Family Weekend Welcome to October 18-20, 2019

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Family Weekend Welcome to October 18-20, 2019 WELCOME TO FAMILY WEEKEND OCTOBER 18-20, 2019 EVENT GUIDE WELCOME TO FAMILY WEEKEND We are delighted you are here for this very special occasion! Family Weekend is an important event in our community — a time when students share their lives on campus with their families. We hope your visit provides you a glimpse of the intellectual and cultural vitality of your student’s home away from home. Get a taste of learning at Brown by attending an Academic Forum with one of our celebrated faculty members. No papers to write, no exams to take – just pure immersion in fascinating topics like sustainability, research and Brown’s Open Curriculum. Watch a special screening of the Oscar-winning documentary “Period. End of Sentence.” followed by a panel discussion with one of the film’s executive producers, Charlotte Silverman ’22, and current Brown students working on solving big global problems. And if you would like to learn more about how Brown’s Open Curriculum has supported the intellectual and personal development of individual students, encouraged students’ active participation, and forged learning communities across disciplines for the last 50 years, join us for “Educating your Student at Brown: Life and Learning Inside and Outside the Classroom.” At the Weekend Keynote Address, hear firsthand from President Christina Paxson P’19 and Undergraduate Council of Students President William Zhou ’20 about the innovative ways we are making a Brown education the signature experience of a lifetime — and preparing students for “lives of usefulness and reputation” as engaged citizens of the global community. Following President Paxson’s remarks, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi ’91, P’22 will deliver the keynote address. To entertain and engage you, there are home athletic contests in field hockey, football and women’s volleyball; jazz and wind symphony concerts; a cappella sings under campus arches; dance performances; and so much more listed throughout the schedule. Whether you attend a sporting event, a concert or a theatrical performance, you will begin to see the full range of our community’s talent and commitment. Thank you so much for taking part in Family Weekend 2019. We look forward to seeing you around campus. Enjoy! Rashid Zia Eric Estes Dean of the College Vice President for Campus Life Say cheese! Please note that all or portions of Brown University events and their participants may be captured by photography or video and used for news or Brown promotional purposes. Mark Your Calendars Now! Family Weekend 2020 is October Ăă-ĂĆ BOOKSTORE The Brown Bookstore on the corner of Thayer and Angell streets is open: Friday, October 18: 7:30 a.m. – 8 p.m. Saturday, October 19: 9 a.m. – 8 p.m. Sunday, October 20: 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Driving Directions Warren Alpert Medical School Take Hope Street south, then turn right onto Wickenden Street. Follow Wickenden Street across the Point Street Bridge. Cross Eddy Street and then make your first right onto Richmond Street. The medical school building will be on your right. Brown Stadium Take Hope Street north, then turn right onto Lloyd Avenue. Turn left onto Elmgrove Avenue and continue for approximately one-half mile. The stadium will be on your left. Shuttle Service to Warren Alpert Medical School Shuttle service will be provided to and from the Van Wickle Gates and the Warren Alpert Medical School (222 Richmond St.) on Friday, October 18, between 11:45 a.m. and 6 p.m., and on Saturday, October 19, from 9:30 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. Shuttle Service to the Ceremony of Commitment to Medicine Round-trip shuttle transportation will be available between the First Unitarian Church and the Warren Alpert Medical School from 3–4 p.m. and will resume after the ceremony until 7:30 p.m. Shuttle Service to Brown Stadium The shuttle to the football game will take fans to and from Brown Stadium and Brown’s campus and is free for all fans. The buses will be available at Faunce Arch or 277 Lloyd Ave. (outside the Stevenson- Pincince Field Parking Lot) approximately every 10 minutes, beginning two hours before kickoff. Return trips will be available for one hour after the game. Drop-off and pickup at Brown Stadium will be located on Sessions Avenue. Office of University Communications | 12822DOC145600 Events on Friday, October 18 .................2 Events on Saturday, October 19 ...............11 Events on Sunday, October 20 ...............28 Ongoing Exhibits .......................... 30 Campus Map ................Back cover foldout Campus Information ................Back cover Share your photos, videos and messages with #BrownFamilyWeekend This Family Weekend, Brown will offer programming related to the history and impact of Brown’s Open Curriculum so that families can join students, alumni, faculty and staff during our yearlong, community-wide celebration and exploration of the University’s innovative approach to teaching and learning. Learn more about Brown’s Open Curriculum by visiting brown.edu/oc50 $ Look for the dollar symbol throughout the brochure to signify a paid, ticketed event. ৠ Look for the caduceus symbol throughout the brochure to signify a medical school event. FRIDAY OCTOBER 18 10 – 11:45 a.m. Tours of the Annmary Brown Memorial The Annmary Brown Memorial, designed by Rhode Island architect Norman Isham, was built between 1903 and 1907 as a library, art gallery and mausoleum. Its monumental bronze doors feature allegorical representations of Art and Learning, signaling to visitors that the memorial offers many treasures to explore in addition to the crypt that holds the remains of Annmary Brown and her husband, General Hawkins. Annmary Brown Memorial, 21 Brown St. Noon – 1 p.m. Family Weekend Sustainability Tour Join Brown’s Office of Sustainability to learn about sustainability initiatives at Brown, including our commitment to reducing Brown’s greenhouse gas and energy footprint, compost and recycling, green building practices, local food and alternative living options. Current students will share their experiences with sustainability at Brown and talk about ways students can get involved inside and outside the classroom. The tour lasts approximately one hour. Tour departs from the first floor main desk at the Stephen Robert ’62 Campus Center. Noon – 1 p.m. From the Pussyhat Project to the Welcome Blanket: How Jayna Zweiman ’01 Uses an Interdisciplinary Approach to Activism and Entrepreneurship How can we leverage the power of art to create design interventions for social change? How can art help us reimagine our spaces and systems? Join the Nelson Center for Entrepreneurship for our Founder Friday’s speaker series with Jayna Zweiman ’01, co-founder of the Pussyhat Project and the Welcome Blanket, for an interview with Danny Warshay ’87, P’20, P’23, executive director of the Nelson Center. In their discussion, Zweiman will discuss how she started two design interventions, how the power of storytelling enables change and how crafts can intersect with politics. Nelson Center for Entrepreneurship, 2nd floor, 1 Euclid Ave. 2 FRIDAY OCTOBER 18 Noon – 2 p.m. The Sarah Doyle Center Open House The Sarah Doyle Center for Women and Gender seeks to engage the campus community in conversations and programs around gender, especially as it intersects with other markers of identity. Visit the center and learn about its many resources and programs. Currently on exhibition in the gallery is “Exposing Unseen Boundaries: Works by Consuelo Jimenez Underwood.” The Sarah Doyle Center for Women and Gender, 26 Benevolent St. (opposite Keeney Quadrangle) Noon – 6 p.m. Family Weekend Welcome Center Stop by the Family Weekend Welcome Center to pick up your Family Weekend materials, which will include a comprehensive schedule of events with locations and descriptions of all planned activities. University Event & Conference Services staff will be available to answer your questions regarding the weekend’s activities. Stephen Robert ’62 Campus Center, Leung Gallery, 75 Waterman St. 1 – 2:30 p.m. Student-guided Medical School Toursৠ Take a stroll around the medical school building and see where medical students spend their days–and nights! Warren Alpert Medical School, The Herbert M. Kaplan Atrium, 222 Richmond St. 1 – 4 p.m. Swearer Center Community Open House The Swearer Center engages students, faculty and community partners in collaborative work in and beyond Providence. All are invited to attend a fall-themed Open House at the Swearer Center’s new home at 2 Stimson Ave. Enjoy local seasonal treats, meet the staff and explore the center’s new collaborative space! Swearer Center, 2 Stimson Ave. 1 – 5:30 p.m. Medical School Registrationৠ Stop by to pick up a schedule of events, a snack and some medical school swag! Warren Alpert Medical School, The Herbert M. Kaplan Atrium, 222 Richmond St. 3 FRIDAY OCTOBER 18 1:15 – 2 p.m. Muslim Friday Prayers (Salat al-Jumu’ah) Brown Muslim Student Center Champlin Hall, Room 018, basement level, 208 Meeting St. 2 –3 p.m. Map It Out – Providence: Gallery Talk by Marisa Brown, Assistant Director for Program at the Center for Public Humanities “Map It Out – Providence”is an exhibition of hand-drawn maps created by Providence and Rhode Island community members in collaboration with the Toronto-based artists Gwen MacGregor and Sandra Rechico. The maps reveal our community’s memories and propose new ways of understanding the geography of our city and state. Attendees are welcome to add their own maps to the exhibition. Nightingale-Brown House, 357 Benefit St. (entrance off Williams Street) 2 – 4 p.m. Open House with the Office of International Programs (OIP) Stop by the OIP to meet the staff and discover the numerous overseas opportunities for studying abroad through Brown. Light refreshments will be served. Page-Robinson Hall, Suite 420, 69 Brown St.
Recommended publications
  • Personal Calendar, 1995-2007
    i Personal Calendar, 1995-2007 by Professor Darrell M. West Dept. of Political Science Brown University Providence, Rhode Island and Vice President of Governance Studies Brookings Institution Washington, DC 2016 ii Table of Contents Preface 1995 ............................................................................................. 4 1996 ............................................................................................ 31 1997 ........................................................................................... 58 1998 ........................................................................................... 83 1999 .......................................................................................... 110 2000 .......................................................................................... 138 2001 .......................................................................................... 160 2002 ........................................................................................ 186 2003 ........................................................................................ 214 2004 ........................................................................................ 238 2005 ........................................................................................ 259 2006 ........................................................................................ 279 2007 ........................................................................................ 300 Index ........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Brown Alumni Monthly 9 )
    "Living at Laurelmead on Blackstone Boulevard " is Like Living Back on Campus... Only Better Introducing the new Brown campus connection, Laurelmead on Blackstone Boulevard. Located only minutes from Brown, Laurelmead is a distinguished residential community for independent adults. Owners enjoy an engaging lifestyle with the assurance of 24-hour security and home and grounds maintenance services. The Laurelmead campus includes beautiful common areas, resident gardens, and walking trails along the Seekonk River. Find out why so many Brown and Pembroke alumni, retired faculty, and fellow colleagues have chosen to make Laurelmead their new home. Dining at Laurelmead: From elegant dining to cafe or pub dining... this is the meal plan we dreamed of as students. The Fitness Center: Yoga, aquatics, weights, are considered an elective. The Odeon at Laurelmead: Where a variety of lectures and perforinances are attended. Come visit Laurelmead during your LAURELMEAD^^ Distinguished Adult Cooperative Living next visit to Providence, or call for 355 Blackstone Boulevard more information at (800) 286-9550. Providence, Rhode Island 02906 (401) 273-9550 • (800) 286-9550 NAN BOUCHARD TRACY '46 ^SiWli>i«ii«.t«Ml6; PRODUCED BY THE ALUMNI RELATIONS OFFICE Inscribe your name on College Hill. I he Brown Alumni Association invites JL. you to celebrate your lifelong connection to Brown by purchasing a brick in the Alumni Walkway. Add your name - or the name of any alumnus or alumna you wish to honor or remem- ber - to the beautifully designed centerpiece of BROIfiN the upcoming Maddock /\ | ^ [^ l\V±y 1 Alumni Center garden ASSOCIATION restoration project. Celehratintj Our THE PROPOSED ALUMNI WALKWAY Connections to Brown MADDOCK ALUMNI CENTER, BROWN UNIVERSITY Join the hundreds of alumni who have already purchased their bricks! ORDERED BY NAME .
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring Curriculum Leadership Capacity-Building Through Biographical Narrative: a Currere Case Study
    EXPLORING CURRICULUM LEADERSHIP CAPACITY-BUILDING THROUGH BIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVE: A CURRERE CASE STUDY A dissertation submitted to the Kent State University College of Education, Health and Human Services in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy By Karl W. Martin August 2018 © Copyright, 2018 by Karl W. Martin All Rights Reserved ii MARTIN, KARL W., Ph.D., August 2018 Education, Health and Human Services EXPLORING CURRICULUM LEADERSHIP CAPACITY-BUILDING THROUGH BIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVE: A CURRERE CASE STUDY (473 pp.) My dissertation joins a vibrant conversation with James G. Henderson and colleagues, curriculum workers involved with leadership envisioned and embodied in his Collegial Curriculum Leadership Process (CCLP). Their work, “embedded in dynamic, open-ended folding, is a recursive, multiphased process supporting educators with a particular vocational calling” (Henderson, 2017). The four key Deleuzian “folds” of the process explore “awakening” to become lead professionals for democratic ways of living, cultivating repertoires for a diversified, holistic pedagogy, engaging in critical self- examinations and critically appraising their professional artistry. In “reactivating” the lived experiences, scholarship, writing and vocational calling of a brilliant Greek and Latin scholar named Marya Barlowski, meanings will be constructed as engendered through biographical narrative and currere case study. Grounded in the curriculum leadership “map,” she represents an allegorical presence in the narrative. Allegory has always been connected to awakening, and awakening is a precursor for capacity-building. The research design (the precise way in which to study this ‘problem’) will be a combination of historical narrative and currere. This collecting and constructing of Her story speaks to how the vision of leadership isn’t completely new – threads of it are tied to the past.
    [Show full text]
  • CURRICULUM VITAE JORDAN WHITE, MD, MPH Business Or
    CURRICULUM VITAE JORDAN WHITE, MD, MPH Business or Mailing address: The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University 222 Richmond Street Providence, RI 02903 Business Telephone: (401) 863-7798 Home Telephone: (401) 451-0372 Email address: [email protected] EDUCATION Undergraduate University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill BS (Psychology) 1994-1998 Phi Beta Kappa 1998 ​ Medical School University of Maryland School of Medicine MD 2002-2006 Alpha Omega Alpha 2006 ​ ​ University of Maryland Humanism Honor Society 2006 Edward J. Kowalewsi Award for Excellence in Family Medicine 2006 Joanne Hatem, M.D. Memorial Prize for combining humanism and patient care 2006 Other Advanced Degrees University of Massachusetts Amherst School of Public Health MPH 2009-2011 POSTGRADUATE TRAINING Residencies Family Medicine Brown Alpert Medical School/Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island (MHRI) 2006-2009 Recruiting Chief Resident 2007-2008 Brown Intern Orientation Coordinating Resident 2007-2009 Maternal-Child Health Chief Resident 2008-2009 Preventive Medicine University of Massachusetts Worcester (UMass) 2009-2011 Chief Resident 2010-2011 Other Training Centering Pregnancy® Facilitation Training 2009 Teaching of Tomorrow Participant Track I 2010-2011 Medical Student Educators Development Institute 2014-2015 Mental Health First Aid 2017 Jordan C. White, MD, MPH 2 6/14/2017 POSTGRADUATE HONORS AND AWARDS Kenney Research Day Resident Poster Award 2009 Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island First Place Poster for Community Project 2009 American Academy
    [Show full text]
  • Amelia Beatrice Warshaw · AAMC ID: 14116682 · [email protected] · 917-796-2903 · · 79 Williams Street · Providence, RI 02906 · Website: Amelia.Media
    Amelia Beatrice Warshaw · AAMC ID: 14116682 · [email protected] · 917-796-2903 · · 79 Williams Street · Providence, RI 02906 · website: amelia.media/ EDUCATION Warren Alpert Medical School (AMS) of Brown University, Providence, RI Expected May 2021 ​ Princeton University, Princeton, NJ June 2016 ​ - Psychology, BA, cum laude; Pre-med; GPA: 3.71 - Thesis: Using Pediatric Growth Curves in Secondary Prevention of Eating Disorders: Closing the Diagnostic Gap between Onset of Growth Stunting or BMI Suppression and Clinical Presentation (presented at Pediatrics Academic Societies Meeting May 2017) - University Activities: Innovation: Princeton Journal of Science and Technology (Editorial Board), Intercollegiate Journal of Science (Editor), Daily Princetonian (Writer), Princeton University Art Museum Family & Community Programming (Volunteer), Banot Women’s Organization (Board Member), Princeton Club Field Hockey (Captain) MEMBERSHIP IN HONORARY/PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES American Academy of Pediatrics American Medical Association Rhode Island Medical Society Sigma Xi Honor Society CERTIFICATION/LICENSURE BLS Certified 08/05/2017 HIPAA Certified 08/07/2017 Universal Precautions Certified 08/08/2017 WORK EXPERIENCE Alpert Medical School CPR Leadership, Providence, RI June 2020 - present ​ ​ 2020-2021 CPR Leadership Board Member Chat, Process, Reflect (CPR) is a monthly 2-hour educational session designed to facilitate critical conversations amongst 3rd year medical students related to experiences unique to the practice of clinical medicine.
    [Show full text]
  • Download This
    NP8 Form 10-800 OMB No. 1024-0018 (Rtv.»-M) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form 1. Name of Property historic name: Ladd Observatory other name/site number: 2. Location street & number: 210 Dovle Avenue (corner of Hope Street)_________________ not for publication: N/A city/town: Providence_______ vicinity: N/A state: RI county: Providence code: 007 zip code: 02906 3. Classification Ownership of Property: Private_______ Category of Property: Building___ Number of Resources within Property: Contributing Noncontributing 1 ____ buildings structures objects Total Number of contributing resources previously listed in the National Register: 0 Name of related multiple property listing: N/A________________ USDI/NPS NRHP Registration Form Page 2 Property name Ladd Observatory. Providence County, Rhode Island 4. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1986, as amended, I hereby certify that this X nomination __ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR/fart 60. In my opinion, the property X meets __ does not meet the National Register Criteria. __ See continuation sheet. Signature of certifying official ate meets __ does not meet the National Register criteria. See continuation sheet. Date State or Federal agency and bureau 5. National Park Service Certification I hereby certify that this property is: entered in the National Register See continuation sheet. determined eligible for the National Register ____ See continuation sheet other (explain): Signature of Keeper 6.
    [Show full text]
  • Books at Brown
    BOOKS AT BROWN VOL. I, NO. 2. Ifilillii SEPTEMBER, I938 PUBLISHED BY THE FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY OF BROWN UNIVERSITY JOHN HAY On the 8th day of October in the year 1838, John Hay was born in the pioneer town of Salem, Indiana. His mother, born in Assonet, Massachusetts, in 1803, was a Leonard and his maternal grandfather, David Augustus Leonard, had attended Brown Uni­ versity (then Rhode Island College) in the Class of 1792. This New England connection drew the youth, John Milton Hay, when of college age, to Brown. His subsequent career has placed him in the very highest esteem among the University's alumni. During October, from the 24th through the 30th, there will be an exhibition of John Hay memorabilia in the Harris Room of the Library. On the evening of October 26th the Friends of the Li­ brary will hold their October meeting in the Harris Room at eight o'clock and members will have an opportunity to view the exhibit. The exhibition will include examples of Hay's published and private works, autograph letters, pictures, and his college records. Early letters of Hay are extremely rare as most of them were addressed to his family and were subsequently destroyed. During the brief interval between his graduation from Brown and his departure for Washington to become Lincoln's private secretary, he suffered from, or perhaps we should say, indulged in, "Leonard Melancholy." This period it is hoped will be repre­ sented by copy No. 1 of Caroline Tichnor's book, A Poet in Exile, which has the original letters bound in.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae
    Angus Deaton, CV, June 2018, Page - 1 - CURRICULUM VITAE Name: Sir Angus Stewart Deaton Date and Place of Birth: 19th October 1945 in Edinburgh, U.K. Nationality: British Children: 2 children, born 1970, 1971. Degrees: B.A. 1967, M.A. 1971, Ph.D. 1974 (Cambridge) Present Positions: Senior Scholar, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University Dwight D Eisenhower Professor of Economics and International Affairs, Emeritus Presidential Professor of Economics, University of Southern California Senior Scientist, Gallup Organization Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research E-mail: [email protected] Chronology of Education and Appointments 1959-64 Foundation Scholar, Fettes College, Edinburgh. 1964 Exhibition in Mathematics, Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge. 1964-67 Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, Mathematics, Parts 1a and 1b, and Economics, Part 2. 1967-68 Economic Intelligence Department, Bank of England. 1969 Junior Research Officer, Department of Applied Economics, Cambridge. 1972 Fellow and Director of Studies in Economics, Fitzwilliam College and Research Officer, Department of Applied Economics. 1976-83 Professor of Econometrics, University of Bristol. 1979-80 Visiting Professor, Princeton University. 1983- Dwight D. Eisenhower Professor of International Affairs, and Professor of Economics 2016 and International Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School and Department of Economics 1990-91 Overseas Fellow, Churchill College, Cambridge. Honors and Awards, Invited Lectures, most recent first 2017 Franklin Founder Award, joint with Anne
    [Show full text]
  • The Two Hundred and Forty-Fourth
    E Brown University The 2012 Two Hundred and Forty-Fourth Commencement E E For a map of the Brown campus and to locate individual diploma ceremonies, please turn to the inside back cover. Brown University providence, rhode island The College Ceremony 2 Candidates for Honorary Degrees 22 may , Schedule in the Event of Storm 2 Citations and Awards 25 Conditions ❖ Fellowships, Scholarships, and Grants 26 The Graduate School Ceremony 3 Special Recognition for Advanced 26 Alpert Medical School Ceremony 3 Degree Candidates The University Ceremony 4 Faculty Recognition 28 Brown University’s 18th President 4 Commencement Procession Aides 29 and Marshals Brown Commencement Traditions 5 The Corporation and Officers 31 Candidates for Baccalaureate Degrees 6 Locations for Diploma Ceremonies 32 Candidates for Advanced Degrees 12 Summary (all times are estimated) Seating on the College Green is on a first-come The day begins with a procession during which basis outside the center section. the candidates for degrees march across the College Green, led by the chief marshal party, : a.m. Seniors line up on Waterman Street. Brown band, presidential party, Corporation, : a.m. Procession begins through Faunce Arch. senior administration, and faculty. In addition, alumni who have returned for reunions march : a.m. Graduate School ceremony on Lincoln Field with their classes. Once the last person is : a.m. Medical School ceremony at The First through the Van Wickle Gates on the front Unitarian Church green, the procession inverts and continues down College street with each participant : p.m. College ceremony on First Baptist Church applauding the others. grounds begins (videocast).
    [Show full text]
  • Rhode Island Slavery and the University Jennifer Betts, University Archivist, Brown University Society of American Archivists, NOLA 2013
    Rhode Island Slavery and the University Jennifer Betts, University Archivist, Brown University Society of American Archivists, NOLA 2013 Pre-Slavery and Justice Committee March 2001 David Horowitz’s “Ten Reasons Why Reparations for Slavery is a Bad Idea and Racist Too” July 2001 President Ruth Simmons sworn in 2002 Lawsuit against corporations mentioned Harvard, Yale, and Brown benefitted from slavery March 2004 Unearthing the past: Brown University, the Brown Family, and the Rhode Island Slave Trade symposium April 2004 “Slavery and justice: We seek to discover the meaning of our past” op ed Charge to the committee Members: 11 faculty 1 graduate student 2 administrators 3 undergraduate students Goal and charge: • Provide factual information and critical perspectives that will deepen understanding. • Organize academic events and activities that might help the nation and the Brown community think deeply, seriously, and rigorously about the questions raised by this controversy. Rhode Island and Slavery • Between 1725 and 1807 more than 900 ships from Rhode Island travelled to West Africa • Ships owned by Rhode Island merchants accounted for 60% of slave trade voyages in 18th and early 19th century • Rhode Island ships transported 106,000 slaves Brown Family Tree Nicholas Brown, Nicholas Brown, Sr. (1729-1791) Jr. (1769–1841) James Brown (1698-1739) Joseph Brown (1733-1785) (brothers) John Brown (1736-1803) Obadiah Brown (1712-1762) Moses Brown (1738-1836) Brown Family Tree Nicholas Brown, Nicholas Brown, Sr. (1729-1791) Jr. (1769–1841) James Brown • First record of slave (1698-1739) Joseph Brown trading in 1736 (1733-1785) • Mary left for Africa (brothers) • Obadiah sold slaves in John Brown West Indies (1736-1803) • Three slaves sold in Obadiah Brown Providence by James for (1712-1762) Moses Brown 120 pounds (1738-1836) Brown Family Tree Nicholas Brown, • SallyNicholas, 1764- 65:Brown, 109 of Sr.
    [Show full text]
  • Brown University EAP 2019
    Brown University Sports Medicine Emergency Action Plan Revised September 2, 2019 1 Index ● Location of and Maintenance Required for AEDs - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3 Emergency Care and Coverage Plan by Venue - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 ● Brown Stadium - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 ● Erickson Athletic Complex - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6 o Berylson Family Fields - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7 o Meister-Kavan Field - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8 o Goldberger Family Field - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 9 o Murray Stadium - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10 o Softball Field - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 11 o Stevenson-Pincince Field - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 12 o Varsity Tennis Courts - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 13 o Grass Practice Field - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - 14 ● Marston Boathouse - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 16 ● Marvel Field - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 20 ● Meehan Auditorium - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 22 ● Olney
    [Show full text]
  • Lick Observatory Records: Photographs UA.036.Ser.07
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c81z4932 Online items available Lick Observatory Records: Photographs UA.036.Ser.07 Kate Dundon, Alix Norton, Maureen Carey, Christine Turk, Alex Moore University of California, Santa Cruz 2016 1156 High Street Santa Cruz 95064 [email protected] URL: http://guides.library.ucsc.edu/speccoll Lick Observatory Records: UA.036.Ser.07 1 Photographs UA.036.Ser.07 Contributing Institution: University of California, Santa Cruz Title: Lick Observatory Records: Photographs Creator: Lick Observatory Identifier/Call Number: UA.036.Ser.07 Physical Description: 101.62 Linear Feet127 boxes Date (inclusive): circa 1870-2002 Language of Material: English . https://n2t.net/ark:/38305/f19c6wg4 Conditions Governing Access Collection is open for research. Conditions Governing Use Property rights for this collection reside with the University of California. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. The publication or use of any work protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use for research or educational purposes requires written permission from the copyright owner. Responsibility for obtaining permissions, and for any use rests exclusively with the user. Preferred Citation Lick Observatory Records: Photographs. UA36 Ser.7. Special Collections and Archives, University Library, University of California, Santa Cruz. Alternative Format Available Images from this collection are available through UCSC Library Digital Collections. Historical note These photographs were produced or collected by Lick observatory staff and faculty, as well as UCSC Library personnel. Many of the early photographs of the major instruments and Observatory buildings were taken by Henry E. Matthews, who served as secretary to the Lick Trust during the planning and construction of the Observatory.
    [Show full text]