Posts from — October 2009
Community informed of student’s death abroad
In a campus-wide e-mail Saturday evening, President Ruth Simmons delivered the tragic news that Arun Stewart ‘11, an East Asian studies concentrator from Dallas, Texas, was killed Friday in a fall from a rooftop terrace in Beijing, where he was studying abroad this semester.
Read Monday’s Herald for more. Full text of Simmons’ e-mail after the jump. [Read more →]
October 31, 2009 No Comments
A Thousand Words: October sky

October showed its sunny side once again Monday after a storm front moved through Providence Saturday night. Kim Perley / Herald
Have your own October photos to share? Share them with the world! Send them to blog@browndailyherald.com for a chance to see them posted in a future Blog Daily Herald post.
October 27, 2009 1 Comment Tags: A Thousand Words, main green, october
Winners, Bad News Bears and a Lengthy Women’s Hockey Digression
Lots of winners this week. Why? I can think of three possible reasons: as an apology for taking several weeks off (I blame midterms), because I’m a nice guy, or, just maybe, because a lot of teams did well. I say it’s all three.
Continued after the jump [Read more →]
October 26, 2009 No Comments Tags: bad news bears, cross country, fall sports, field hockey, food metaphors, football, m. soccer, m. tennis, m. water polo, volleyball, w. golf, w. hockey, w. soccer, winners, winter sports
A Thousand Words: College Hill, past and present
The Herald examines Brown’s multifaceted relationship with the city it calls home in its five-part Town/Brown series. Click here to visit the series page with articles, maps and multimedia at browndailyherald.com.
Today, the University sprawls over most of College Hill. But since it cleared 51 houses to build Wriston Quad, growth has brought controversy when Brown’s boundaries have blurred. Here’s a look at the transformation of the neighborhood around Brown’s campus. Read the full article.

1926: Hegeman Hall is built on the corner of Thayer and George, where a row of townhouses formerly stood.
Continue reading after the jump. [Read more →]
October 23, 2009 No Comments Tags: A Thousand Words, college hill, construction, dorms, series, Town/Brown
Badami ’11: A humble solution for BDS
I’m not about to call the recent BDS demonstrations by concerned undergraduates sanctimonious; it is my heartfelt belief that those protesting genuinely care about the many individuals who tirelessly serve us. Begrudgingly, I even stood through one of their jejune man-puppet displays on my way to a Ratty dinner.
But I also understand the difficult decision of the folks holding the purse strings, the ever-lambasted Brown Corporation. Every financial determination they must make is a tradeoff – some must lose so that others may subsist. In this case, the Corporation has proposed a “sliding scale” to determine BDS workers’ health care premiums. (Interestingly, this scheme is similar to the US progressive tax system, something many SDS and SLA members, I imagine, would support.) The university also plans on refashioning the retirement benefits for new hires and is considering a wage freeze.
I would like here to offer a solution to this current predicament. I mean this without a drop of Swiftian satire: Brown should simply institute a tuition hike.
Why can’t undergraduates, quite literally, put their money where their mouth is? If they so ardently care about the plight of BDS workers, they will have no hesitation in coughing up a few extra grand a semester to offset the cost of lower healthcare premiums and increased wages. But if you feel the same moral confusion that I do when considering this dilemma, perhaps you can begin to sympathize with the tough, inevitably unpopular decision the Corporation must make. The protests so far have been useful, but keep in mind the underlying tension of the Corporation’s decision as you march your man-puppet across the Main Green. In the end, you may get more than you bargained for.
Anthony Badami ’11
Opinions Columnist
October 16, 2009 2 Comments Tags: 2009, bds, Opinions, strike
You Tell Us: Columbus Day or Fall Weekend?
Newly-christened Fall Weekend 2009 has come and gone, leaving Columbus Day behind for the first time…but not without protest and debate. You tell us: which name is more fitting for the holiday weekend? Or should the observance be moved to a different date altogether?
October 13, 2009 No Comments Tags: 2009, Columbus Day, Fall Weekend, overwrought debate
Submit your questions to our new advice column!
Have you got questions? The BDH’s advice columnists have got answers! Submit your questions about love, life, school or the universe to advice@browndailyherald.com and let them solve all your problems.
October 6, 2009 2 Comments Tags: advice
A Thousand Words: Rally for BDS
Nearly 200 students, Brown Dining Services workers and members of various civic groups from Providence gathered in front of University Hall Thursday to rally for health care reform.
Concerns about negotiations on the renewal of the BDS workers’ contract, which expires Oct. 12, brought the groups together on the Main Green in support of the workers. Representatives for the workers and the University have met to bargain over health care and pension benefits. Cuts to workers’ benefits have been discussed during negotiations.
The ralliers also called for health care reform on the state and national levels and marched to Whole Foods after speeches on the Main Green.

See more photos after the jump. [Read more →]
October 1, 2009 No Comments Tags: A Thousand Words, bds, health care, main green, rally
Providence, RI