Bears.
The Pioneers opened the second
hal with three unanswered goals
to gain a 7-6 lead, but the Bears an-
swered with two o their own in the
closing minutes o the third, when Hol-
lingsworth assisted goals by Feinberg
and Hardy.
Denver scored two goals to take a
9-8 lead early in the ourth quarter, but
Williams third goal o the game tied
it up and Hollingsworths frst goal
on the day gave Brown a 10-9 lead.
Burke made two key saves to keep
Brown in control, but with 6:30 let, the
Pioneers tied the game at 10. Walsh
answered with an impressve goal oa eed rom Feinberg, as he grabbed
and fred the ball while alling to the
ground in ront o the crease, to get
the lead back with six minutes let. At
4:23, the Pioneers tied it up again, but
Walshs game-winning goal with just
over a minute remaining put Brown
back on top.
I thought we maintained our com-
posure in the ourth quarter, and some
guys really stepped up and had great
plays, Walsh said. Kyle made an awe-
some pass at the end. And the crowd
made a big dierence it was great
to have that support.
Denver gained possession o the
ball with 32 seconds let in the game,
but Burke came up with a crucial save,locking up the victory.
Ater the game, Williams said the
main dierence between this Sundays
victory and last seasons 11-8 loss to
the Pioneers was the teams ability to
remain poised and capitalized on our
etra man opportunities.
Last year Denver pressured us
early and took us out o our game, but
yesterday we ocused on playing our
game and did not worry about them,
Williams said.
Looking orward to next Satur-
day, when the Bears will ace UMass-
Amherst, Tiany said the Bears will
need to shore up their deense.
Right now were allowing too
many good shots and too many creaseshots to be taken on Jordan, he said.
We need to be tougher in ront o
Jordan. This will be a big test against
UMasss outstanding attack unit
this weekend.
SportsuesdayThe Brown Daily Herald
. k
M. k , by dan aLexander
SportS StaffWriter
The 12th-seeded mens hockey team
didnt go into the frst round o the
ECAC Hockey Tournament trying
to dey history. They went in justtrying to extend their season and
end 5th-seeded Harvards. All signs
suggested that wouldnt happen.
A 12-seed had never deeated
a 5-seed since the current ormat
o the tournament began in 2003.
Brown (7-21-5, 5-15-4 ECAC) hadnt
won back-to-back games in over a
year, and Harvard (9-16-6, 9-7-6
ECAC Hockey) hadnt been shut
out at home in consecutive games
in 111 years.
All streaks end sometime.
In a best-o-three-game series
that only needed two contests, the
Bears stunned Harvard. In 86 shots
over two games, the Crimson didntscore once on goalie Mike Clem-
ente 12.
Nobody really expected this,
said Harvard captain Brian McCa-
erty. But thats why they play the
games I guess.
bw 1, Hv 0
Coming into Friday nights game,
Clemente had never posted a shut-
out in his young career at Brown
and orward Harr y Zolnierczyk 11
hadnt scored a goal in two years.
But when the fnal buzzer sounded,
Clemente was a perect 39 or 39 in
goal, and Zolnierczyk had scored
the games only goal.
Harvard goalie Ryan Carroll
stayed even with Clemente in the
frst period, stopping all seven shots
he aced. Harvard maintained a 13-7
shot advantage in the scoreless frst
period. The Crimsons six-game un-
beaten streak looked like it was in
danger when the Bears came out
with the frst six shots o the second
period. But Carroll denied every
shot, and the Crimson regained an
11-10 shot advantage by the end o
the rame.
The fnal period was 15-5 or Har-
vard on the shot charts, but 1-0 or
Brown on the scoreboard.
Just over three minutes into the
third, Browns ourth line produced
the games only goal. David Brown-
schidle 11 shot a backhand rom
close in on Carroll. Carroll denied
the shot, but couldnt corral the re-
bound. Zolnierczyk slapped the wild
puck into the back o the net or the
games only goal.
I thought the ourth line was
tremendous, said Browns Head
Coach Roger Grillo.
Harvard put the pressure on Cle-
mente in the fnal minutes Carroll
let the net with 46 seconds let on
the clock, giving the Crimson an
etra attacker.
But Clemente, playing in his
frst collegiate postseason game,
embraced the pressure.
Its un, he said. When youre
a little kid, you want to be in a 1-0 or
2-0 playo game where your team
needs you.
With the man advantage, Har-
vard fred shot ater shot on Clem-
ente. Doug Rogers shot two one-tim-
ers the frst o which Clemente
pushed aside and the second owhich sailed wide.
The rebounds kept coming out to
Harvard, and Crimson assistant cap-
tain Alex Biega got the fnal chance.
He wound up rom the right point
and sent a rocket at the goal, but
Clemente maintained his shutout
with his 39th stop o the night.
bw 2, Hv 0
The Bears showed no signs o
slowing down on Saturday, as Cle-
mente blanked the Crimson again
with a career-high 47 saves.
I dont think Ive ever had back-
to-back shutouts at any level, Cle-
mente said.
Eric Slais 09 and assistant cap-
tain Aaron Volpatti 10 gave Cle-
mente some insurance, scoring a
goal apiece, both o which were
assisted by assistant captain Matt
Vokes 09.
Unlike Friday night, Clemente
didnt have to deend the goal with
a blank scoreboard or long. Less
than three minutes ater the puck
dropped, Vokes, skating along the
let boards, spotted Slais cutting
rom center ice to the let ace-o
circle, with only one deender stand-
S f Iw By KAtie Wood
aSSiStantSportS editor
The wrestling team fnished o
its season with three ourth-place fnishes in the consolation
bracket at the Eastern Intercol-
legiate Wrestling Association
Championships at Penn this past
weekend. Many wrestlers lost
their opening matches and ought
their way back into contention in
the wrestle-back bracket, includ-
ing co-captain Matt Gevelinger
09, who qualifed or the NCAA
National Championships, which
will take place March 19 to 21 in
St. Louis.
Our expectation was to have
as many place winners as pos-
sible, Gevelinger said. We all
battled and had a lot o pride in
what we were doing we never
quit.
Gevelinger, the No. 6 seed at
184 pounds, received a frst-round
bye, but ell short in the second
round, 11-3, to 3rd-seeded Justin
Kerber o Cornell. He bounced
back with three straight wins,
wrestling back into the third-
place match, where his day ended
with a 10-2 loss to 2nd-seeded
Ivy League oe Louis Caputo o
Harvard.
Beore the regional competi-
tion this week, each weight class
had a predetermined number o
spots in the NCAA champion-
ships. Gevelinger ound him-
sel in the elite group o our
184-pound wrestlers rom the
region who will make their wayto the Gateway City in search o a
national title. Gevelinger returns
to nationals or the second year
in a row and hopes to come away
with more than his guaranteed
two matches.
I had the goal o going back
Id been working or it all sea-
son, Gevelinger said. I have to
be mentally prepared, and above
all, believe in mysel.
Branden Stearns 09, wres-
tling at 197 pounds, came out o
nowhere to claim ourth place
in the consolation bracket as an
unranked wrestler. He lost his
opening match, 7-5, to Armys1st-seeded Richard Starks, but
stormed back and rattled o
three wins o his own entering
the third-place match. He lost
a hard-ought fnal match, 5-3,
to 8th-seeded Lou Miller o Co-
lumbia, and narrowly missed
the cut or nationals, as only the
top two fnishers at 197 pounds
moved on.
Stearns resilience came as no
surprise to Gevelinger.
The great thing about wres-
tling is that in this tournament,
Jstin Coleman / Herald File Photo
Mens lacrosse won twice last weekend, beatin Denver 12-11 with a last-min-te oal from Jack Walsh 09, assisted by Kyle Hollinsworth 09 (above).
continued onpage 5 continued onpage 5
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SSSDTuESDAY, MARCH 10, 2009 THE BROWN DAILY HERALD PAgE 5
anything can happen, Gevelinger
said. It all comes down to thesematches.
Seventh-seeded Greg Einrank
10, wrestling at 125 pounds, did
not wrestle until the second
round and came up short in his
frst match as 2nd-seeded Penns
Rollie Peterkin recorded an 18-1
technical all at the 6:28 mark. He
won three consecutive matches in
the wrestle-back bracket to reach
the third-place match against 3rd-
seeded Derek Reber o Bucknell.
Einrank could not fnish o Re-
ber, alling 6-2 and claiming ourth
place. Einrank ell one spot shorto making his frst trip to nation-
als, as the top three places pro-
ceed on in competition.
Both Stearns and Einrank are
hoping their names will be called
when the NCAA announces 52
wildcard berths on Wednesday.
Bryan Tracy 10 at 157 pounds
and 6th-seeded Zach Zdrada 09 at
heavyweight both won their frst
match o the day, but could not
stay in the winners bracket. Each
wrestler lost their next match and
fnished the day 1-2.
Ross Baldwin 09 (133 pounds),Stephen DeLorenzo 10 (141
pounds), David Foxen 11 (149
pounds) and Je Lemmer 12
(165 pounds) all lost their open-
ing matches and could not muster
up another win to advance in the
double-elimination tournament.
We had trained all season or
this one meet, Gevelinger said.
I wish we could have placed fve
or si guys.
w continued frompage 4
ing between Slais and the goalie.To be honest with you, I dont
know how I got around the guy,
Slais said. Im not the astest
skater.
But Slais lowered his head, pow-
ered orward and came up on Car-
roll all alone, then backhanded the
puck through the fve-hole to put
Brown up, 1-0.
Harvard controlled the rest
o the period, gaining a 15-8 shot
advantage. The Crimson got their
closest chance when Captain Jimmy
Fraser fred a wrist-shot on a two-
on-one break. The puck hit the top
right post, ricocheted across thegoal to the let post and bounced
out.
Despite the bounce-out, the siren
lit up as Fraser hoisted his stick in
the air. But ater a reeree huddle,
the striped shirts ruled that the puck
had not crossed the goal line plane,
preserving Browns 1-0 lead.
The call looked like it was go-
ing to be crucial ater neither team
scored in the second period, and it
remained a one-goal game.
But the Bears made it a two-goal
game just under three and a hal
minutes into the fnal rame, when
Volpatti managed to get a shot out
o a cluster in the slot in ront o
Harvards goal.
Carroll let Harvards net with
2:14 let in avor o an extra attacker.
The Crimson got a two-man advan-tage when Slais was whistled or
hooking with less than two minutes
on the clock.
Despite the si-on-our attacker
advantage, Harvard couldnt fnd
the back o the net. The Crimson
took the last 11 shots o the game,
but Clemente stopped them all,
bringing his total to 47 saves.
Their goalie was seeing the
puck well, said Harvard Head
Coach Ted Donato, shaking his
head. He was incredible.
With 4.8 seconds let on the
clock, the whistle blew, stopping
time once more. The small contin-gent o Brown ans, wearing team
jerseys, stood up and began clap-
ping. They didnt stop until ater the
buzzer, while the Bears slapped each
other on the helmets and jumped up
and down in a huddle.
Theres just a good eeling in
the locker room right now, and it
hasnt been there or a couple o
years, Slais said, while Clemente
added Its kind o un to end some-
ones season.
The win sends Brown to New
Haven, Conn. next weekend or
another three-game series in the
ECAC quarterfnals against top seed
Yale (20-7-2, 15-5-2 ECAC Hockey),ranked No. 10 in the nation.
M. CC
continued frompage 4
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ditorial & LettersPage 6 | TuESDAY, MARCH 10, 2009
The Brown Daily Herald
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lettertotheeditors
editorial
s s W Mitra Anoshiravani, Colin Chazen, Ellen Cshin, Sydney Ember,
Laren Fedor, Nicole Friedman, Britta greene, Sarah Hsk, Brian Mastroianni, Hannah
Moser, Ben Schreckiner, Caroline Sedano, Melissa Shbe, Anne Simons, Sara Snshine
staff Wt Znaira Chodhary, Chris Dffy, Nicole Dnca, Jliana Friend, Cameron
Lee, Kelly Mallahan, Christian Martell, Heeyon Min, Seth Motel, Jyotsna Mllr, Laren
Pischel, Leslie Primack, Anne Speyer, Alexandra ulmer, Kyla Wilkes
s s W Nicole Stock
s b a Max Barrows, Jackie goldman, Mararet Watson,Ben Xion
b a Stassia Chyzhykova, Misha Desai, Bonnie Kim, Mara Lynch, Cathy
Li, Allen Mcgonaill, Thanases Plestis, Corey Schwartz, William Schweitzer, Kenneth So,
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c e Sara Chimene-Weiss, Sydney Ember, Laren Fedor, Casey gaham, AnnaJoravleva, geoffrey Kyi, Frederic L, Jordan Mainzer, Kelly Mallahan, Allison Peck,Madeleine Rosenber
W dvl Jihan Chao
Jca Cahan, Ka Wn, Dsns
K Maahan, Man rnbg, Cpy eds
laun F , emm l, Ma shub, Jnna sak, Janna Whmuh, Nh eds
thebrowndailyherald
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Were sorry that Roba Dolce is dead and gone. It was a nice addition
to Thayer Street, and its always sad to see a local business ounder.
However, prime commercial real estate should not be let as a memorial,
especially during difcult economic times, and we think theres a pretty
natural choice to succeed Roba Dolce at 178 Angell St.: Chipotle.
The prospect o a Thayer Street Chipotle was frst mentioned in a
Herald article over two years ago, to the delight o many Brown students
who became Chipotle partisans during their high school days. The
low-cost, high calorie, highly delicious burritos are explicitly marketed
to college students, who make up the sweet spot o the restaurants
18-34 core demographic. So they want us, and we want them whats
the problem?
Mainly, the other Thayer street restaurants or, to be more specifc,
Stonehenge Partners LLC (Johnny Rockets) and Dale Dulgarian (An-
dreas, Gordito Burrito). Ater Chipotle attempted to move in at 2 Euclid
St., this impromptu anti-burrito coalition fled a lawsuit alleging thatChipotles proposed outdoor seating and parking plans violated state
zoning laws. Though the court rejected Stonehenge and Dulgarians
claims about parking, it ruled that Chipotles outdoor seating pushed
the building unacceptably ar away rom the sidewalk, ending the Euclid
Street project.
This clearly isnt the case with the ormer Roba Dolce spot. Since the
building has operated with an outdoor seating area or some time, the
space could accommodate Chipotles needs. Further, the act that the
court already agreed to Chipotles o-site parking plan at the old location
might acilitate the transition and orestall other legal challenges.
But this tit-or-tat over arcane zoning laws obscures the most un-
damental issue at stake in this debate: Brown students right to a good
burrito. Were sorr y, Gordito, but or years weve been settling or sub-par
burritos that make the Rattys usual are look appetizing by comparison.
No more. The cruel and arbitrary denial o our right to put on that
Freshman 15 by indulging in ood that actually tastes good cannot, in
good conscience, be allowed to stand. Its time to put on our collectiveactivist hats and get to work. Chipotles cause must be our own.
Editorials are written by The Heralds editorial page board. Send com-
ments to [email protected].
Narrow-mindedness: the real embarrassment
t h e:
Intelligently designed or not, it was a bit iron-
ic how Tyler Rosenbaums 11 opinion piece (An
unortunate embarrassment, March 3) was about
how others shouldnt have opinions. Despite his at-
tempts to protect the image o Brown, Rosenbaum
only succeeded in illustrating the closed-mindedness
o many students on our campus. While Rosenbaum
is certainly entitled to his opinions, what he needs to
understand is the act that others, including Bobby
Jindal 91.5, are as well.
Then again, what was I thinking? How dare Jindal
have an opinion dierent rom relatively liberal
Brunonian(s) such as Rosenbaum? I mean there is
a certain truth in the notion that Brown does churn
out individuals similar to Rosenbaum individuals
who come to Brown expecting to be coddled and
unchallenged intellectually. In truth, Rosenbaum is
more conservative than his portrayal o Jindal. His
advocacy o suppressing intellectual dialogue, on the
grounds that the epressed opinion diers rom his
own, reveals his unwillingness to listen and consider
all views. In the end, isnt that what so-called liberals
hate the most about conser vatives? Additionally, con-
trary to Rosenbaum, I believe most people understand
that Jindal represents only one view amongst a diverse
spectrum o opinions present at Brown. No one person
can truly represent Brown in its entirety.
ch H ch 11
March 8
Hw th Hl?Let s know. Take the srvey!
browndailyherald.com/srvey
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8/14/2019 March 10, 2009 Issue
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TuESDAY, MARCH 10, 2009 | PAgE 7
pinionsThe Brown Daily Herald
It was a pretentious gathering, even or Brown
the kind o panel discussion where each
speaker is allotted fve minutes but takes 15 to
20 due to ecessive hand gestures and elon-
gated syllables. The prahhhh-cess by which
we ooorrrr-ganize the diiiiiscipline is viiii-tally
important.
With a title like Scholarship in a Time o
War: Universities, Associations and the Re-
sponsibilities o Citizenship, maybe I was ask-
ing or trouble, but Id like to think that there
was potential or some enlightenment. Instead,
I received urther confrmation that all Brownroads lead to the third oor o University Hall.
Perhaps the most interesting panel mem-
ber was Norm Hebert, director o the ofce o
sponsored projects, who spoke about research
unding at Brown. Ater emphasizing his role
as an administrator not a scholar, Hebert
went through a list o past research sponsor-
ships that his ofce had considered (without
mentioning whether or not they were accept-
ed), including a white supremacist organiza-
tion and the American tobacco industry.
When I asked Hebert how he decided
which sponsors to accept, his superior, Vice
President or Research Clyde Briant, eplained
that the ofce simply ollowed the guidelines
laid out by the Corporation. But o course.
I dont have a bone to pick with the Corpo-ration. The only reason I keep bringing them
up is that they run this school and so I think its
worth our eorts to understand them as best
as possible.
In a recent Herald column, a student who
clearly doesnt understand the Corporation
wrote, Corporation members are not paid or
their eorts but attempt to maintain and im-
prove this University o ours. They act as stu-
dents advocates and, unlike other members o
the community, can govern equitably because
they dont have any fnancial interest in the
University (A deense o the Corporation,
Feb. 23).I think that such an attitude is a common
one among Brown students. Ater all, it seems
to be true. There is no monetary salary or
Corporation members. They dont seem to
have any fnancial interest in University ac-
tions. But o course, as Im sure any o the bil-
lionaire members would tell you, nothing in
this world is ree.
The frst and most concrete way that Corpo-
ration members are compensated is through
admission o their children. Finding Corpora-
tion members with children who were accept-
ed at Brown isnt eactly Wheres Waldo? Call
it correlation and not causation i you want, but
the link is undeniable. O course, Corporation
kids arent the only ones who beneft rom pa-
rental connections I was admitted in part be-
cause my dad is a Brown graduate.
Still, regardless o whether or not their chil-
dren merited admission and indeed what it
means to merit admission is highly conten-
tious these students aced a lower level o
scrutiny in their admission process than stu-dents whose parents were not directly decid-
ing how Brown spends its money.
The second and more benefcial way that
Corporation members are paid is through social
networking. In what other situation are such a di-
verse range o wealthy and powerul people in
felds such as fnance, medicine, law and gov-
ernment gathered into one room?
Members oten sit on other boards such as
Goldman Sachs (President Simmons) and one
has a side gig with the U.S. Treasury Depart-
ment (Steven Rattner). U.S. Securities and E-
change Commission Commissioner Annette
Nazareth works alongside fnancial fgures shemay one day investigate.
Want truly dizzying connections? Brown
Corporation member and Princeton sociology
proessor Marta Tienda is on the board o the
Jacobs Foundation, the RAND Corporation,
the Alred P. Sloan oundation, TIAA and the
Princeton Healthcare System.
The main point is that Corporation mem-
bership gives one access to power and inu-
ence in an incredible range o areas, many o
which overlap, and those kinds o connections
have legitimate and enormous value outside o
Corporation meetings.
The most salient aspect o the Corporations
unofcial salary rom relaed admissions
standards or their children to networking ben-
efts is that students arent the ones paying
it. The result is that the Corporation does not
answer to the students it is supposed to serve.
Which brings us to the other part o the ear-
lier quotation: The Corporation as students
advocates that is, a group o altruists look-
ing out or students best interests. Conceiv-ably, i the Corporation does not answer to stu-
dents, it might act in its own interests instead
o ours.
A particularly relevant case involving sel-
interest and uture Brown trustees occurred
less than two years ago.
In late May 2007, billionaires Steven A. Co-
hen and Barry Rosenstein, both managers o
successul fnancial frms, teamed up to write
a letter to online brokerage TD Ameritrade
advising them to combine with either Charles
Schwab or E*Trade. The letter accused mem-
bers o that companys board o acting against
the combination and thus against stockhold-er interests in order to maintain their inu-
ence on board decisions.
In a second letter written a ew weeks later,
Cohen and Rosenstein insisted that leaders o
Toronto Dominion, the TD o TD Ameritrade,
were blocking a combination which could di-
minish Toronto-Dominions ownership stake,
eectively placing their own interests above
those o the shareholders.
At the time, one observer called the letter
a shot across the bow at the directors, saying,
you better pay attention to everybody, not just
the one who put you on board.
Pay attention to everybody? Not just the
ones you put on the board? Sound amiliar?
Almost eactly one year later, Cohen andRosenstein were named Corporation members
where they, along with other members, have
ignored calls or student representation on the
Corporation or community approval o any o
its decisions.
I the Corporation doesnt answer fnancial-
ly to the student body, why wouldnt they act
like the TD Ameritrade board members that
Cohen and Rosenstein were criticizing and act
primarily in their own interests? Why are Co-
hen and Rosenstein worried about damaging
sel-interest on TD Ameritrades board but not
on the Brown Corporation?
Their letter concludes with a telling line:
We believe that the light o day is a powerul
asset or shareholders and we welcome the
Boards opening o a public discussion o thesematters.
Cohen and Rosenstein should share such
wisdom with their ellow trustees. Advocate or
students by letting us advocate or ourselves.
Permit students to sit on the Corporation.
Former Herald Opinions Editor Ben Bern-
stein 09 is a history concentrator from
St. Lois, Missori.
w C
So I was sitting in my room, as I oten do,
trying to determine the next Brown policy
to deconstruct and criticize. Though I have
been a pugnacious opponent o several o this
great Universitys policies, this time around, I
wont be attacking a specifc policy but a state
o aairs. Now, Ive criticized the meal plan in
another one o my columns (The meal scam,
Oct. 15). To my surprise, some students ound
this column disagreeable.
I wont deny complaints about the quality
and availability o the ood at Brown are get-
ting old, but that act says something about the
inaction o the administration our voices are
going unheard. While I would otherwise love
to be ignored, this is not the case here.
The greatest innovation rom Dining Ser-
vices o late (or at all or that matter) was
the Tastes o the World line at the Ratty. It
added variation, maybe even a bit o cultural
character to the lieless reectory. But pita and
tacos can only add so much character beore
students begin to cry out in dissatisaction.
O course, we are fckle. Show us some
hummus and implement a no tray policy
and were content. But we are only content
or a while. We need a long-term solution to
our dissatisaction. We must realize that, as is,
the dining halls are unprepared to meet our
nourishment needs. So what do we do?We riot!
Okay, maybe not. Instead, Ill now present
an idea that is by no means original but should
be in print: We implement the meal plan at
o-campus retail locations. Imagine using
Flex points at Starbucks, or meal credits at
Au Bon Pain and East Side Pocket. Is that not
such stu as dreams are made o?
There are three oreseeable advantages to
this: First, it would make meal plans less o a
rip-o. I cranked the numbers in my previous
column, and something doesnt add up. Not
only are our ood options limited, but we get
relatively little bang or our buck. I we had
to hold the latter constant because Brown
probably would not want to revise its meal
plans, why not take the opportunity to easily
improve the ormer?
O course, there are a ew who apparently
do not share this sentiment (as their angry
letters will attest). I think its sae to say these
Dining Services anatics are in the minority.
Second, more people would be on the
meal plan i they knew they could use theirmeal plan at o-campus eateries. Ater a ew
years at Brown the dining options really get
old. Accordingly, students abandon the meal
plan or the prospect o greater ood glory
o-campus. Under this change, the diversity
o menu options will keep us entertained ad
infnitum.
Third, it would stimulate Providence busi-
nesses. Imagine how many more customers
o-campus retail eateries would get i students
were not bound to Brown dining halls.
This would consequently take an operations
strain o the University, as dining halls would
service ewer students daily. With Brown
trying to be economical during Americas
fscal crisis, this could be a step in the right
direction.
Naturally, one might question whether this
change would render dining halls obsolete.
Ater all, why go to a dining hall when you can
eat o-campus at no detriment to you?
Well, o-campus ood is signifcantly more
expensive, and so that alone might be a deter-
rent. Convenience and accessibility are otheractors. Indeed, sometimes its just easier to
walk to the Gate than a Thayer restaurant, and
most Thayer restaurants arent open late at
night anyway. However, I dont see anything
wrong with Brown putting a cap on the num-
ber o meal credits or Flex points or combina-
tion thereo that one can use o -campus. Im
satisfed so long as I can spice things up even
once in a while o-campus.
Other universities, such as Boston Univer-
sity, Northwestern and NYU have instituted
systems similar to the one I am proposing. In
act, our Ivy League schools (Harvard, Penn,
Princeton, Yale) have done so, according to
their respective Web sites. I think its time we
stepped on board.
And stepping on board would be as sim-
ple as the University brokering a deal with
o-campus retailers through which Brown
monopoly money could be electronically e-
changed or cash makes you wonder why
we never considered it beore.
So maybe, just maybe, when all is said and
done, and years rom now your child asks you,
(Father or mother), were you able to use your
meal credits at o-campus eateries when you
were in college? youll be able to confdently
respond: Yes, (child name), yes.
Jared Lafer 11 is a philosophy concentra-
tor from Manhattan. He can be reached
D f-
We shold implement the meal plan at retail
locations. Imaine sin Flex points at Starbcks,
or meal credits at A Bon Pain and East Side
Pocket. Is that not sch stff as dreams aremade of?
The most salient aspect of the Corporations
nofficial salary from relaxed admissions
standards for their children to networkin benefits
is that stdents arent the ones payin it.
BEN
BERNSTEINopinions coluMnist
JARED LAFER
opinions coluMnist
-
8/14/2019 March 10, 2009 Issue
8/8
tuesday, MarcH 10, 2009 paGe 8
Today3
7
Profs brin canine colleaes to work
M. hockey beat Harvard twice last weekend
The Brown Daily Herald
42 / 32
today, MarcH 10
7:00 p.M. At the End of the Road:
Reporting in the Seams with C.J. Chiv-
ers, foreign correspondent for the New
York Times, Brown/RISD Hillel
8:00 p.M. Brown Lecture Board Pres-
ents John Edwards, Salomon 101
toMorroW, MarcH 11
7:00 p.M. Hman Conseqences
of the Economic Crisis, J. Walter
Wilson 501
7:30 p.M. A Reading by Laynie
Browne, McCormack Family The-
ater
ACROSS1 Soaks (up), as
with a papertowel
5 Dept. of Labordivision
9 Legislativebigwigs
14 Thats a __!:directors cry
15 Shellacking
16 Air travelerschoice
17 Like Pollyannasoptimism
19 Parade sight20 Multipurpose
ointment22 Poetic before23 Rev.s speech24 Like a fauxlex
watch26 Rules of sentence
structure28 Closings30 Felipes uncle31 Syracuse
University team33 Office note34 1975 #1 hit for
Labelle38 Big Island port39 Many an ex-lib40 Sick41 Mackintosh, e.g.
43 Old RomanRepublic leader47 Grommets
cousin49 Loud laugh50 Imitate51 Sanctuaries for
flora55 Eponymous
mathematicianKarl
56 Seat belt, for one57 French farewell58 __ account: never59 Common sonata
finale60 Winter Palace
residents61 Busts opposite62 Once, long ago
DOWN1 Processes during
checkout, as a
credit card
2 Not at allgood-humored
3 Wash. Huskiesconf.
4 Prod5 Ph.D. candidates
hurdle6 Serious7 Website offering
streaming TVvideo
8 Up and __!9 Communion
symbols10 Second word of
the song TheSound of Music
11 Quarantined12 It may be
followed by a nap13 Collectors goal18 Prayer beads21 __ Bartlet, The
West Wingpresident
25 Animal housing27 Fuss28 Wading bird29 Cinematic
clownfish32 The Darlings dog33 Buddenbrooks
novelist Thomas
34 Pond floaters35 Christian chant36 Get used (to)37 Pretty woman38 Move it41 The next United
States one will bein 2010
42 Giant who wore#4
44 Messiah
45 Tips over
46 Anne Ricevampire
48 Surgery beam49 Like some easy
questions52 Math test
question, briefly53 Nevada gambling
mecca54 100-yard dash,
e.g.
55 Hoods gun
By Neville L. Fogarty
03/10/09
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
c Vl | Abe Pressman
egm tw | Dstin Foley
th o a zm | Kevin grbb
sHarpe refectory
LuncH Pulled Pork Sandwich, Red
Rice, Steak Fries, Cheese Pizza
dinner Herbed Trnips, Chicken
Salad, BBQ Chicken Pizza, Chocolate
Pddin
Verney-WooLLey dininG HaLL
LuncH Baked Manicotti with
Sauce, Corn and Broccoli Casserole,
White Chocolate Chip Cookies
dinnerRoasted Honey and Chili
Chicken, E Foo Yon
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