Archive

 Some of the organ’s thousands of pipes soar to the Sayles Hall ceiling.
discoveries

The sound of 3,355 pipes

Looming above the main room of Sayles Hall is an antique musical treasure: the largest remaining Hutchings-Votey pipe organ in the world.
READ MORE March 23, 2009
 Match Day brought jubilation for medical students like Sonia Aneja, facing camera, whose careers are now coming into focus.

A little champagne with your future?

On March 19, Brown fourth-year medical students attended Match Day festivities on campus and learned where they would pursue residencies for the next three years.
READ MORE March 23, 2009

Stephen Houston: Anthropologist, Archaeologist, Maya Scholar

Stephen Houston, professor of anthropology and MacArthur fellow, discusses his life-long pursuit of understanding Maya civilization in a new video.
READ MORE March 23, 2009
 Ben Brown ’08, ’12 MD: Translating linguistic and medical skills into better patient services.

Brown med program connects community health care and careers

A grant designed to improve access to medical care for disadvantaged patients is encouraging medical students to specialize in much-needed primary care.
READ MORE March 23, 2009
 This document, dated January 2, 1759, is the official manifest of the Wheel of Fortune, one of the Brown family’s vessels used in the transatlantic slave trade. It includes a brief description of the ship’s cargo, chiefly rum. (Click to view larger.)
Slavery and Justice

Commission proposes memorial as part of ongoing discussion of slavery

The Commission on Memorials, established by the University in cooperation with the city of Providence and state of Rhode Island, has released a report containing six recommendations on how to acknowledge Brown’s and the community’s historical relationship to slavery.
READ MORE March 17, 2009
 World-renowned conductor Daniel Barenboim (left) and Cogut Center director Michael Steinberg are continuing a musical collaboration begun at Brown in 2006.

Steinberg to advise European opera houses in joint ‘Ring’ production

Michael Steinberg, director of Brown’s Cogut Center for the Humanities, is helping two of the world’s most prestigious opera houses, La Scala and the Berlin State Opera, stage a joint production of Richard Wagner’s epic “Ring Cycle.”
READ MORE March 12, 2009
 The Sidney E. Frank Hall for Life Sciences, dedicated in 2006, was the first Brown building to meet Leadership in Environmental Design silver certification criteria.

Brown reduces carbon emissions by nearly 8 percent in one year

Conservation and efficiency measures helped the University shrink its carbon footprint at a higher rate than anticipated in 2007–08, a Facilities Management report reveals.
READ MORE March 4, 2009
 The College Hill Café inside the Brown Bookstore serves meals and snacks from 7 a.m. until 10 p.m. every weekday.
Grand opening

Food for body and mind: a new look for the Brown Bookstore

The newly renovated bookstore on Thayer Street has reopened with a series of events and promotions this week.
READ MORE March 3, 2009

Brown alum Jim Yong Kim ’82 named 17th president of Dartmouth College

Dartmouth College announced on March 2 that Jim Yong Kim ’82, a physician known for his work in the global campaign against AIDS, would be its new president.
READ MORE March 2, 2009
 Trish Glover: Working to end sexual violence.
five questions for …

Trish Glover

The University’s first sexual assault response and prevention coordinator talks about her mission and explains why higher numbers of reported assaults can be a positive outcome.
READ MORE February 25, 2009
the brown corporation

Simmons: Sacrifices needed to preserve Brown’s academic excellence

In an e-mail to the Brown community, President Ruth J. Simmons reported on Feb. 21 Corporation actions including a 0.9% budget increase for FY10, cost-saving measures that will include staff cuts, and the lowest tuition increase in more than 45 years.
READ MORE February 22, 2009
 Constantine Gatsonis: A call for more rigorous training, higher standards, and stronger protocols for scientific detective work.
Five Questions for Constantine Gatsonis

Forensic science found far short of ‘CSI’ perfection

Constantine Gatsonis co-chaired a two-year effort to examine the state of the nation’s forensic science, an increasingly important part of collecting criminal evidence. The report, issued last week through the National Academy of Sciences, found U.S. forensic science badly in need of an overhaul.
READ MORE February 20, 2009
 Writing Center associates Daniel Block and Sophia Beal, both graduate students themselves, help dissertation writers talk through their ideas as a way to get past writer’s block.

A cure for the dissertation blues

A new program developed by the Graduate School and the Writing Center helps Ph.D. students stop researching and start writing.
READ MORE February 19, 2009
 Bruno welcomes staff to Bear Day.
staff recognition

Honoring the ‘bears’ behind the scenes

Twenty staff groups and individuals received awards from President Simmons at the annual celebration of those who keep the University running.
READ MORE February 19, 2009
 Detailed with intricate machine embroidery, the garments are typical of the style worn in the area of Nigeria where the Ashamu family lived.
Discoveries

Chief Ashamu’s Ceremonial Robes

A collection of ceremonial robes and other apparel worn by Chief Emmanuel O. Ashamu of Nigeria now resides at the Brown dance studio that bears his name.
READ MORE February 17, 2009
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