Daily
Herald
THE BROWN
vol. cxlviii, no. 14
INSIDE
Page 4
Tour-nados
Six students to lead tours at RISD Museum Page 7
Privilege point Black ’12 says privileged opinions should be ignored Page 8
Dream teams Club teams aspire for recognition for successes
TODAY
47 / 32
TOMORROW
43 / 25
since 1891
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2013
Winter Storm Nemo whips across campus In the flurry of student excitement over snow, U. staffers worked overtime and stayed on campus By RACHEL MARGOLIS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Winter Storm Nemo dwindled to a close Saturday afternoon after covering Providence in about a foot and a half of snow. The University weathered the storm, with staff members initating campus-wide recovery efforts. The snow began around 9 a.m. Friday morning, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association. The snow and fog thickened in the evening, causing power outages and winds reaching speeds as severe as 52 mph. Service response coordinators were hard at work around the clock to keep the campus “safe and operational” over the weekend, said Marisa Quinn, vice president for public affairs and University relations. / / Nemo page 5
EMILY GILBERT / HERALD
As the winter storm hit campus, students enjoyed the time off from classes Friday through snowball fights, skiing, snowboarding and sledding on trays from the dining halls.
Divest Coal targets Corp., rallies on Main Green Snowfall Students gathered in the snow to urge Brown to divest from fossil fuel companies Friday By KATHERINE CUSUMANO SENIOR STAFF WRITER
LYDIA YAMAGUCHI / HERALD
Despite weather conditions, around 90 students gathered on the Main Green to bring the Corporation’s attention to the Divest Coal campaign.
Members of Brown Divest Coal and the campus community took to the Main Green Friday morning to rally against the University’s alleged fossil fuel investments. The rally was planned to coincide with the Corporation meeting originally scheduled to take place that day, said Emily Kirkland ’13, one of the group’s student organizers. As snow began to fall, the protesters chanted the slogans “Brown take action, stop extraction!” and “Look around, it’s sleeting, the Corpora-
tion’s meeting, the world is overheating — divest now!” “We wanted (the Corporation members) to literally hear us,” said Nathan Bishop ’13, a member of Brown Divest Coal. Speakers — including members of the campaign — discussed reasons for the University to divest from coal companies, which have appalling environmental and worker safety practices, Kirkland said. The turnout was somewhat lower than anticipated, which Kirkland attributed to the early time, 10 a.m., and the impending blizzard. She said she was still impressed by the 80 to 90 students who attended the protest, which aimed to “demonstrate the depth of our students’ support.” Visiting Assistant Professor in Environmental Studies Professor Dawn King / / Coal page 2
R.I. universities weather storm complications
Students at schools around the state navigated power outages and snowed-in roads By ELIZABETH KOH FEATURES EDITOR
Except for occasional sledding injuries and brief power outages, many Brown students escaped unscathed from Winter Storm Nemo this weekend. But other universities in Rhode Island, especially those with large commuter populations, are still feeling the fallout from the storm.
FEATURE
Blast from the past These challenges are not new — though Winter Storm Nemo left about 20 inches of snow in its wake, the Blizzard of ’78 left more than 28 inches of
snow, 11,800 homes and business without power in Rhode Island and over 9,000 people in shelters. “We never thought it was going to be as bad as it was,” said University of Rhode Island graduate Mark Petteruti, who was a sophomore living on the URI campus when the Blizzard of ’78 hit on a Monday and closed the campus for a week. “The cafeterias started to get depleted on food because there was no way for trucks to get to campus,” he said. Dining workers got creative and “made unusual kinds of dinners,” Petteruti said. “When it got really low, they were serving canned food.” The National Guard even delivered food by helicopter to the roof of the cafeteria building, he said. “We thought that was unbelievable.” But snowed-in URI students found ways to stay entertained, Petteruti said. “They had all these events building snowmen and / / Storm page 3
EVAN THOMAS / HERALD
Winter Storm Nemo took its toll all across Providence, leaving about a foot and a half of snow and causing school closures across the state.
causes statewide disruption Transportation was suspended and over 176,000 R.I. residents were left without power By EMILY BONEY SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Winter Storm Nemo blew through Rhode Island starting Friday morning and into Saturday, burying parts of the state in upwards of two feet of snow. The ‘blizzicane’ is the fifth worst winter storm New England has seen in a century. Local medical provider Lifespan reported 282 hospitalizations related to the blizzard, stemming from causes such as shoveling and motor vehicle accidents, according to WPRI. Power outages affected 14.5 percent of the states’ population — nearly all homes and businesses in Newport and Bristol lost power — but most of the outages were in Providence county, according to the National Grid’s website. After more than 9,000 Providence homes lost power during the storm, only about 200 were still waiting for power to be restored as of yesterday evening, Mayor Angel Taveras tweeted, with over 176,000 outages statewide, according to Gov. Lincoln Chafee ’75 P’14 P’16. Chafee declared a state of emergency in Rhode Island Friday. Shelters opened across the state Feb. 8 and 9, offering warmth to those without electricity. The most snowfall recorded during Nemo in the state was in West Glochester, which received 27.6 inches. Travel was / / Snow page 4