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Actor and former White House employee Kal Penn spoke in Salomon last night.
Actor Kal Penn has two words of advice for Brown students be crazy. Im so glad that Im constantly meeting people who are making crazy decisions and crazy choices, said Penn, actor and former White House Associate Director of Public Engagement, who addressed a packed Salomon 101 last night. Penn said he has frequently been called crazy for decisions he had made in particular, leaving his role on the television show House for a two-year stint in the White House. Penns talk occurred during the
first night of the housing lottery, a conflict for which he apologized. I almost feel obligated to find you housing now that youre here, he said. The talk encompassed both humorous and serious topics, touching upon Penns experiences as an Indian-American actor and his work in the Obama administration. He frequently elicited cheers and applause, especially when he discussed his childhood in New Jersey, a background he said is like an ethnicity in the way it bonds people. The subject of diversity often just comes up organically when continued on page 5
Mohammed Ghazi Atallah 13 started off this years housing lottery by choosing Minden Hall 807. The first 460 housing groups selected rooms at Sayles Hall last night, and the rest will choose tomorrow night. Members of Residential Council, dressed in bright T-shirts and funny hats, stood beneath a large screen displaying available rooms
at the front of the auditorium. A line of representatives for the upcoming six groups formed along a side of the room. The rest of the participants waited nervously in their seats, at first only filling the front rows. In the middle of the night, when the event was most heated, the auditorium was packed with rowdy and anxious students. For around the first 20 minutes, the lottery went smoothly as members of the first 100 groups slowly filed in. No shows did not even
receive the typical applause from the crowd. Its just chill, said Freddy Navarro 13, whose group, number 69, was hoping to get a suite in Vartan Gregorian Quad with his group. The majority of the early groups sought singles. Singles in Minden, the Pembroke dorms and rooms in the newly renovated 315 Thayer St. were some of the most popular choices, though some groups who chose 315 Thayer St. said they were a little unsure of what to expect.
They didnt list the square footage of the rooms, so were not sure what we got ourselves into, said Luisa Garcia 13 after her group leader selected a room in the building. But we really like that part of campus, and the access to Thayer (St.) is great. Tensions started to rise as the prime rooms were swept up, and the room started to fill with both people and noise. At this point, continued on page 2
Through a fall Group Independent Study Project, Saturday night dinners and a series of other initiatives and projects, a new student group is looking to reignite discussions about the University originally inspired by the New Curriculum. Born over a dinner between two upperclassmen, Brown Conversation aims to continue the dialogue about Brown, its educational philosophy and its place in higher education. The group emerged from dinner conversations last semester between Evan Schwartz 13, an independent concentrator in community development and education, and Anish Sarma 12, an electrical engineering concentrator. Promoted solely via word of mouth, the groups listserv now boasts 142 members, and 20 to 35 people show up at any given meeting. Around 100 individuals in total have attended meetings at some point, Schwartz said. With the administrative turnover taking place, now could be a particularly opportune time for students to consider the identity of the University, Sarma said, but he added that timing is coincidental continued on page 3
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Republican presidential hopeful and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney lambasted President Barack Obamas economic policies in front of hundreds of supporters at a town hall campaign stop in Warwick last night. Romney came to Rhode Island in preparation for the states Republican primary April 24, a competition he is widely expected to win.
election campaign has begun. Romney opened by countering the notion that the Republican Party is waging a war on women, which has recently received media attention because of controversy surrounding the partys stance on birth control. The real war on women has been waged by this presidents economic policy, because they have failed American women, Romney said. He said that of the more than 800,000 jobs lost over the course of Obamas presidency, 92 percent were held by women. PolitiFact, a nonpartisan organization that rates the accuracy of political statements, classified the statistic as mostly false. John Robitaille, the 2010 Republican candidate for Rhode Island Governor, spoke to the crowd before Romney took the stage. Robitaille highlighted the difficult economic times and the high uncontinued on page 2
Tom Sullivan / Herald Mitt Romney slammed Democrats policies at a campaign stop in Warwick.
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each group has for responsibilities and rights and also to put forward different and clear rules about how UCS was funded, said Holly Hunt 13, one of the council members who served on the UCS-UFB committee. Before, it was actually really ambiguous. Under the proposed changes, the council will still submit a budget to UFB each spring, and UFB will remain a subsidiary of the council. But UCS would automatically receive $1,200 each semester to use for projects on behalf of students. At least one-third of all proposed capital improvements will be funded by the board, and the council will receive a certain amount of funding for decorations, publicity and mission-relevant conferences. Currently, UCS members are all required to attend one UFB meeting, and, under the proposed changes, UFB members will also be required to attend one council meeting because they didnt really have a clear sense of what we do here, and why we need money, Hunt said. The finance board will also be allowed to submit a list of groups they would recommend for categorization or re-categorization to the Student Activities Committee. This list will only be a recommendation, and the committee will not be required to adhere to UFBs suggestions, Hunt said. The council will vote on these and other suggested changes next meeting in the form of a proposed code change. The council also approved a code change to implement rules for write-in candidates in UCS-UFB elections. Because Chris Catoya 13 did not receive the required number of signatures to officially run for UFB vice chair, people will be allowed to write in candidates for the position during the election. But the current code does not specify rules for determining the victor should more than one write-in candidate receive votes during the election. For this reason, the council approved a code change specifying that if only one write-in candidate enters the election, the candidate could win with five percent of the votes. If multiple write-in candidates enter, one candidate must receive a majority of the votes in order to win. to the fact. Its sort of fundamental to what Brown is that students engage with these questions. Part of being educated is knowing why you have the education that you have, Sarma said. The New Curriculum, born from the efforts of a GISP led by Ira Magaziner 69 P06, P07, P10 and Elliot Maxwell 68, was implemented in 1969. The new guidelines did away with distribution requirements and added the Satisfactory/No Credit option in place today. Schwartz said the original effort to revamp the Universitys curriculum was not meant to be a one-off thing, but rather a spark to get students to constantly reflect on their education and how to improve it. He said there have been different pockets of conversation since then, and Brown Conversation aspires to unite those different voices in a collaborative setting. The groups purpose is intentionally imprecise. Some people come with concrete goals for structural reform at the University level, whereas others simply want to talk about their own education. Schwartz said upperclassmen might be drawn by controversial issues related to the University, such as those explored in The Heralds Mission Drift? series last semester, but first years seem to want to explore their education personally first. You cant have a sense that Brown has changed if you just got here, Sarma said. Some projects that group meetings have precipitated are the Outgoing Senior Interview Project and a GISP for next semester. While the group itself may avoid taking stances on particular issues, it hopes to bring people of similar goals together to catalyze projects that they care about, Sarma said. Schwartz emphasized the diversity of group members and a desire for fresh faces, adding that the breakdown by class years is almost even. The group is especially interested in recruiting first-years so they can start thinking about their education to shape their four years purposefully. It seems like this sort of discussion often happens largely among seniors, Schwartz said. But Nikhil Kalyanpur 13, a Herald opinions columnist, said it seems like underclassmen are more represented at the meetings than seniors are something he called crucial for are involved in student groups or committees that pertain to Brown Conversations mission. Several members of the Undergraduate Council of Students, including Anthony White 13 and David Rattner 13, have attended meetings. As a UCS member, White said he brings certain insights to the group about administration, adding that he is also interested in the group as a student who wants to make the concentration declaration process more meaningful. Rattner said he has been working with a committee within Brown Conversation to circulate information about the New Curriculum to incoming students. Kalyanpur and Schwartz are independent concentrators, and Schwartz works at the Curricular Resource Center. Peggy Chang 91, director of the CRC, said Brown Conversation shares similarities with the centers mission in that they both are peer advising resources that help any student who seeks advice to make the most of his or her time at Brown. The GISP for next semester, for which about a dozen students Brown Conversation, Schwartz said. Pedagogically, it will analyze different philosophies of education and then through them analyze Browns philosophy historically as well as what it is now, Kalyanpur said. He added that one goal will be to cement our own practical philosophy that will inform Brown Conversations future projects and direction. Last weeks discussion topic was about whether Brown should have requirements. After asking what departments people had deliberately avoided, the group realized that for every department someone had ignored, there was another person who was concentrating in that or a similar discipline. Members then pitched their concentrations to get people to reconsider departments that theyd written off, Schwartz said. One potential project the group is planning is a Curiosity Fair, inspired by the discussion about requirements, where students would talk to people in departments they had avoided to be convinced to explore different areas.
Started over dinner, group prompts dialogue Simmons discusses financial aid, city relations continued from page 1 sustainingofthe conversation. have expressed intent to enroll, was Many the current members designed to contextualiz(e) the
By margareT niCkenS seNior staff writer
President Ruth Simmons visited the general body meeting of the Undergraduate Council of Students Wednesday night to discuss the councils work this past year and to answer questions about tuition increases, the relationship between Brown and Providence and the Universitys priorities. UCS also discussed a possible code change regarding the relationship between the council and the Undergraduate Finance Board. Simmons said she expects the number of students applying to the University to continue to decline in the future. I think that the landscape is changing because the public is very aware of the challenges of meeting the cost of higher education, Simmons said, adding that she does not think this will affect the quality of applications. Simmons also said it was infeasible for the University to go universally need-blind given its current budget. Simmons later answered questions about the Universitys reputation nationally and globally, increasing the diversity of the faculty and the Universitys relationship with Providence. Universities have become, in many ways, the most successful sector in society, Simmons said, adding that because many other institutions are failing financially, she believes it will become more common for cities to ask colleges and universities for assistance in the future. But she said, I dont think its reasonable for the city, having made mistakes and having become insolvent because of those mistakes, to turn to institutions that are successful and to demand that they pay for those mistakes. UCS also recommended changes to the relationship between the council and UFB and the way in which the council is funded. A fivemember committee was formed last month to review ways to improve the communication between the two bodies after the council proposed an amendment that would give the council more control over its funding. The committee was a way for UCS and UFB to hammer out what
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ment stunned him, though, and he said he wondered whether people actually watched ER to choose their medical products. I asked doctor cousins of mine there are lots of doctors in the family, he said, a comment that was met with laughter. His cousins confirmed what he had suspected: Doctors did not in fact watch ER to figure out which medical products to buy. In the fall of 2007, Penn went to an event that altered the course of his career a campaign rally for then-Senator Barack Obama. Penn, a lifelong independent, said he was struck by what he saw someone who was not particularly liked by either the Democratic or Republican establishments, but who was the real deal. Penn put his own life on hold to work on the campaign, following Obama to Iowa and joining his youth outreach team. After the election, Penn applied for and received a job in the White House, where he worked principally on Asian-American and Pacific Islander outreach, youth outreach and arts outreach. In his second day on the job, Penn was placed on the phone to determine whether an agency should be included in an executive order. Though the White House had already decided not to include the agency, when it came time to officially pronounce the decision, Penn fell silent. I thought to myself, surely theres an adult on the phone, he said. Youth interests are particularly underrepresented in media coverage of politics, he said. For instance, when he spoke with young liberals and conservatives, both groups identified jobs, poverty, climate change, education and Darfur as their top five political concerns. Both said they viewed the repeal of Dont Ask, Dont Tell as a civil rights issue. But from watching news coverage, he would never have guessed it, he said. In particular, Penn attributed the discrepancy in coverage to the amount of money older interest groups have to influence politics the American Association of Retired Persons, for instance, has a budget in the billions, while youth interest groups only have a few million each. Penn said he has often been asked about the transition between life in Hollywood and life in Washington D.C. But he said for him, the two lifestyles are not mutually exclusive. Media has played a role in socializing in how we look at our political system, he said. And going to D.C. reminded him that being crazy is probably a little bit good. Regardless of your major or what your interests are or who you bone hopefully diversely, this is the most innovative generation the world has seen, he said. The event, sponsored by the Brown Lecture Board, was followed by a brief question and answer session.
By dana reilly CoNtributiNg writer
Former Chilean president discusses new book Penn made jump from Lagos described his book as global trade was key to promoting Hollywood to Washington the history of two transitions in equity and Chiles future, Snyder
continued from page 1 he discusses his experiences, he said. He added that he is not sure he has his own thoughts about diversity everyone should just bone diversely to keep them from looking or sounding the same. Penns status as an IndianAmerican marked much of his own early experiences in Hollywood, he said. He spent several years eating beans out of a can while searching for jobs, when finally his agent called him with a potential supporting role in National Lampoons Van Wilder. When he asked her what information she was withholding, she confessed: The character was named Taj Mahal. Though he was initially turned off, Penn looked at the script. There were about 30 things wrong with its character portrayal, he said. But fundamentally, Taj Mahal was just an 18-year-old college student who wants to get laid someone he said everybody could relate to. Penn was nervous when he went to the audition. But then he saw the other finalist for the role: a white dude named Nick with brownface on. I was like, No way, Penn said. Though he spoke briefly with Nick, Penn said he knew then that he had to get the part. Penns role in the film helped him land a leading role in Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle, a movie he said purposefully sought to prominently feature AsianAmericans. The studio had asked its writers why the characters had to be Asian and Indian why they could not instead be black and Jewish. The writers had a diverse group of friends, Penn said, and found it weird when Asian and Indian characters were shifted to the side in films and television. Ultimately, they did not want to make David and Jason go to McDonalds they wanted it to be Harold and Kumar, he said. And in turn, Penns role in Harold and Kumar led him to star in Mira Nairs 2006 film The Namesake. So I was really glad I played Taj Mahal, he said. Some of Penns own friends took a less traditional path to success. When a group of his friends could not find acting jobs, they bought a video camera and created their own short films for the internet, he said. Eventually, they found success under the name The Lonely Island. That ingenuity reflects a creativity prominent in the younger generation, Penn said. Older executives at NBC still didnt know how the changing face of technology would affect their companies, he said. The small number of major media companies influences what people see, he said. For instance, ER, which was broadcast on NBC, only featured medical equipment by General Electric a logical choice, he said, since NBC is owned by GE. The product placeIt certainly is a wonderful life after the presidency for former Chilean President and Professorat-Large Ricardo Lagos, as his good friend and former Colombian President Belisario Betancur used to tell him. Lagos spoke at the Watson Institute for International Studies last night about his latest book entitled, The Southern Tiger: Chiles Fight for a Democratic and Prosperous Future. This is the third book Lagos published this year, which is pretty admirable, as any professor will tell you, quipped Richard Snyder, director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies and professor of political science, in his introductory remarks. Lagos was good-humored as he addressed the audience of about 25 people. I discovered that in this country the real dictators are the publishers, Lagos joked when discussing his difficulty influencing the title of his book. Chile the transition from dictatorship to democracy and the transition from a rather backward to a more modern country, Lagos said. The second transition is much more difficult to achieve. Lagos was a leader in the resistance movement against Augusto Pinochet in the 1980s and played a crucial role in restoring democracy to Chile. He is famous for denouncing the dictator on national television, pointing his finger at the camera lens and addressing Pinochet directly, a historic event dubbed Lagos finger. Snyder described Lagos as a pragmatic socialist. As minister of education and minister of public works, Lagos expanded social services for the poor and improved highway infrastructure with private tolls. Lagos served as president of Chile from 2000-06, during which time he pursued various free trade agreements with the United States. Lagos understood
said. He ended the talk by applauding the student protesters who are now demanding better access to quality education. A political era came to an end with the demonstrations in Santiago, Lagos said. Matthew Gutmann P14, vice president for international affairs, said the book will be available at the Brown Bookstore. I think this is an opportunity for students to hear from an important world leader, he said. Lagos will visit Snyders POLS 1240: Politics, Markets and States in Developing Countries course this afternoon. Lagos will also attend the upcoming events at the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, including a two-day conference, New Approaches to Poverty and Inequality Reduction in the Global South, with former Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi and policymakers from Brazil, India, Mexico and Turkey.
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Pushing academic boundaries
Last month, we expressed disappointment that the University was planning to institute the Professional Executive Masters Program for fall 2013, a program we believe is motivated by short-term economic concerns that neglect Browns long-term mission. That said, we are extremely pleased with the announcement of the debut of the Graduate Schools Open Graduate Programs. The program offers an innovative and interdisciplinary approach to graduate studies. Students will be able to combine a doctoral study with a masters degree in another sub-field. A University faculty committee has accepted nine students for the first installment of the program. The University is reportedly receiving extremely positive feedback on the program, and we would like to echo this sentiment. The program fits in perfectly with incoming President Christina Paxsons background in and emphasis on interdisciplinary work. Paxson expressed an interest in develop(ing) links between the sciences and social sciences and humanities, and this program seems to us like a strong move in that direction. The Herald reported that one enrolled student plans to devote a chapter of her engineering PhD dissertation to archaeology, the field in which she is pursuing a masters degree. We anticipate that this type of creative and multidisciplinary study will enhance the Universitys academic culture. At Brown, we like to distinguish ourselves as inventive students who cannot be neatly placed into a single discipline or interest. We are glad that this new program challenges the notion that doctoral students in particular need to keep their focuses narrowly defined. The program will enable graduate students not only to push the bounds of their academic research, but also the boundaries and limitations of the disciplines themselves. Furthermore, we feel that this program is especially promising for fields in the humanities. Given the themes of The Heralds Mission Drift? series last semester and having spoken with humanities professors and students on campus, we know that many feel the University is trending towards an emphasis on physical and life science research in a detrimental way. We cant help but agree with this criticism. As such, the Open Graduate Programs can serve as the best of both worlds, as a way for doctoral students focusing on the sciences to incorporate masters work in the humanities into their primary field. While we would certainly like to see the University make a stronger effort to combat this shift away from humanities, this should be a small step in the right direction. As with any pilot program, it will be necessary to scrupulously evaluate the program in its first years and examine how it is implemented. Some have expressed minor reservations that the additional masters study might detract from the heavy workload endemic to doctoral studies, something administrators should undoubtedly monitor. To be honest, however, we see very little reason not to embrace this program. We are confident and excited in the programs ability to attract the type of intellectually curious and dynamic students on which Brown prides itself. editorials are written by The heralds editorial page board. Send comments to editorials@browndailyherald.com.
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An article in Fridays Herald (Petition calls for financial aid reform, April 6) stated that Amit Jain 12 and Tim Natividad 12, co-founders of Brown for Financial Aid, were roommates as first-years. In fact, Jain and Natividad lived on the same hall, but were not roommates. The Herald regrets the error.
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I almost feel obligated to find you housing now that youre here.
Kal Penn See PeNN on page 1.
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Tumblr posts. So, I suppose the Trayvon Martin shooting is not just a black college priority. The important thing to note about all of the aforementioned colleges and universities is that they are not in Rhode Island. Were so far away from Florida, and New England is quite progressive relative to other states, so racial violence isnt a reality for us, right? Surely, its a regional thing. Perhaps that argument would make sense if at least two rallies had not taken place in Providence at the end of March. for an hour and a half. A discussion and film screening followed the march. Community members met April 8 to continue conversations about the slaughtered youth, with an open invitation to students at Rhode Island College and Brown. I have run out of excuses for the Universitys lack of response to Trayvon Martins death. We can have protests about the University financially supporting Providence, and about sweatshop workers and the bookstores clothes, but we dont want to talk about the very real issue of racial not belong exclusively to the black community. We as a student community, regardless but not unaware of race, need to think about why we are not enraged about Trayvon Martins death. We are black, or people of color or friends with people of color who could have been Trayvon Martin. We are citizens of or residents in a country where people are still murdered for the color of their skin. We all are currently living in a state that is struggling to pass a bill to prevent racial profiling by police officers, in an attempt to decrease incidents of racial violence. Why dont we care? It is fairly simple to read a book about racial violence or racial justice and decide that you are angry. It is also fairly simple to close that book and return to the Brown bubble where everyone presumably has equal rights. As a black student, I ask myself quite often if the University cares about my experience as a person of color. Furthermore, I am saddened when I hear people of color decidedly announce that the University doesnt care about [insert racial group]. If you have reached the end of this column and you still dont find the Universitys silence a problem, I think you can safely say you dont care about any of the Trayvon Martins who live in your country, work in businesses with you or your family and sit in your classes. Helen McDonald 14 is ready to talk about Trayvon Martin and can be reached at Helen_McDonald@brown.edu.
Nearly two months ago, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin was killed in Sanford, FL when self-appointed neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman shot the youth who was black and wearing a hoodie the night he was killed for looking suspicious in a gated community. This incident has opened the door to conversations about racial violence in the United States, and several rallies have been held across the nation to call for the arrest of Zimmerman, who is currently in hiding. Interestingly enough, Brown has not held any rallies, demonstrations or even any meetings in the months since Martin was shot. Well, the explanation for the lack of meetings is really quite simple: Trayvon Martin was a young black man. The colleges that would organize the most to rally for justice would be historically black colleges and universities like Howard University and Clark Atlanta University, right? While Howard and Clark did have rallies in March, other colleges like Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Texas, the College of Charleston, Western Michigan University and many others held protests as well. Students have collectively flooded the Internet with support for the Martin family through YouTube videos, Twitter trending topics and
I have run out of excuses for the universitys lack of response to Trayvon Martins death. We can have protests about the university financially supporting Providence, and about the Bookstores product policies ... but we dont want to talk about racial violence.
The citys Justice for Trayvon Martin rally took place March 27 at Father Lennon Park. Later that week, about 50 to 70 people gathered March 30 at Central High School for a march in honor of Trayvon Martin. Supporters, many of them men, congregated in black attire, with their hoods up and mouths covered in black bandanas, to form a cohesive group standing up for Trayvon Martin. Carrying signs with proclamations like RACISM KILLS, R.I.P. TRAYVON MARTIN and NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE, protestors marched around downtown Providence violence. It is hard to wonder if the University as a whole not just the administration but also the student body cares about black people problems. We did not talk enough about the execution of Troy Davis in September, and we have barely discussed the Kony 2012 campaign, among other issues. Why dont we march, protest and organize in the face of Trayvon Martins death? This question is not my attempt to rally because the lack of a specific protest is not our problem. And, I use our as an inclusive pronoun because this problem does
In March, the New York Times Ethicist column in asked: Is it ethical for humans to eat meat? As omnivores, human beings have always relied on meat as a significant source of nutrition. Evidence of specialized hunting techniques dates back 50,000 years to the origins of human culture. But just because humans have always eaten meat does not mean we ought to continue doing so. Similarly, just because most of the meat consumed today comes from animals whose living conditions are, well, unlivable does not mean that raising livestock and killing them for meat is inherently unethical. Human beings are animals, despite our delusions to the contrary. We occupy a large niche in the global ecosystem and the top spot on most food chains. We also possess two formidable skills: the power to alter the natural order and a capacity for moral reasoning that created the ethical dilemma over our meat-based diet in the first place. Rather than rely on hunting, scavenging and gathering like other omnivores, ancient humans transformed the environment to better serve their own interests. We planted crops and domesticated animals, providing the necessary ingredients for long-term human settlements to flourish into civilizations. With science and technology, our
We owe non-human animals a certain consideration of interests because they are also sentient beings, but we cannot simply care for them out of the kindness of our hearts. One can only keep so many pets.
a good, or bad thing, but human beings, as distinctly moral animals, make value judgments about the way things are and ought to be. The most compelling argument for why eating meat is unethical stems from the total disregard for animal welfare in the industrial food system. As Peter Singer argues, we must grant non-human animals equal consideration of interests because they are also sentient beings. Their suffering outweighs the purely economic benefits derived from raising livestock in inhumane
Consider, for a moment, what would happen if we all call it quits because enslaving and killing other animals doesnt sit well on our collective conscience. What exactly is going to happen to the billions of cows, pigs and chickens we are currently raising for food? Domesticated animals depend wholly on humans to provide for their needs, and the new species of livestock weve created wouldnt last a generation in the wild. Whats more, animals are necessary for even a meat-free food system. Our ability
The National Popular Vote Bill a product of the national movement aiming to reform the presidential election process by modifying the Electoral College has returned to the forefront of state politics. The legislation was introduced in the state House of Representatives in February, marking the fifth time the bill will be heard in the Rhode Island General Assembly. Representatives will vote May 1 on the measure, which currently has 45 sponsors in the House.
Nearly 4,000 historic items from the John Carter Brown Library collection can now be accessed online.
The John Carter Brown Library is home to more than 50,000 rare books and 16,000 reference books and secondary sources. But due to the changing nature of students study habits and library restrictions to protect its books, most of these resources remain vastly underused. In an effort to make its collections more widely available, the library is working with the company Internet Archive to digitize its book collections and make them available online for anybody to see. Its a radical new universe that were operating in, and we may seem like a rare books library that is old-fashioned on the surface, and we are we have old books here in a building thats more than 100 years old, said Edward Widmer, the JCBs director and librarian. But these extraordinary powerful tools of learning are really exciting and are changing everything we can do. The digitized collection allows people to download the historical collections on their computers and Kindles, and it also lets readers search for words, copy and paste items into their projects and share the documents with groups through special reading lists. The project, now in its second year, is set to continue through at least spring 2013 and longer if it receives more funding. Costing $46,000 per year, it is being sponsored by map collector and Cartography Associates President David Rumsey. I see Brown students walking around all the time receiving information through an iPhone, laptop or tablet, Widmer said. Thats how young people are processing information including historic information about distant centuries. So I thought we needed to be abreast of this change and not only to begin to capture historic information with these new systems, but even better to send it out into the world, he continued. Thanks to this project, readers will be able to cut and paste sec-
tions of an old book and email it to someone, Widmer said. You can search an old book even if it has no index because now, when it is scanned, it becomes wordsearchable. Language will be no longer be a barrier, either. With a book in Spanish a lot of our books are in Spanish or French Google Translate will instantly tell you what that book is about, he added. The project started with the JCBs Haiti collection, which includes rare books, maps and newspapers that tell the story of the founding of the French colony of Saint-Domingue and its evolution from the richest colony in the Americas to the only colony that fell to a slave revolution. The revolution resulted in the founding of Haiti. Collections from Argentina, indigenous America, Peru, Portugal and Brazil combine with the Haiti collection to make up roughly 4,000 JCB items currently available online. The collections contain firsthand accounts of colonies, laws, revolutions, wars and countless other historical events. Some documents still have thumb- and handprints all over from being read in the field by people preaching to slaves about how they shouldnt revolt, said Xephyr Inkpen, a Rhode Island School of Design graduate who works for Internet Archive. Inkpen has been copying thousands of pages from centuries-old books and using a custom-built scanner, one of only 70 in the world, for digitization. Thanks to the digitization project, students can read firsthand accounts that would otherwise be more difficult to view, since the JCB does not allow its documents to be removed from the building. Readers are required to present two forms of currently valid identification including a passport if the person is not a citizen of the United States or Canada as well as a permanent address and in many cases a letter of recommendation from an established college or university professor just to look at books, according to the JCB website. The
library also prohibits the photocopying of rare books. Due to these obstacles, Inkpen sees the contributions of Internet Archive as valuable to students looking for easier ways to access JCB documents. The librarys motto is speak to the past, and it shall teach thee, so digitizing books is a cool way for them to leave the library and reach a broader audience, she said. Students have offered positive feedback on the project. When more people have access to significant documents, it promotes a greater environment for learning, said Sam Paci 14.5. The JCB is something that a lot of people dont use, said Chris Anderson 14. This will make research more convenient. The digitization also immortalizes books that are beginning to corrode after hundreds of years. Lead crystals from the ink in handwritten books can eat through pages, and the caustic dye on covers can change the color of the whole book after a few hundred years in print, Inkpen said. Nothing can be done to stop this process, but the digitization will leave images of the documents online forever in an accessible manner. Its preserving a moment in time for that book, Inkpen said. These books have lived longer than any of us. Some of them are 500 years old thats longer than America has been around. Students and faculty really love what were doing, but the group Im getting the most feedback from is the citizens of foreign countries whose history lives in this library, Widmer said. They have a lot of trouble getting access to their own history because of libraries that are off-limits, or in some cases libraries that were looted or had earthquakes or hurricanes happen. Theyre so grateful to us that were putting their history up online for free. People from Haiti have called saying, I dont have the funds to travel to Providence, but I was able to find my ancestor in one of these publications, Inkpen said.
Alex Mechanick 15, a member of Democracy Matters, said voter turnout could increase as a result of this legislation. Greater public engagement is a healthy thing for elections, Mechanick said. We like to think the president is elected by the people, and if that doesnt happen then you have issues. He added that this phenomenon could also increase participation in local elections because national and local races are often listed on the same ballot. By getting more voters to come out on Election Day to choose a president, you get a lot more involvement with the entire ballot, Mechanick said. Opponents to the national reform have argued that states with large populations will be overly represented within the aggregate national vote, meaning that voters in California may have a greater say in choosing the president than voters in New Hampshire, for instance. But so far, states of all sizes have passed the bill into law, ODonnell said. The Rhode Island Tea Party has come out in adamant opposition, suggesting that the Electoral College actually highlights concerns within all states, rural, suburban and urban through a system of checks and balances, Tea Party leaders wrote in a press release. Our Founding Fathers designed a political structure for the United States to protect the rights of the individual by preventing the central government from becoming tyrannical and oppressive, they wrote. Gov. Lincoln Chafee 75 P14 has promised to sign the legislation into law if it passes in both chambers this year. Chafees predecessor, Donald Carcieri 65, vetoed the bill in 2008 despite overwhelming support in the General Assembly. This is a great year for it to go all the way but its going to be a close vote, said Rob Richie, executive director of Fair Vote. Richie added that there is overwhelming support for this type of reform due to recent events, including the 2000 presidential election, in which George W. Bush won the election without winning the popular vote. The 2000 election hasnt left peoples minds, and if were unfortunate enough to have one of those close elections, I can see it gaining more steam, said Shawn Patterson 12, president of the Brown Democrats. Both ODonnell and Richie said they are optimistic that the legislation will go into effect before the 2016 presidential election. ODonnell added that Rhode Island voters are more likely to support this legislation now because they are seeing firsthand how their state is being ignored by the major candidates. (The legislation) is getting people to realize that change is possible, Richie said. When they realize that change is possible, theyre pretty pleased.