Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations
A complete backup of stream-market.com.ua
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of turnerchevroletcrosby.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of coches-japoneses.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of getsproutstudio.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of surveydownline.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of fattlestacks.tumblr.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of cadigitalcity.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of haruneclinic.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of carpetexpress.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of everydayparisian.squarespace.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations
A complete backup of monitoruldegalati.ro
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of waymarkedtrails.org
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of americanbakers.org
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of dental-tribune.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
overall at the
UNIVERSITY’S PEER INSTITUTIONS ANNOUNCE COVID-19 Ivy Plus universities will all require COVID-19 vaccinations for students in the fall, but are so far adopting different policies towards faculty and staff. More schools are announcing a vaccine requirement for students returning to campus for the 2021-22 academic year, signaling a return to normalcy. The University announced thatvaccines
PPSD SUPERINTENDENT HARRISON PETERS RESIGNS Providence Public Schools Superintendent Harrison Peters and the Rhode Island Department of Education reached an agreement Friday to terminate Peters’ contract amid growing concerns over his hiring of a school administrator charged with assaulting a teenage boy and his knowledge of five allegations by students against the administrator ofnon-consensual
THE CULTURAL PHENOMENON THAT IS SALLY ROONEY But that’s not the only reason Rooney has become a cultural phenomenon: Just as digital technology seamlessly becomes a part of her narrative, the social and political atmosphere of the times are absorbed into it just as naturally. The 2008 financial crash of Ireland forms the backdrop of both her novels; “Normal People”explicitly
TITLE IX PROGRAM OFFICER RENE DAVIS TO LEAVE U. FOR Title IX Program Officer Rene Davis will leave the University in June to become assistant head of an independent K-12 school, according to a Thursday announcement from Russell Carey ’91 MA’06, executive vice president for planning and policy. During her time at the University, Davis has worked to refine policies within the Title IX Office AFTER LEAVING THE NEST, UNDERGRADS HIRE ‘MOTHER GOOSE’ The company’s name is a play on the fairytale character of Mother Goose, Kepple said. The two worked for months “getting to know the area and the best services, like restaurants,” and created the Campus Goose network, Kepple said. THE BROWN DAILY HERALDSUBMISSIONSADVERTISEEDITORS' NOTEFENCINGMEN'S LACROSSELIVIA GIMENES By Caelyn Pender February 25, 2021. This article is part of the series Celebrating Black history at Brown. On a Saturday night in February 1923, the brothers of the Alpha Gamma chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha held an initiation ceremony to welcome three new members to their ranks. With the addition of two active members and an honorary member — a HARRIS ’22 AND IQBAL ’24: AMERICAN RESPONSE TO UYGHUR GENOCIDE 19 hours ago · A truly impactful response to Uyghur genocide requires global cooperation.The Chinese government has demonstrated a relentless commitment to cultural erasure and reaps the benefits of many powerful allies willing to look the other way. However, if enacted as part of a global campaign, America’s full investment in condemnation, sanctions and refugee assistance might force Beijing to ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. MASK MANDATE IN RHODE ISLAND LIFTED FOLLOWING CDC GUIDANCE Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee lifted the statewide mask mandate May 18 following the release of new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stating that fully vaccinated individuals no longer have to wear a mask in most settings. MEN’S CREW TAKES FIFTH IN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS, WOMEN'S The women’s eighth place finish in Sarasota, Florida was the team’s 23rd top-ten finish at the NCAA National Championships in 24 years of competition. The men’s and women’s crew teams raced on opposite ends of the East Coast in their respective Division 1 National Championships this weekend. The men’s team placed fifthoverall at the
UNIVERSITY’S PEER INSTITUTIONS ANNOUNCE COVID-19 Ivy Plus universities will all require COVID-19 vaccinations for students in the fall, but are so far adopting different policies towards faculty and staff. More schools are announcing a vaccine requirement for students returning to campus for the 2021-22 academic year, signaling a return to normalcy. The University announced thatvaccines
PPSD SUPERINTENDENT HARRISON PETERS RESIGNS Providence Public Schools Superintendent Harrison Peters and the Rhode Island Department of Education reached an agreement Friday to terminate Peters’ contract amid growing concerns over his hiring of a school administrator charged with assaulting a teenage boy and his knowledge of five allegations by students against the administrator ofnon-consensual
THE CULTURAL PHENOMENON THAT IS SALLY ROONEY But that’s not the only reason Rooney has become a cultural phenomenon: Just as digital technology seamlessly becomes a part of her narrative, the social and political atmosphere of the times are absorbed into it just as naturally. The 2008 financial crash of Ireland forms the backdrop of both her novels; “Normal People”explicitly
TITLE IX PROGRAM OFFICER RENE DAVIS TO LEAVE U. FOR Title IX Program Officer Rene Davis will leave the University in June to become assistant head of an independent K-12 school, according to a Thursday announcement from Russell Carey ’91 MA’06, executive vice president for planning and policy. During her time at the University, Davis has worked to refine policies within the Title IX Office AFTER LEAVING THE NEST, UNDERGRADS HIRE ‘MOTHER GOOSE’ The company’s name is a play on the fairytale character of Mother Goose, Kepple said. The two worked for months “getting to know the area and the best services, like restaurants,” and created the Campus Goose network, Kepple said. STUDENTS, PROFESSORS RESPOND WITH EXCITEMENT TO IN-PERSON 21 hours ago · Many students are finding the change refreshing, with Hannah Julius ’24 saying that longer classes are “mentally draining” and “hard to focus on” when held over Zoom.. But while in-person classes have been a welcomed change, some students have still not fully transitioned, with hybrid classes making up a majorityof their schedules.
HARRIS ’22 AND IQBAL ’24: AMERICAN RESPONSE TO UYGHUR GENOCIDE 19 hours ago · A truly impactful response to Uyghur genocide requires global cooperation.The Chinese government has demonstrated a relentless commitment to cultural erasure and reaps the benefits of many powerful allies willing to look the other way. However, if enacted as part of a global campaign, America’s full investment in condemnation, sanctions and refugee assistance might force Beijing to THE FUTURE OF ONLINE LEARNING AT BROWN Since March 2020, the student experience at the University has been largely relegated to Zoom meetings and recorded lectures. But the novel prevalence of online technology in the University curriculum has provided a chance for the University to examine how it educates and challenges faculty and students alike. REMOTE LEARNING OPENS DOOR TO MORE GUEST LECTURERS 1 day ago · Throughout the pandemic, remote learning has allowed professors to incorporate a more diverse set of guest lecturers into their syllabi. As Brown continues its fourth semester of remote learning, The Herald spoke with professors about their experiences hosting lectures over Zoom and their plans for incorporating guest speakers in the future as the University transitions back to in-person ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. HAFFENREFFER MUSEUM LOOKS INTO ORIGINS OF POTENTIALLY 1 day ago · An Ukhurhe, a rattle staff used in ancestral ceremonies, is one of 15 objects crafted in Benin City, now southern Nigeria, that lie in the collections of the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology. Artifacts from Benin are tied to a violent history — in 1897, British colonial forces ravaged the Royal HODGES ’22: IN SUPPORT OF A TAX ON SUGARY DRINKS The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply harmed Rhode Island’s economy and a quarter of households are now experiencing hunger. Even as businesses start to reopen, an unprecedented number of Rhode Islanders still rely on food banks to feed themselves and their families, and food bank usage grew by 26 percent in the past year. Despite these dire circumstances, Rhode Island’s legislature now VINCENT HARRIS TO SERVE AS NEW BCSC DIRECTOR 1 day ago · The University appointed Vincent Harris as associate dean and new director of the Brown Center for Students of Color, capping off a national search and campus-wide controversy spanning nearly two years. In his new role, Harris hopes to foreground his intersecting identities as a queer Black man MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION PROPOSAL RACES AGAINST STATEHOUSE CLOCK Three weeks remain in Rhode Island’s legislative session — and the clock is ticking on Democratic Rep. Scott Slater’s recreational marijuana proposal. Slater introduced the bill, which aims to legalize the use of recreational marijuana in the Ocean State, at the end oflast month.
JAVIER MONTAÑEZ NAMED PPSD INTERIM SUPERINTENDENT 1 day ago · Javier Montañez will serve as the new interim superintendent of the Providence Public School District following former superintendent Harrison Peters’ May resignation, according to a press release from the Rhode Island Department of Education. Montañez is currently the principal of Leviton Dual Language School, an elementary school in Providence focused on bilingual education inEnglish
THE BROWN DAILY HERALDSUBMISSIONSADVERTISEEDITORS' NOTEFENCINGMEN'S LACROSSELIVIA GIMENES By Caelyn Pender February 25, 2021. This article is part of the series Celebrating Black history at Brown. On a Saturday night in February 1923, the brothers of the Alpha Gamma chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha held an initiation ceremony to welcome three new members to their ranks. With the addition of two active members and an honorary member — a UNIVERSITY’S PEER INSTITUTIONS ANNOUNCE COVID-19 Ivy Plus universities will all require COVID-19 vaccinations for students in the fall, but are so far adopting different policies towards faculty and staff. More schools are announcing a vaccine requirement for students returning to campus for the 2021-22 academic year, signaling a return to normalcy. The University announced thatvaccines
MASK MANDATE IN RHODE ISLAND LIFTED FOLLOWING CDC GUIDANCE Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee lifted the statewide mask mandate May 18 following the release of new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stating that fully vaccinated individuals no longer have to wear a mask in most settings. ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. PROF. ANANI DZIDZIENYO, BELOVED AND BRILLIANT, DIES AT 79 Professor Anani Dzidzienyo, renowned scholar, mentor and educator, died on Oct. 25. Dzidzienyo was 79 years old. Following over four decades of teaching at the University, the Ghanaian academic has left behind a legacy of internationally respected scholarship and a deep memory of his capacity for connection. TITLE IX PROGRAM OFFICER RENE DAVIS TO LEAVE U. FOR Title IX Program Officer Rene Davis will leave the University in June to become assistant head of an independent K-12 school, according to a Thursday announcement from Russell Carey ’91 MA’06, executive vice president for planning and policy. During her time at the University, Davis has worked to refine policies within the Title IX Office THE CULTURAL PHENOMENON THAT IS SALLY ROONEY But that’s not the only reason Rooney has become a cultural phenomenon: Just as digital technology seamlessly becomes a part of her narrative, the social and political atmosphere of the times are absorbed into it just as naturally. The 2008 financial crash of Ireland forms the backdrop of both her novels; “Normal People”explicitly
RISD PRESIDENT ROSANNE SOMERSON TO RETIRE Rhode Island School of Design President Rosanne Somerson will retire at the end of the academic year after serving five years in office, the school’s Board of Trustees announced in an email to the RISD community Dec. 22. “For over three decades, President Somerson hasbeen an
SCHMIDT '21: PROFESSORS SHOULD STOP SCHEDULING EXAMS AT NIGHT Nothing is worse than a night exam. Many classes, especially large lectures in STEM fields, schedule exams late in the evening. At their worst, these exams can span from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. AFTER LEAVING THE NEST, UNDERGRADS HIRE ‘MOTHER GOOSE’ The company’s name is a play on the fairytale character of Mother Goose, Kepple said. The two worked for months “getting to know the area and the best services, like restaurants,” and created the Campus Goose network, Kepple said. THE BROWN DAILY HERALDSUBMISSIONSADVERTISEEDITORS' NOTEFENCINGMEN'S LACROSSELIVIA GIMENES By Caelyn Pender February 25, 2021. This article is part of the series Celebrating Black history at Brown. On a Saturday night in February 1923, the brothers of the Alpha Gamma chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha held an initiation ceremony to welcome three new members to their ranks. With the addition of two active members and an honorary member — a UNIVERSITY’S PEER INSTITUTIONS ANNOUNCE COVID-19 Ivy Plus universities will all require COVID-19 vaccinations for students in the fall, but are so far adopting different policies towards faculty and staff. More schools are announcing a vaccine requirement for students returning to campus for the 2021-22 academic year, signaling a return to normalcy. The University announced thatvaccines
MASK MANDATE IN RHODE ISLAND LIFTED FOLLOWING CDC GUIDANCE Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee lifted the statewide mask mandate May 18 following the release of new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stating that fully vaccinated individuals no longer have to wear a mask in most settings. ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. PROF. ANANI DZIDZIENYO, BELOVED AND BRILLIANT, DIES AT 79 Professor Anani Dzidzienyo, renowned scholar, mentor and educator, died on Oct. 25. Dzidzienyo was 79 years old. Following over four decades of teaching at the University, the Ghanaian academic has left behind a legacy of internationally respected scholarship and a deep memory of his capacity for connection. TITLE IX PROGRAM OFFICER RENE DAVIS TO LEAVE U. FOR Title IX Program Officer Rene Davis will leave the University in June to become assistant head of an independent K-12 school, according to a Thursday announcement from Russell Carey ’91 MA’06, executive vice president for planning and policy. During her time at the University, Davis has worked to refine policies within the Title IX Office THE CULTURAL PHENOMENON THAT IS SALLY ROONEY But that’s not the only reason Rooney has become a cultural phenomenon: Just as digital technology seamlessly becomes a part of her narrative, the social and political atmosphere of the times are absorbed into it just as naturally. The 2008 financial crash of Ireland forms the backdrop of both her novels; “Normal People”explicitly
RISD PRESIDENT ROSANNE SOMERSON TO RETIRE Rhode Island School of Design President Rosanne Somerson will retire at the end of the academic year after serving five years in office, the school’s Board of Trustees announced in an email to the RISD community Dec. 22. “For over three decades, President Somerson hasbeen an
SCHMIDT '21: PROFESSORS SHOULD STOP SCHEDULING EXAMS AT NIGHT Nothing is worse than a night exam. Many classes, especially large lectures in STEM fields, schedule exams late in the evening. At their worst, these exams can span from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. AFTER LEAVING THE NEST, UNDERGRADS HIRE ‘MOTHER GOOSE’ The company’s name is a play on the fairytale character of Mother Goose, Kepple said. The two worked for months “getting to know the area and the best services, like restaurants,” and created the Campus Goose network, Kepple said. REMOTE LEARNING OPENS DOOR TO MORE GUEST LECTURERS 19 hours ago · Throughout the pandemic, remote learning has allowed professors to incorporate a more diverse set of guest lecturers into their syllabi. As Brown continues its fourth semester of remote learning, The Herald spoke with professors about their experiences hosting lectures over Zoom and their plans for incorporating guest speakers in the future as the University transitions back to in-person MORE THAN THREE-QUARTERS OF STUDENTS ON CAMPUS HAVE The percentage of documented COVID-19 vaccinations increased to 76.8 percent and 69.3 percent, respectively, for students and employees on campus during the week of May 27 to June 2, according to the Healthy Brown COVID-19 Testing Update. HAFFENREFFER MUSEUM LOOKS INTO ORIGINS OF POTENTIALLY 18 hours ago · An Ukhurhe, a rattle staff used in ancestral ceremonies, is one of 15 objects crafted in Benin City, now southern Nigeria, that lie in the collections of the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology. Artifacts from Benin are tied to a violent history — in 1897, British colonial forces ravaged the Royal THE FUTURE OF ONLINE LEARNING AT BROWN 1 day ago · Since March 2020, the student experience at the University has been largely relegated to Zoom meetings and recorded lectures. But the novel prevalence of online technology in the University curriculum has provided a chance for the University to examine how it educates and challenges faculty and students alike. HODGES ’22: IN SUPPORT OF A TAX ON SUGARY DRINKS 1 day ago · The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply harmed Rhode Island’s economy and a quarter of households are now experiencing hunger. Even as businesses start to reopen, an unprecedented number of Rhode Islanders still rely on food banks to feed themselves and their families, and food bank usage grew by 26 percent in the past year. Despite these dire circumstances, Rhode Island’s legislature now VINCENT HARRIS TO SERVE AS NEW BCSC DIRECTOR 18 hours ago · The University appointed Vincent Harris as associate dean and new director of the Brown Center for Students of Color, capping off a national search and campus-wide controversy spanning nearly two years. In his new role, Harris hopes to foreground his intersecting identities as a queer Black man MEN’S CREW TAKES FIFTH IN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS, WOMEN'S The men’s and women’s crew teams raced on opposite ends of the East Coast in their respective Division 1 National Championships this weekend. The men’s team placed fifth overall at the 2021 International Rowing Association National Championships in West Windsor, New Jersey. ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. 'CRUELLA,' THE DISNEY VILLAINESS WITH A FASHIONABLE BACKSTORY 1 day ago · Directed by Craig Gillespie (“I, Tonya”), “Cruella” is a dazzling crime-comedy, villain origin story with a vampy flair distinct from the standard Disney live-action feature. Despite an untrimmed run time of 2 hours and 14 minutes, its plot contrivances and questionable character motives are MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION PROPOSAL RACES AGAINST STATEHOUSE CLOCK 1 day ago · Three weeks remain in Rhode Island’s legislative session — and the clock is ticking on Democratic Rep. Scott Slater’s recreational marijuana proposal. Slater introduced the bill, which aims to legalize the use of recreational marijuana in the Ocean State, at the end of last month. THE BROWN DAILY HERALDSUBMISSIONSADVERTISEEDITORS' NOTEFENCINGMEN'S LACROSSELIVIA GIMENES By Caelyn Pender February 25, 2021. This article is part of the series Celebrating Black history at Brown. On a Saturday night in February 1923, the brothers of the Alpha Gamma chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha held an initiation ceremony to welcome three new members to their ranks. With the addition of two active members and an honorary member — a MASK MANDATE IN RHODE ISLAND LIFTED FOLLOWING CDC GUIDANCE Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee lifted the statewide mask mandate May 18 following the release of new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stating that fully vaccinated individuals no longer have to wear a mask in most settings. ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. PROF. ANANI DZIDZIENYO, BELOVED AND BRILLIANT, DIES AT 79 Professor Anani Dzidzienyo, renowned scholar, mentor and educator, died on Oct. 25. Dzidzienyo was 79 years old. Following over four decades of teaching at the University, the Ghanaian academic has left behind a legacy of internationally respected scholarship and a deep memory of his capacity for connection. GRADUATING SENIORS TO CELEBRATE COMMENCEMENT IN-PERSON Virtual Degree Conferral Ceremony slated for May 24, in-person ceremony to follow one year later in May 2021. Families and guests will tune into the class of 2021's Commencement ceremony virtually, Paxson announced in a Thursday email. On Sept. 6, 2016, members of the class of 2020 walked through the Van Wickle gates to cheers fromfaculty
RISD PRESIDENT ROSANNE SOMERSON TO RETIRE Rhode Island School of Design President Rosanne Somerson will retire at the end of the academic year after serving five years in office, the school’s Board of Trustees announced in an email to the RISD community Dec. 22. “For over three decades, President Somerson hasbeen an
UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR ASKS NYT TO CORRECT 1619 PROJECT Wednesday, January 29, 2020. Talia Mermin / Herald. Professor Emeritus of History Gordon Wood P’86 co-wrote a letter to the editor requesting a correction to the New York Times Magazine’s acclaimed 1619 Project with four other professors from different universities. In response, through a public letter, New York Times MagazineEditor-in
SCHMIDT '21: PROFESSORS SHOULD STOP SCHEDULING EXAMS AT NIGHT Nothing is worse than a night exam. Many classes, especially large lectures in STEM fields, schedule exams late in the evening. At their worst, these exams can span from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. AFTER LEAVING THE NEST, UNDERGRADS HIRE ‘MOTHER GOOSE’ The company’s name is a play on the fairytale character of Mother Goose, Kepple said. The two worked for months “getting to know the area and the best services, like restaurants,” and created the Campus Goose network, Kepple said. POLL: FIFTH OF STUDENTS DON’T MASTURBATE While sex and masturbation are popular topics of discussion on campus, a recent Herald poll revealed that about a fifth of students never masturbate. In the poll, about 26 percent of students reported masturbating once or twice a week, 17 percent three to five times a THE BROWN DAILY HERALDSUBMISSIONSADVERTISEEDITORS' NOTEFENCINGMEN'S LACROSSELIVIA GIMENES By Caelyn Pender February 25, 2021. This article is part of the series Celebrating Black history at Brown. On a Saturday night in February 1923, the brothers of the Alpha Gamma chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha held an initiation ceremony to welcome three new members to their ranks. With the addition of two active members and an honorary member — a MASK MANDATE IN RHODE ISLAND LIFTED FOLLOWING CDC GUIDANCE Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee lifted the statewide mask mandate May 18 following the release of new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stating that fully vaccinated individuals no longer have to wear a mask in most settings. ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. PROF. ANANI DZIDZIENYO, BELOVED AND BRILLIANT, DIES AT 79 Professor Anani Dzidzienyo, renowned scholar, mentor and educator, died on Oct. 25. Dzidzienyo was 79 years old. Following over four decades of teaching at the University, the Ghanaian academic has left behind a legacy of internationally respected scholarship and a deep memory of his capacity for connection. GRADUATING SENIORS TO CELEBRATE COMMENCEMENT IN-PERSON Virtual Degree Conferral Ceremony slated for May 24, in-person ceremony to follow one year later in May 2021. Families and guests will tune into the class of 2021's Commencement ceremony virtually, Paxson announced in a Thursday email. On Sept. 6, 2016, members of the class of 2020 walked through the Van Wickle gates to cheers fromfaculty
RISD PRESIDENT ROSANNE SOMERSON TO RETIRE Rhode Island School of Design President Rosanne Somerson will retire at the end of the academic year after serving five years in office, the school’s Board of Trustees announced in an email to the RISD community Dec. 22. “For over three decades, President Somerson hasbeen an
UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR ASKS NYT TO CORRECT 1619 PROJECT Wednesday, January 29, 2020. Talia Mermin / Herald. Professor Emeritus of History Gordon Wood P’86 co-wrote a letter to the editor requesting a correction to the New York Times Magazine’s acclaimed 1619 Project with four other professors from different universities. In response, through a public letter, New York Times MagazineEditor-in
SCHMIDT '21: PROFESSORS SHOULD STOP SCHEDULING EXAMS AT NIGHT Nothing is worse than a night exam. Many classes, especially large lectures in STEM fields, schedule exams late in the evening. At their worst, these exams can span from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. AFTER LEAVING THE NEST, UNDERGRADS HIRE ‘MOTHER GOOSE’ The company’s name is a play on the fairytale character of Mother Goose, Kepple said. The two worked for months “getting to know the area and the best services, like restaurants,” and created the Campus Goose network, Kepple said. POLL: FIFTH OF STUDENTS DON’T MASTURBATE While sex and masturbation are popular topics of discussion on campus, a recent Herald poll revealed that about a fifth of students never masturbate. In the poll, about 26 percent of students reported masturbating once or twice a week, 17 percent three to five times a MORE THAN THREE-QUARTERS OF STUDENTS ON CAMPUS HAVE 1 day ago · The percentage of documented COVID-19 vaccinations increased to 76.8 percent and 69.3 percent, respectively, for students and employees on campus during the week of May 27 to June 2, according to the Healthy Brown COVID-19 Testing Update. THE FUTURE OF ONLINE LEARNING AT BROWN 21 hours ago · Since March 2020, the student experience at the University has been largely relegated to Zoom meetings and recorded lectures. But the novel prevalence of online technology in the University curriculum has provided a chance for the University to examine how it educates and challenges faculty and students alike. HODGES ’22: IN SUPPORT OF A TAX ON SUGARY DRINKS 21 hours ago · The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply harmed Rhode Island’s economy and a quarter of households are now experiencing hunger. Even as businesses start to reopen, an unprecedented number of Rhode Islanders still rely on food banks to feed themselves and their families, and food bank usage grew by 26 percent in the past year. Despite these dire circumstances, Rhode Island’s legislature now 'CRUELLA,' THE DISNEY VILLAINESS WITH A FASHIONABLE BACKSTORY 23 hours ago · Directed by Craig Gillespie (“I, Tonya”), “Cruella” is a dazzling crime-comedy, villain origin story with a vampy flair distinct from the standard Disney live-action feature. Despite an untrimmed run time of 2 hours and 14 minutes, its plot contrivances and questionable character motives are hurried swiftly along from one visually MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION PROPOSAL RACES AGAINST STATEHOUSE CLOCK 21 hours ago · Three weeks remain in Rhode Island’s legislative session — and the clock is ticking on Democratic Rep. Scott Slater’s recreational marijuana proposal. Slater introduced the bill, which aims to legalize the use of recreational marijuana in the Ocean State, at the end of last month. ‘LARGE CONCRETISED MONUMENT TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY British contemporary artist Rebecca Warren’s 2007 sculpture ‘Large Concretised Monument to the Twentieth Century’ is the newest addition to the University’s public art collection. The 6-foot-tall bronze sculpture was installed May 14 across from Friedman Hall on the Main Green and will be on MEN’S CREW TAKES FIFTH IN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS, WOMEN'S The men’s and women’s crew teams raced on opposite ends of the East Coast in their respective Division 1 National Championships this weekend. The men’s team placed fifth overall at the 2021 International Rowing Association National Championships in West Windsor, New Jersey.CLAIRE HODGES
The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply harmed Rhode Island’s economy and a quarter of households are now experiencing hunger. Even as businesses start to reopen, an unprecedented number of Rhode Islanders still rely on food banks to feed themselves and “CYCLOPEDIA EXOTICA” LOOKS AT MICROAGGRESSIONS From the one-eyed point of view of the Cyclops, Aminder Dhaliwal’s graphic novel “Cyclopedia Exotica” examines topics ranging from relationships and community building to microaggressions and casual bigotry, all planted in a world where Cyclopes and human “Two-Eyes” live among one another. THE CULTURAL PHENOMENON THAT IS SALLY ROONEY But that’s not the only reason Rooney has become a cultural phenomenon: Just as digital technology seamlessly becomes a part of her narrative, the social and political atmosphere of the times are absorbed into it just as naturally. The 2008 financial crash of Ireland forms the backdrop of both her novels; “Normal People”explicitly
THE BROWN DAILY HERALDSUBMISSIONSADVERTISEEDITORS' NOTEFENCINGMEN'S LACROSSELIVIA GIMENES By Caelyn Pender February 25, 2021. This article is part of the series Celebrating Black history at Brown. On a Saturday night in February 1923, the brothers of the Alpha Gamma chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha held an initiation ceremony to welcome three new members to their ranks. With the addition of two active members and an honorary member — a MASK MANDATE IN RHODE ISLAND LIFTED FOLLOWING CDC GUIDANCE Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee lifted the statewide mask mandate May 18 following the release of new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stating that fully vaccinated individuals no longer have to wear a mask in most settings. ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. PROF. ANANI DZIDZIENYO, BELOVED AND BRILLIANT, DIES AT 79ANANI LLCANANI MEANINGANANI NAMEANANI NAME MEANINGANANI TRUCKING Professor Anani Dzidzienyo, renowned scholar, mentor and educator, died on Oct. 25. Dzidzienyo was 79 years old. Following over four decades of teaching at the University, the Ghanaian academic has left behind a legacy of internationally respected scholarship and a deep memory of his capacity for connection. GRADUATING SENIORS TO CELEBRATE COMMENCEMENT IN-PERSON Virtual Degree Conferral Ceremony slated for May 24, in-person ceremony to follow one year later in May 2021. Families and guests will tune into the class of 2021's Commencement ceremony virtually, Paxson announced in a Thursday email. On Sept. 6, 2016, members of the class of 2020 walked through the Van Wickle gates to cheers fromfaculty
RISD PRESIDENT ROSANNE SOMERSON TO RETIREROSANNE SOMERSON RISDROSANNE SOMERSON FURNITURERISD CHALLENGERISD HRRISD HUMAN RESOURCES Rhode Island School of Design President Rosanne Somerson will retire at the end of the academic year after serving five years in office, the school’s Board of Trustees announced in an email to the RISD community Dec. 22. “For over three decades, President Somerson hasbeen an
UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR ASKS NYT TO CORRECT 1619 PROJECTWHAT IS 1619 PROJECT1619 PROJECT ARTICLES Wednesday, January 29, 2020. Talia Mermin / Herald. Professor Emeritus of History Gordon Wood P’86 co-wrote a letter to the editor requesting a correction to the New York Times Magazine’s acclaimed 1619 Project with four other professors from different universities. In response, through a public letter, New York Times MagazineEditor-in
SCHMIDT '21: PROFESSORS SHOULD STOP SCHEDULING EXAMS AT NIGHT Nothing is worse than a night exam. Many classes, especially large lectures in STEM fields, schedule exams late in the evening. At their worst, these exams can span from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. AFTER LEAVING THE NEST, UNDERGRADS HIRE ‘MOTHER GOOSE’ The company’s name is a play on the fairytale character of Mother Goose, Kepple said. The two worked for months “getting to know the area and the best services, like restaurants,” and created the Campus Goose network, Kepple said. POLL: FIFTH OF STUDENTS DON’T MASTURBATE While sex and masturbation are popular topics of discussion on campus, a recent Herald poll revealed that about a fifth of students never masturbate. In the poll, about 26 percent of students reported masturbating once or twice a week, 17 percent three to five times a THE BROWN DAILY HERALDSUBMISSIONSADVERTISEEDITORS' NOTEFENCINGMEN'S LACROSSELIVIA GIMENES By Caelyn Pender February 25, 2021. This article is part of the series Celebrating Black history at Brown. On a Saturday night in February 1923, the brothers of the Alpha Gamma chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha held an initiation ceremony to welcome three new members to their ranks. With the addition of two active members and an honorary member — a MASK MANDATE IN RHODE ISLAND LIFTED FOLLOWING CDC GUIDANCE Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee lifted the statewide mask mandate May 18 following the release of new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stating that fully vaccinated individuals no longer have to wear a mask in most settings. ARCHIVES - BROWN DAILY HERALD Digital archives (Intermittent years, 1891 – 2011) Thanks to the efforts of The Brown Daily Herald’s digitization project, several older parts of the Herald archives are now available online. If you would like to browse these archives, click here. PROF. ANANI DZIDZIENYO, BELOVED AND BRILLIANT, DIES AT 79ANANI LLCANANI MEANINGANANI NAMEANANI NAME MEANINGANANI TRUCKING Professor Anani Dzidzienyo, renowned scholar, mentor and educator, died on Oct. 25. Dzidzienyo was 79 years old. Following over four decades of teaching at the University, the Ghanaian academic has left behind a legacy of internationally respected scholarship and a deep memory of his capacity for connection. GRADUATING SENIORS TO CELEBRATE COMMENCEMENT IN-PERSON Virtual Degree Conferral Ceremony slated for May 24, in-person ceremony to follow one year later in May 2021. Families and guests will tune into the class of 2021's Commencement ceremony virtually, Paxson announced in a Thursday email. On Sept. 6, 2016, members of the class of 2020 walked through the Van Wickle gates to cheers fromfaculty
RISD PRESIDENT ROSANNE SOMERSON TO RETIREROSANNE SOMERSON RISDROSANNE SOMERSON FURNITURERISD CHALLENGERISD HRRISD HUMAN RESOURCES Rhode Island School of Design President Rosanne Somerson will retire at the end of the academic year after serving five years in office, the school’s Board of Trustees announced in an email to the RISD community Dec. 22. “For over three decades, President Somerson hasbeen an
UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR ASKS NYT TO CORRECT 1619 PROJECTWHAT IS 1619 PROJECT1619 PROJECT ARTICLES Wednesday, January 29, 2020. Talia Mermin / Herald. Professor Emeritus of History Gordon Wood P’86 co-wrote a letter to the editor requesting a correction to the New York Times Magazine’s acclaimed 1619 Project with four other professors from different universities. In response, through a public letter, New York Times MagazineEditor-in
SCHMIDT '21: PROFESSORS SHOULD STOP SCHEDULING EXAMS AT NIGHT Nothing is worse than a night exam. Many classes, especially large lectures in STEM fields, schedule exams late in the evening. At their worst, these exams can span from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. AFTER LEAVING THE NEST, UNDERGRADS HIRE ‘MOTHER GOOSE’ The company’s name is a play on the fairytale character of Mother Goose, Kepple said. The two worked for months “getting to know the area and the best services, like restaurants,” and created the Campus Goose network, Kepple said. POLL: FIFTH OF STUDENTS DON’T MASTURBATE While sex and masturbation are popular topics of discussion on campus, a recent Herald poll revealed that about a fifth of students never masturbate. In the poll, about 26 percent of students reported masturbating once or twice a week, 17 percent three to five times a MORE THAN THREE-QUARTERS OF STUDENTS ON CAMPUS HAVE 1 day ago · The percentage of documented COVID-19 vaccinations increased to 76.8 percent and 69.3 percent, respectively, for students and employees on campus during the week of May 27 to June 2, according to the Healthy Brown COVID-19 Testing Update. THE FUTURE OF ONLINE LEARNING AT BROWN 8 hours ago · Since March 2020, the student experience at the University has been largely relegated to Zoom meetings and recorded lectures. But the novel prevalence of online technology in the University curriculum has provided a chance for the University to examine how it educates and challenges faculty and students alike. HODGES ’22: IN SUPPORT OF A TAX ON SUGARY DRINKS 8 hours ago · The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply harmed Rhode Island’s economy and a quarter of households are now experiencing hunger. Even as businesses start to reopen, an unprecedented number of Rhode Islanders still rely on food banks to feed themselves and their families, and food bank usage grew by 26 percent in the past year. Despite these dire circumstances, Rhode Island’s legislature now 'CRUELLA,' THE DISNEY VILLAINESS WITH A FASHIONABLE BACKSTORY 10 hours ago · Directed by Craig Gillespie (“I, Tonya”), “Cruella” is a dazzling crime-comedy, villain origin story with a vampy flair distinct from the standard Disney live-action feature. Despite an untrimmed run time of 2 hours and 14 minutes, its plot contrivances and questionable character motives are hurried swiftly along from one visually MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION PROPOSAL RACES AGAINST STATEHOUSE CLOCK 8 hours ago · Three weeks remain in Rhode Island’s legislative session — and the clock is ticking on Democratic Rep. Scott Slater’s recreational marijuana proposal. Slater introduced the bill, which aims to legalize the use of recreational marijuana in the Ocean State, at the end of last month. ‘LARGE CONCRETISED MONUMENT TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY British contemporary artist Rebecca Warren’s 2007 sculpture ‘Large Concretised Monument to the Twentieth Century’ is the newest addition to the University’s public art collection. The 6-foot-tall bronze sculpture was installed May 14 across from Friedman Hall on the Main Green and will be on MEN’S CREW TAKES FIFTH IN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS, WOMEN'S The men’s and women’s crew teams raced on opposite ends of the East Coast in their respective Division 1 National Championships this weekend. The men’s team placed fifth overall at the 2021 International Rowing Association National Championships in West Windsor, New Jersey.CLAIRE HODGES
The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply harmed Rhode Island’s economy and a quarter of households are now experiencing hunger. Even as businesses start to reopen, an unprecedented number of Rhode Islanders still rely on food banks to feed themselves and “CYCLOPEDIA EXOTICA” LOOKS AT MICROAGGRESSIONS From the one-eyed point of view of the Cyclops, Aminder Dhaliwal’s graphic novel “Cyclopedia Exotica” examines topics ranging from relationships and community building to microaggressions and casual bigotry, all planted in a world where Cyclopes and human “Two-Eyes” live among one another. THE CULTURAL PHENOMENON THAT IS SALLY ROONEY But that’s not the only reason Rooney has become a cultural phenomenon: Just as digital technology seamlessly becomes a part of her narrative, the social and political atmosphere of the times are absorbed into it just as naturally. The 2008 financial crash of Ireland forms the backdrop of both her novels; “Normal People”explicitly
SUPPORT INDEPENDENT STUDENT JOURNALISM Donations are integral to the continued success of The Brown Daily Herald. If you are able, please take one minute to make a tax-deductible contribution to support our student journalists and independent news. Thank you! SUPPORT INDEPENDENT STUDENT JOURNALISM Donations are integral to the continued success of The Brown Daily Herald. If you are able, please take one minute to make a tax-deductible contribution to support our student journalists and independent news. Thank you! Donate __ __ Donate __ Fill out my LGL form!* About »
* Staff List
* Join
* Comments Policy
* Web Policy
* Read the Print Edition* Find a Paper
* Contact »
* Tips
* Questions
* Reprint and Permissions Requests* Submissions
* Advertise
* Donate
* Subscribe »
* Print Subscriptions* Newsletter
* News »
* University News
* Metro
* COVID-19
* Sports »
* Fall »
* Crew
* Cross Country
* Field Hockey
* Football
* Golf
* Men’s Soccer
* Women’s Soccer
* Men’s Tennis
* Women’s Tennis
* Volleyball
* Men’s Water Polo* Winter »
* Men’s Basketball * Women’s Basketball* Fencing
* Gymnastics
* Men’s Ice Hockey * Women’s Ice Hockey* Squash
* Swimming & Diving
* Men’s Tennis
* Women’s Tennis
* Track & Field
* Wrestling
* Spring »
* Baseball
* Men’s Lacrosse
* Women’s Lacrosse* Softball
* Men’s Tennis
* Women’s Tennis
* Track & Field
* Columns
* Athlete of the Week* Athletics News
* Arts & Culture
* Science
* Opinion »
* Columns
* Op-eds
* Editorials
* Letters to the Editor* Post- Magazine
* Donate
Sections
* News
* COVID-19
* Sports
* Arts & Culture
* Science
* Opinion
* Post- Magazine
* Donate
BROWN RELEASES FOURTH ANNUAL DIAP PROGRESS REPORTBy Samantha Molina
May 26, 2020
The Office of Institutional Equity and Diversity released its fourth annual progress report for “Pathways to Diversity and Inclusion: An Action Plan for Brown University” May 19. COMMENCEMENT 2020: A SHARED CEREMONY, LIVED THROUGH A SCREEN By Clara Gutman ArgemíMay 25, 2020
Scattered across three continents, Jonathan He ’20 and his friend group tuned in to watch Sunday’s online Commencement ceremony together. They were expecting the event, which began at 1 p.m. EST, to last hours. It ran for just over 20 minutes. AS COVID-19 HIGHLIGHTS SOCIETAL FAULT LINES, STUDENT ACTIVISTS PRESSON
By Kayla Guo May
25, 2020
This article is part of the series Commencement Magazine 2020 As an organizer for Sunrise Providence, Emma Bouton ’20 planned to participate in a mass strike on Earth Day to protest the lack of political action taken to combat climate change. BROWN’S FINANCIAL DEFICIT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2021 COULD RANGE FROM $100 MILLION TO $200 MILLIONBy Livia Gimenes
May 23, 2020
The deficit for Fiscal Year 2021 will be “significantly larger” than previous years and could range from $100 million to $200 million, President Christina Paxson P’19 announced at Wednesday’s facultymeeting.
BROWN STUDENTS LEAD FOOD REDISTRIBUTION EFFORTS AMIDST PANDEMICBy Jack Walker
May 23, 2020
In recent months, Brown students have been leading a nationwide food redistribution effort to help farms whose usual supply chains havebeen disrupted.
OPINIONS »
AJ DAVIS: FINDING MEANING IN THE SMALL MOMENTS May 26, 2020 | 1 comment * Eduard Muñoz-Suñé: How the pandemic expanded my perception of success after college May 25, 2020 | 0 comments * Derek Simshauser: Where will we be when things ‘get back tonormal’?
May 25, 2020 | 0 comments * Jonathan Douglas: How (not) to think like a computer May 25, 2020 | 0 comments * Wrenn MS’18 PhD’21: Fact-Checking the UCS Executive Board’s Herald Letter: A Historical Perspective May 24, 2020 | 0 comments * Dhruv Singh: Finding your people May 24, 2020 | 0 commentsUNIVERSITY NEWS »
BROWN RELEASES FOURTH ANNUAL DIAP PROGRESS REPORT May 26, 2020 | 0 comments * Commencement 2020: a shared ceremony, lived through a screen May 25, 2020 | 0 comments * As COVID-19 highlights societal fault lines, student activistspress on
May 25, 2020 | 1 comment * Brown’s financial deficit for Fiscal Year 2021 could range from $100 million to $200 million May 23, 2020 | 1 comment * No spring break, shorter terms: Brown outlines potential threesemester plan
May 23, 2020 | 2 comments * Tagged for the Americas, Australia, countries in between, students’ study abroad travel bags must stay home another semester May 15, 2020 | 1 commentARTS & CULTURE »
‘I HAD A CHANCE ON SOMETHING RANDOM’: BENJAMIN MOSER’S JOURNEY FROM BROWN TO PULITZER PRIZE May 19, 2020 | 0 comments * The ghosts of Spring Weekends past April 23, 2020 | 0 comments * ‘Swallow’ stands out with a chilling portrayal of domesticisolation
April 23, 2020 | 0 comments * ‘Unorthodox’: a young woman’s journey to finding freedom April 22, 2020 | 0 comments * Ivy Film Festival to screen Official Selection, speaker seriesvirtually
April 17, 2020 | 0 comments * ‘Tiger King’ music supervisor Randall Poster ’84 P’23 discusses the documentary series’ rise April 10, 2020 | 0 commentsMETRO »
BROWN STUDENTS LEAD FOOD REDISTRIBUTION EFFORTS AMIDST PANDEMIC May 23, 2020 | 0 comments * R.I. Department of Health data shows people of color are overrepresented in positive test cases for COVID-19 May 1, 2020 | 3 comments * First-year creates online platform to facilitate undergraduate community work during COVID-19 crisis April 30, 2020 | 1 comment * ‘While I am sleeping they’re awake, and now, when I wake up, they’re asleep’: For international students at home, remote semester presents unique challenges April 24, 2020 | 0 comments * Wyatt Detention Facility reports first COVID-19 case among detainees, facility in lockdown April 22, 2020 | 0 comments * Amid fears of COVID-19 sweeping through correctional facilities, a rallying cry: ‘Free Them All’ April 20, 2020 | 0 comments SCIENCE & RESEARCH » BROWN RESEARCHERS IDENTIFY MALARIA VACCINE CANDIDATE April 30, 2020 | 0 comments * Tweets, Testimonies, Reports: Brown researchers deconstruct climate change discourse in social media, Rhode Island April 25, 2020 | 0 comments * Brown assistant professor co-leads ongoing investigation on link between hair-loss causing hormones, COVID-19 April 23, 2020 | 0 comments * Energy, Media, Action: Brown researchers investigate climate changecountermovement
April 23, 2020 | 0 comments * Brown medical students given option to graduate early due toCOVID-19
April 21, 2020 | 0 comments * Fifty years of Earth Days, environmental movements on campus April 21, 2020 | 1 commentSPORTS »
FORMER FOOTBALL STANDOUT JAMES DEVELIN ’10 ANNOUNCES NFL RETIREMENT May 11, 2020 | 0 comments * Former gymnastics coach Jackie Court passes away at 81 April 23, 2020 | 0 comments * Brown alums with Olympics aspirations shift sights to 2021 April 21, 2020 | 0 comments * Women’s basketball hires Head Coach Monique LeBlanc April 13, 2020 | 2 comments * Zach Hunsaker ’20 wraps up college basketball career April 7, 2020 | 0 comments * Erin McCrudden hired as assistant field hockey coach April 6, 2020 | 0 commentsCOVID-19 UPDATES
*
*
*
*
*
BROWN’S FINANCIAL DEFICIT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2021 COULD RANGE FROM $100 MILLION TO $200 MILLION The deficit for Fiscal Year 2021 will be “significantly larger”than previous...
*
BROWN STUDENTS LEAD FOOD REDISTRIBUTION EFFORTS AMIDST PANDEMIC In recent months, Brown students have been leading a nationwide foodredistribution...
*
NO SPRING BREAK, SHORTER TERMS: BROWN OUTLINES POTENTIAL THREESEMESTER PLAN
Updated 3:16 p.m. May 23, 2020 At a special faculty meeting Wednesday,Provost Richard...
*
TAGGED FOR THE AMERICAS, AUSTRALIA, COUNTRIES IN BETWEEN, STUDENTS’ STUDY ABROAD TRAVEL BAGS MUST STAY HOME ANOTHER SEMESTER As the impact of COVID-19 continues into the summer, the Universityhas canceled...
DAILY NEWSLETTER (HEADLINES)* woods and waves
* how to socialize in the age of social distancing * muffin march madness * nerve-ous breakdown * from the mess to the massesLATEST ISSUE
SECTIONS
* News
* Sports
* Arts & Culture
* Opinions
ONLINE
* Multimedia
* Photo Galleries
* Videos
* Data Science
* Graphics
* Illustrations
* Comics
* Post- Magazine
* Archives
INFORMATION
* About
* Join
* Contact
* Advertise
* Donate
* Alumni
* Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2020 Brown Daily Herald. All Rights Reserved.Designed by
Details
Copyright © 2024 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0