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Daily
Bears Lair bare without machines
By JoSEPh roSalES Senior Staff Writer
the Brown
Herald
Since 1891
Sam Williams 12 wakes earlier this semester, knowing she will have to wait for machines at the Bears Lair satellite fitness center. Julie Rodriguez 14 has postponed her workouts on certain days because she cannot afford to waste time in line for one of the two remaining treadmills. The Graduate Center gym has become a ghost town of empty space and broken-down machines since the semesters start, when the Department of Athletics removed machines they deemed old or unsafe. It is unclear when these machines will be replaced. The Department of Athletics has taken out 10 machines from the Bears Lair since the start of the semester, said Matthew Tsimikas, assistant director of athletics and physical education. But these machines were removed before the department secured funding for new replacements, leaving limited options for students at the satellite gym. continued on page 3
Amidst confused and opportunistic WaterFire attendees, Brown students filtered into the intimate Rhode Island School of Design Auditorium Saturday night to hear psychedelic crooning and dubstep beats at Brown Concert Agencys annual Fall Concert.
100 seats empty. Its a shame they werent filled. Real Estate and Starkey, this years headliners, turned out a good, balanced show. Real Estate, a five-person indie electronic band currently based out of Brooklyn, had a mellow, gritty vibe that called to mind the MGMT of yesteryear. They were a great start to the night, revving students up for the energetic, heart-thumping beats of Starkey. Not sure how this seated auditorium works, but feel free to stand up and dance or come down, said one of the band members, seemingly confused by the formal air of the venue. Brown students do not continued on page 4
Emily Gilbert / Herald
Real Estate invited the audience to stand up and dance at Fridays concert.
A majority of students rate their educational experience at Brown as excellent, according to the 2011 enrolled student survey, whose findings were released Thursday. Two thirds of all undergraduates participated in the confidential electronic survey, which the Office of Institutional Research kept open for three weeks last spring. The survey gathers information about students views on the undergraduate experience, includ-
ing relationships with faculty and advisers, extracurricular activities, accomplishments and plans such as finding an internship or writing a thesis. Overall, respondents gave the University high marks. A particularly perspicuous item on the survey inquired, If you could start all over again, would you go to Brown? Nearly 70 percent replied, Definitely. Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron wrote in an email to The Herald that she was pleased to find 80 percent of participants had been
excited by class and 83 percent of students indicated that they had engaged often or very often in intellectual discussion with students outside class. She wrote she would like to see improvements in student-faculty interaction. The OIR conducts the survey once every four years. The OIR reported that the composition of respondents with regard to demographics such as financial aid status, class year, sex, race or ethnicity accurately reflects the overall the undergraduate population.
Mark Kachmar 13 ran for 98 yards but fumbled twice in Fridays loss.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. When it rains, it pours. The football team made too many mistakes Friday, turning the ball over five times including twice on the opposing goal line in a 24-7 loss to Harvard. The Crimson (1-1, 1-0 Ivy) only outgained Bruno (1-1, 0-1 Ivy) by 14 yards, but Harvard was able to make big plays on both sides of the ball, whereas the Bears failed to capitalize on their opportunities. When you turn the ball over and make some dumb penalty plays that makes the changes in the game, said Browns Head Coach Phil Estes. We just squandered too many opportunities. Its something that we have to fix, Estes added. Our ball security is not very good right now.
The defeat came in front of a crowd of 18,585 at Harvard Stadium, including a large Brown contingent that braved torrential rain and made the one-hour trip north from Providence. Co-captain quarterback Kyle Newhall-Caballero 11.5 could not replicate the efficiency of last weeks performance against Stony Brook University that earned him Ivy League co-offensive player of the week honors. Though he threw for 269 yards, he completed only 54 percent of his passes and threw three interceptions. Running back Mark Kachmer 13 gained 157 yards from scrimmage but fumbled the football twice. The Harvard defense forced timely turnovers and successfully pressured Newhall-Caballero, shutcontinued on page 5
Canvas will replace MyCourses as the Universitys online learning management system next fall. Computing and Information Services has been searching for an alternative to MyCourses for over a year. Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron will announce the change in an email to faculty today. Some faculty members are currently piloting the system in their classes, with more planned to test it in the spring, and Alpert Medical School has adopted Canvas as of this fall. MyCourses will be available through spring 2013 for those who elect to use it. The organization of Canvas distinguishes it from MyCourses, said Jonah Kagan 13, a member of the Academic Technology Steering Committee, which worked with CIS to find a replacement for MyCourses. Rather than clicking several times to view a single homework assignment for a class, students using Canvas can see all information they need aggregated on a single page. The interface is similar to a Facebook news feed, with recent stories such as a changed due date or a student comment on a continued on page 3
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TODaY 4 P.m. Conversations in Africana Writing, Churchill House 8 P.m. PW Presents The Visit, TF Green, Production Workshop 7 P.m. Public Forum on the ROTC Report, Salomon 001 SEPTEmBER 26 TOmORROW 11 a.m. Study Abroad Fair, Lincoln Field SEPTEmBER 27 By MaddiE BErG Contributing Writer
MEnu
SHaRPE REFECTORY Gnocchi Alla Sorrentina, Chicken Fajitas, White Chocolate Chip Cookies VERNEY-WOOLLEY DINING HaLL LUNCH Pepperoni French Bread Pizza, Green Beans with Tomatoes, White Chocolate Chip Cookies
DINNER Vegetable Strudel with Cream Sauce, French Onion Soup, Cream Cheese Brownies Country Style Baked Ham, Spicy Cuban Stir Fry, Cream Cheese Brownies
SudOKu
Brian Zink was named an assistant dean for medical student career development at the Alpert Medical School Wednesday, a newly created
position he will assume Oct. 1. Zink, who served as chair of emergency medicine at Miriam and Rhode Island hospitals, said the Med School created the position as a way to improve the career advising services already offered there.
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The Brown Daily Herald (USPS 067.740) is an independent newspaper serving the Brown University community daily since 1891. It is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, excluding vacations, once during Commencement, once during Orientation and once in July by The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. Single copy free for each member of the community. POSTMASTER please send corrections to P.O. Box 2538, Providence, RI 02906. Periodicals postage paid at Providence, R.I. Subscription prices: $280 one year daily, $140 one semester daily. Copyright 2011 by The Brown Daily Herald, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Edward Wing, dean of medicine and biological sciences, said Zink will be responsible for four tasks: helping faculty advise medical students about their careers, helping write deans letters for students residency applications, overseeing the Med Schools career development center and expanding the curriculum for the doctoring program, a Med School requirement that gives students experience in doctors offices. Previously, Zink worked in the deans office at the University of Michigan, where he interacted regularly with medical students, an aspect of his work he said he missed while working at the hospitals. Zink said he had been having discussions with colleagues at the Med School, including Wing, about becoming more involved with student life, which led to the creation of his new position. I inquired, and they were receptive, he said. From the first time he came to Brown, hes shown interest in the deans office, Wing said. He is passionate about it, he said. Its our opportunity and his. In addition to these functions, Zink said he will work on expanding the reach of a web-based medical career advising program called Careers in Medicine, which students will use throughout their four years. The program requires students to take self-evaluations in their first year and then saves the results for later reevaluations. These evaluations help students decide what path to take in the medical field after graduation. Zink called this program robust but said it must be accompanied by team of dedicated faculty and widespread student use. Most med schools offer some career development program, Zink said, Were trying to create a very comprehensive program that leads to people making great decisions.
Campus news 3
Students have been inconvenienced by long waits, the result of the removal of 10 exercise machines in the Bears Lair.
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continued from page 1 have to be told something twice. At first scattered throughout the auditorium, they crammed in front of the stage, getting up close and personal with the musicians as banb members strummed guitars to the musics psychedelic undertones. Real Estates harmonies were lush and playful, mixing together elements from various genres to create an addictive sound that had people swaying in the aisles or lounging in the dark, upper tiers of the auditorium, nodding their heads to the commanding beat of the drummers snare. The musicians called to mind a really, really good garage band slightly unkempt in their appearance, laid-back and simple in their delivery but also intoxicatingly creative. For their first performance in Providence, they knew how to get the crowd going, shouting out to Brown and including the audience in the performance. By the end of the night, I felt like I knew a little something about each member of the band and had been listening to their music forever, though it was only my second time hearing them. I appreciated the strippeddown approach to the presentation, which relied not on gimmicks or flash, but the mellow rhythms of their guitars. Sometimes things got a little too mellow, lulling the crowd into a slight stupor, but the band was quick to pick up the pace and turn the beat around. The beats got picked up, twisted over and ground up a little later in the evening when dubstepper Starkey took to the stage. He threw his whole body into working the beats that percolated through the auditorium with a force unto themselves. The small crowd around the stage swelled as glow sticks and flashing lights bounced around the otherwise dark venue, throwing dancing bodies into relief only for a moment. Starkeys thudding electronic bass lines were accompanied by the film, The Adventures of Prince Achmed a German animated fairy tale from 1926 in the spirit of Aladdin and the oldest animated feature film in existence. BCA discovered early on Saturday that they had a fully functional projector in the RISD Auditorium, and decided to add a visual element to Starkeys performance, Brassil said. They reached out to Adrian Randall 12 to provide a weird, interesting video, she said. Its a video that works with most live musical performances, Randall said of his selection. The film was visually amazing and engrossing to watch. Interestingly, there were sections that matched up perfectly with the music, making me believe at first that Starkey had planned to show
the film with the performance in advance. Finding out that it was completely by chance was a shock. Brassil said BCA was pleased with the evening and, though they wished more people had come to the concert, they were happy that
everyone who did come had a great time. Though the crowd was small, it was a dedicated, energetic group that gelled with the artists, jamming with Real Estate and bobbing to the beats of Starkey.
State-appointed Receiver Robert Flanders Jr. 71 fired Central Falls Police Chief Joseph Moran III Friday, along with a prosecution clerk for the police department and a deputy
city payroll. Our intent was always to eliminate this position even before a study recommended the citys fire and police departments operate under the direction of one authority, Flanders said of Morans former job. Following the studys release in early September, Moran issued a nine-page rebuttal suggesting that the research was not substantive. Normally when you do a study, you try to find out about a place before you rip it apart, Moran told The Herald last week. I guess I agree with his thought process as far as eliminating the position, Moran said, but added that he had a different philosophy. The chief of police handles the police science and the fire chief handles the fire science, he said. Theyre separate and distinct jobs. Moran added that other cities, like Providence, have retained the two positions and added a public safety officer position despite fiscal challenges. Flanders estimated that the city would save over $70,000 per year through the elimination of the police chief position. The districts former fire chief, Rene Coutu, died of cancer in December, and his position was never filled. Both he and Moran earned an annual salary of $80,000, according to a Sept. 24 Providence Journal article. The new public safety officer should be appointed within the next month, Flanders said. He said the new officer will earn an annual salary of around $90,000. Central Falls currently employs 32 police officers and 37 firefighters, according to a Sept. 9 Providence Journal article. Moran, 48, has lived in Central Falls his entire life and said he is not sure what is next for him. When one door closes, another one opens, he said.
Sports Monday 5
Bears fall to Crimson on rainy Friday
continued from page 1 ting down his top target, wide receiver Alex Tounkara-Kone 11.5. Tounkara-Kone, who last week had seven receptions for 149 yards and two scores, was held to three catches for 19 yards this game. Harvard credited senior Matt Hanson, its allIvy cornerback, with taking Brunos leading receiver out of the game. The Crimson opened up the scoring in the first quarter with a trick play. After moving the ball down the field, the Crimson faced a fourth and three on the Brown six-yard line. Harvard Head Coach Tim Murphy dialed up a fake field goal attempt, and the holder, quarterback Colton Chapple, tucked the ball and gained the first down. On the next play, running back Treavor Scales scored up the middle from a yard out to put Harvard up 7-0. Scales rushed for 129 yards on the day. After a Bruno punt, Harvard doubled its lead on an 80-yard drive. With a Brown interception negated by a roughing-the-passer penalty, the Crimson were able to capitalize on the mistake. Tight end Cameron Brate pulled down a perfectly lofted pass from Chapple with one hand before falling over the goal line for the score. Brunos defense calmed down for the rest of the half, sacking Chapple three times. But the offense could not take advantage. Newhall-Caballero orchestrated a drive to inside the Harvard 10-yard line, but tight end Nicholas Faber 12 could not corral a slick football in the endzone. On the next play, Newhall-Caballeros pass was intercepted. Brown finally got on the board in the third quarter as the drizzle turned into torrential rain. Skillful punting by Nathan Lovett 12 gave the Bears the advantage in the field position game, and it took Bruno only four plays to score after starting from its own 43-yard line. Newhall-Caballero connected with Tellef Lundevall 13 for a 31-yard score on a pass along the left sideline. Lundevall bulled his way over a defender and across the pylon, cutting the deficit to 14-7. But that was the closest the Bears would get to a comeback. After marching to the Harvard one-yard line early in the fourth quarter, the game appeared set for a dramatic finish. But on a direct snap rush up the middle, Kachmer let the ball slip, and Harvard was able to recover the fumble. Harvard punted the ball, but the Bears could not take advantage of a short field and were forced to punt. The Crimsons next drive was the dagger as Harvard took the ball 95 yards for a touchdown, putting the game out of reach with under seven minutes left. The score came on a 56-yard pass from Chapple to a wide-open Adam Chrissis, who caught the ball without a defender within a 15 yard viscinity before running it into the endzone. On the first play from scrimmage on Browns ensuing drive, Newhall-Caballero was hit as he released a pass. The throw was intercepted, appropriately capping a dismal night for the Bears. Harvard ran down the clock and added a late field goal to make the final score 24-7. One bright spot for the Bears was the play of Lovett. The Providence native pinned the Crimson inside its own 20-yard line four times, and had a long of 56 yards. He was outstanding, Estes said. Any time you can stick the ball inside the five-yard line and put their backs to the wall, its easier for the defense. But we didnt always do a good job of keeping them there. Browns defense saw a strong performance from Clayton McGrath 12, whose 15 tackles three for a loss led the team. Cornerback Emory Polleys 14 interception was the lone forced turnover for the Bears. Estes said the game reminded him of last years matchup with Harvard, a 29-14 Brown victory in Brown Stadiums first-ever night game. But this time with the reversal of locations came a reversal of roles. They came down to our place, and we just took it to them from the first snap to the last snap, Estes said. Basically, they just did the same thing to us. Theyre a good football team, and we were way out of sync. For Harvard, the win gives them an early season boost in the race for the Ivy League crown, and just as importantly, sets a tone for the year, Murphy said. The Bears will return to more familiar territory in their home opener Saturday against the University of Rhode Island under the lights. At stake will be the Governors Cup, and Bruno will try to avenge last years loss to the Rams in front of what should be a spirited home crowd.
After a heart-breaking overtime defeat at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst Thursday, the Brown womens soccer team broke hearts of their own Sunday, defeating Dartmouth in dramatic fashion at home to open their Ivy season with a win. Though the Bears saw the UMass game taken from them after a late goal by the Minutewomen (5-2-1), heroics from Marybeth Lesbirel 12 put Bruno (5-2-1, 1-00) on the other side of the spectrum as they toppled the Big Green 1-0 (2-6-0, 0-1-0). Solid goalkeeping from both Amber Bledsoe 14 and MC Barret 14 kept Bruno in both games as each team searched for game-winners. Bruno set a physical tone from the opening whistle against the home side, committing five fouls in the first 10 minutes of play. The intensity nearly paid off in the 20th minute when a headed effort from Chloe Cross 15 rattled the right post. At UMass, we had some new players and more inexperienced players that came on the field and started, and I think that was great for them, said captain Sarah Hebert-Seropian 12. I think they did a great job. Despite hitting the crossbar during a flurry of shots later in the half, Bruno could not find a breakthrough heading into the halftime pause. The second half opened in the same way the first finished, with both defenses coming up with stops to keep the game tied. UMass saw a brief glimpse of the goal in the 73rd minute after Barret pushed an on-target shot wide. She then gobbled up the rebound before a charging Minutewoman could put it into the empty net. The Bears recorded four more shots before the end of regulation, but could not beat UMass keeper Emily Cota before the end of regulation. The tie was finally broken four minutes into overtime when Deanna Colarossi nodded home a welltaken corner kick, leaving the Bears devastated.
uMass 1, Brown 0
I think we were just unlucky in overtime, Hebert-Seropian said. We were a little undisciplined on the corner, and thats how they scored on us.
Brown 1, dartmouth 0
The Bears again came out with a vengeance against Dartmouth, testing the Big Green keeper early. Mika Siegelman 14 and Lesbirel fired shots within the first five minutes of play, with Siegelmans punched away dramatically by the diving Dartmouth keeper. Two more shots from the Bears late in the half did not find their way into the visitors net, and Bruno went into halftime with the game knotted at 0-0. Dartmouth seemed to control the midfield for much of the second half, recording nine shots and earning three corner kicks. Barret was forced to make three saves in the half, and despite a quality free kick from Alison Kagawa 12 at the other Cabernet Voltaire | Abe Pressman end, Bruno could not break the deadlock. At the final whistle, the Bears walked off the field towards their second straight overtime after being unable to find a goal in over 180 minutes. Bruno finally broke the scoring drought in the 97th minute in extra time. Kagawa combined with Maddie Wiener 14, who touched the ball to Lesbirel on the flank. Running to the right of the goal, Fraternity of Evil | Eshan Mitra, Brendan Hainline and Hector Ramirez Lesbirel teased out the keeper and slotted her shot home into the right corner. The goal gave Bruno its first Ivy win of the season. MC saved us about three times in the backfield in overtime, Lesbirel said. She kept us in the game. Then Ali hit it up to Maddie, she gave me a great flick, and we were able to put it in the net. I think we learned from UMass a lot, Hebert-Seropian said. That helped us to stay focused. We knew The Unicomic | Eva Chen and dan Sack we could get that goal. Bruno faces cross-town rival University of Rhode Island (5-31) Wednesday. The Bears will look to use this win to gain momentum as they head into a difficult stretch of games. I think you could feel our excitement when we won, HebertSeropian said. It was a great start as we look towards the (Ivy League) championship.
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opinions 7
the Graduate School, include components that allow students to set up their own research essays or projects. This is where the libraries come in. Original research is one of the most obvious ways to generate new information in a meaningful way. Many of the Universitys special collections contain materials that have remained relatively unexplored and that offer viable ground for interdisciplinary and transnational approaches to history. The John Carter Brown Library is a ment, linguistics, religion, et cetera. Especially with the transnational or hemispheric turn in academia, this accumulation of materials from a variety of disciplines and international contexts in one building provides unparalleled opportunities. It is an illusion to think that the U.S. or other countries can be understood or studied in isolation, and the librarys collection opens up possibilities for interdisciplinary as well as hemispheric research. While John Carter Brown could never have predicted of Newtons Principia on display. Both reflect the myriad collections available at the Hay that are of interest to those in the sciences, while the library is also strong in literature, history and culture. User restrictions, though often cited as a reason to avoid the special collections at the John Carter Brown Library, no longer apply. With two forms of photo identification and a reference from an instructor, the restrictions are lifted and the library is all yours to explore. Since very few professors here share Professor Snapes opposition to individual initiative, the reference should not be too hard to come by. With materials increasingly available online and indexed in Josiah, vast amounts of knowledge are only a mouse click away. It is thus surprising how little awareness there is of the possibilities on campus. Im not speaking from my high horse, because my introduction to the libraries too was a happy accident. In testament to their international renown, it was through Professor Wil Verhoeven at my home university of Groningen that I first learned about the John Carter Brown Library and the Hay, years before I would come to Brown. And if people are willing to cross oceans to use its resources, the very least we can do is cross the Main Green. Suzanne Enzerink GS is a masters student in American studies from the netherlands. She urges you to capitalize on your advantageous geographical locations by contacting hay@brown.edu and jcbl_information@brown.edu.
Libraries are an invaluable component of the universitys knowledge capital, and it should be self-evident that students should use and explore these resources to the fullest.
case in point. While the collection will be of most interest to those in the humanities, the great subject, as John Carter Brown himself called Americana, merits exploration by all students. The library is a hub of knowledge about the Americas from the 15th century through 1825. As Kim Nusco, reference and manuscript librarian at the John Carter Brown Library, explains, Within that chronological and geographical focus, the material covers just about every aspect of human activity: exploration, navigation, natural history, anthropology, medicine, travel accounts, trade, literature, govern-
this state of affairs 150 years after his hobby of book collecting started to intensify, the outcome is particularly fortuitous for Brown. Though for departments of physical sciences the creation of knowledge will naturally also involve practical experiments in a lab, the idea that libraries cater mainly to a humanities audience can be easily debunked. The John Hay is opening an exhibition titled Unveiling Secrets: The Evolution of Modern Chemistry Sept. 30, which will draw heavily from the librarys history of science collection. It also has a first edition
For Brown students, who have had a basic science education, belief in the accepted theories may seem like the centrist position that represents most of America. But a Fox News poll from Sept. 7 shows that 50 percent of Americans believe that human life was created exactly as stated in the Bible, while only 15 percent support Darwins theory of evolution. Given this climate of skepticism for one of sciences most vital theories, President Obama deserves commendation for his continued solidarity with the scientific
Paul, R-Tex., businessman Herman Cain and former Sen. Rick Santorum have all taken stands against evolution in the past. As students at a center of research and innovation, we must promote dialogue both on campus and nationwide to make support for evolution not a marginal position but rather a mainstream American view. Evolution shouldnt be a political issue. If America is to stay afloat in the global economy, respecting science must be a national value. Liberals at Brown must con-
Abstract expressionism, pop art, geometric abstraction and photorealism all have a place at the Rhode Island School of Design Museums new exhibition, Made in the UK: Contemporary Art from The Richard Brown Baker Collection. The exhibition, which opened Sept. 23 and runs through Jan. 8, features works by 83 British artists. Filling two galleries of the museum, the exhibition features a variety of art forms, including paintings, prints, drawings and sculptures the majority of which are from the post-World War II era. Some of the pieces are being shown to the public for the first time, said Judith Tannenbaum, one of the collections curators. About half of the exhibition consists of artwork collected by Richard Brown Baker himself, while the museum purchased the other half using funds Baker donated. The exhibition has a recurring landscape motif, including John Parks Camden Town, which could be mistaken for a photograph from afar. The 1980 painting depicts, in exacting detail and color, the London neighborhood of Camden, reflecting the painters sense of homesickness. Vibrant colors radiate throughout the collections galleries, including Tom Dixons functional bright orange Chair and Untitled, an organic, copper sulfate construction by Roger Hirons in a bright blue hue. There is a cross-cultural connection and sense of change in the two galleries. The numerous artists, though they all have a connection to Britain, come from various backgrounds including Nige-
ria and Japan, and their artwork reflects this diversity. Tannenbaum called Made in the UK a portrait of the collector as well as a broad example of contemporary British art. Baker, a longtime resident of New York, was born in Providence and served as a member of the Museums Fine Arts Committee from 1966 to 2000, she said. He lived in Britain during World War II as a Rhodes Scholar and later donated a substantial portion of his collection to RISD, considering the move a gesture to England and to (his) native city, according to a museum press release. One of the first pieces in Bakers art collection, a watercolor by 19th century landscape artist J.M.W. Turner, is on display. Tannenbaum described the work as fluid, open and airy, adding that Baker saw a
connection between this piece and the work of abstract expressionist artists, which he later began collecting. Baker frequented art shows in New York and tended to buy pieces from fledgling contemporary artists, Tannenbaum said. The museum continues to collect work from living British artists through the Richard Brown Baker Fund for Contemporary British Art so far accumulating 60 works, according to the press release. Made in the UK presents an eclectic mix that draws its inspiration from Bakers varied interests, with art ranging from metal pieces that look like heating grates to a piece commenting on the role of the British royal family. Its diversity encourages visitors to reflect upon changes in Britain and throughout the world.
The eighth annual Pixilerations Festival opened Sept. 22 at the Perry and Marty Granoff Center for the Creative Arts. The festival part of a larger celebration hosted by FirstWorks draws both local and international artists to explore the intersection of art and technology in the digital media age. Pixilerations, which runs through Oct. 2, will feature multimedia and musical performances and film screenings. Pixilerations draws a diverse and talented spectrum of over 70 artists to the heart of Providence. Some artists are local, while others hail from Taiwan, England, Germany, the Netherlands, Portugal and Sweden. Paul Myoda, assistant professor of visual art, will exhibit Glittering Machine, a series of interactive sculptures. All exhibitions are free and take place within walking distance. The Granoff Center and the Sol Koffler Gallery at the Rhode Island School of Design will serve as stages, and so will other locations downtown.
FirstWorks collaborated with the Brown University Creative Arts Council and the RISD Digital Media program to organize events, said Peter Bramante, managing director. Pixilerations represents a conjunction of many brains and energies working together, said Elena Lledo, exhibitions director of Pixilerations. FirstWorks has helped a lot with their administrative support, RISD and Brown offer professionals and space and the artists are doing great things. The festival really captures how new media art is always looking at traditional forms of art and giving a new perspective, Bramante said. The art being exhibited will give audiences a new way of seeing things. The installations will also include a large-scale billboard exhibition downtown. Billboards, usually used to advertise products, will become canvases of expression, Lledo said. Pixilerations is a celebration of the digital age, funneling artists from every corner of the world together to express themselves through new media.
Once Via Via IV, then Cosa Nostra, the restaurant on Meeting Street is now claiming its third name in a year: Prince Cafe and Restaurant. Mohamed Badr, the restaurants new owner, changed its name Aug. 1 and expanded its cuisine to include Mediterranean dishes along with its traditional array of Italian foods. The restaurant has experienced few cosmetic alterations as a result of the ownership change, but the management team hopes a new name and menu expansion will bring the restaurant out of a slump, said Munzer Hallak, an employee.
Business is very low right now, Hallak said. We are hoping the changes will attract new customers. Before Badr who could not be reached for comment purchased the cafe, the building was part of a larger chain of restaurants, gas stations and convenience stores owned by East Side Enterprises. While designing Sidney Frank Hall for Life Sciences in 2000, the University tried to purchase the property to include in the LiScis footprint. According to a 2006 Herald article, it negotiated with the former owners for two years before eventually constructing the building around the restaurant.
Peiyu Wu / Herald
The italian restaurant next to Pembroke campus has experienced another identity crisis.