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Brown hosts second ADOCH event amidst Main Green student activism

Admitted student day includes open curriculum discussion, speed friending, residence hall tours

<p>More than 1,100 admitted students attended the two ADOCH events offered this month.</p>

More than 1,100 admitted students attended the two ADOCH events offered this month.

The University hosted the second admitted students鈥 day, known as , for the Class of 2027 Friday. ADOCH events included a discussion about the open curriculum with Dean of the College Rashid Zia 鈥01, speed friending with other admitted students and tours of first-year residence halls.聽

Associate Provost for Enrollment Logan Powell estimated that approximately 560 students registered for each ADOCH program. He highlighted the increased financial support offered to attendees, including 鈥渆xpanding the travel grant program to be able to invite hundreds of low-income students to campus.鈥

Much of ADOCH was held on the Main Green 鈥 which was bustling throughout the day, with student activist groups hosting protests, tabling and showcasing art installations.

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During ADOCH鈥檚 lunch period, Sunrise Brown and Students for Educational Equity hosted a rally calling for increased voluntary payments from the University to the city of Providence. Organizers hoped the rally would educate prospective students 鈥渁bout how activist culture is a real thing here鈥 and also 鈥減ut some pressure鈥 on University administrators, according to See Co-President Niyanta Nepal 鈥25.

Starting on the Quiet Green and later marching to University Hall, the protest caught the eye of prospective students, many of whom said they were excited to see the presence of student activists on campus.

鈥淚'm inspired seeing the students get together and support a common cause,鈥 Maxwell Dassow, an ADOCH attendee, said about the protest.

For Gloria Kuzmenko-Latimer, another prospective student, the protest demonstrated that 鈥減eople here are very vocal about the issues that are going on in the world.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 excited to be in a place where people seem to really care, and they recognize the good and the bad of where they are and try to improve it,鈥 she added.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e showing the incoming freshmen that this is what Brown is,鈥 ADOCH attendee Maurice Silvera told The Herald while watching the protest.

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On the Main Green, Brown Students for Justice in Palestine hung banners reading 鈥淓nd Israeli Apartheid鈥 and 鈥淏rown Divest.鈥澛

According to Jack Doughty 鈥23, an SJP organizer, the installation was part of the group鈥檚 larger effort calling for the University to divest its endowment from 鈥渧iolent industries that perpetuate human rights abuses, both in Palestine and globally.鈥

"Brown is deeply committed to academic freedom, and we will continue to uphold the right of members of the Brown community to express their views on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,鈥 President Christina Paxson P鈥19 P鈥橫D鈥20 wrote in a March 2021 letter to the University community. 鈥淲e will not use the endowment to take an institutional position on this issue.鈥

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鈥淲e want incoming and prospective students to be aware of what it鈥檚 like trying to actively engage in organizing鈥 on campus, Doughty added.

Between two trees on the Main Green, the Dream Team 鈥斅 an on-campus organization dedicated to immigration advocacy and community-building 鈥 displayed a banner reading 鈥淣o one is illegal on stolen land.鈥 The organization hoped that its banner would allow admitted students who identify as undocumented to 鈥溾嬧媖now that there鈥檚 a space for them鈥 at Brown, said a member of the organization who asked to remain anonymous because of their undocumented status.

Brown Votes and Brown Students for Israel also set up tables on the green.

鈥淲e want to spread information, share food, share flyers, talk about (the) culture of Jewish life and pro-Israel life on campus for parents and for students who are potentially coming to campus,鈥 said Jillian Lederman 鈥24, president of Brown Students for Israel and former contributing writer for The Herald.

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鈥淚t's a wonderful thing for admitted students to see how active and engaged current students are,鈥 Powell said, adding that he hoped prospective students would 鈥渨alk away with a clearer sense of what makes the Brown community so special.鈥

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Brittany Narvauz, a prospective student, said that she most enjoyed the speed friending event, while attendee Hannah Park called Zia鈥檚 presentation on the open curriculum a highlight from the day. Other attendees cited the tours of Keeney Quadrangle and the local food trucks serving lunch as their favorite aspects of ADOCH.

Students who were unable to attend the event can explore virtual programming on the 鈥Bruniverse,鈥 an online platform for admitted students, Powell said.

Powell added that he hopes this event allowed students to 鈥渞eally imagine what their lives would be like as Brown students for four years.鈥

Additional reporting by Ashley Cai and Ryan Doherty.


Owen Dahlkamp

Owen Dahlkamp is a Section Editor overseeing coverage for University 国产偷拍 and Science & Research. Hailing from San Diego, CA, he is concentrating in political science and cognitive neuroscience with an interest in data analytics. In his free time, you can find him making spreadsheets at Dave鈥檚 Coffee.



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