Tuesday, November 2, 2004

Page 1

T U E S D A Y NOVEMBER 2, 2004

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD Volume CXXXIX, No. 101

An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891

CAMPAIGN 2004

www.browndailyherald.com

ELECTION DAY

College Hill gears up for Election Day

Brown student mugged in Fones Alley Monday night

BY ERIC BECK

A Brown student was not harmed in a mugging Monday night that three other Brown students witnessed and tried to stop. Judy He ’06 did not suffer any injuries when a man mugged her in Fones Alley between Thayer and Brook streets at about 9:45 p.m.. He, a Herald photo editor, was talking on the phone in Fones Alley as she walked towards The Herald’s back door when the man approached her from behind. “I was really surprised,” she said. “Luckily, he didn’t have a weapon.” He said she struggled with the suspect as he tried to take her bookbag. “I kept trying to hit him in the balls, but it wasn’t working,” she said. As He struggled, a Herald editor drove

Election Day is here, and students registered to vote in Providence will be heading to polls located throughout College Hill to make their voices officially heard. But students who have not registered to vote or mailed in an absentee ballot still have a chance to vote in the presidential race. Students registered to vote at Brown are assigned to one of four precincts on or near the campus — Hope High School, the Ladder 8 fire station on Brook Street, the Salomon Center or The Governors B. Students are assigned to polling locations based on their dorm when they first registered — students who registered when they were first-year students, for example, are assigned to the polling location for their freshman dorm. McCormick said students should notify poll officials if their address or dorm location has changed. In a campus-wide e-mail Monday, President Ruth Simmons directed students unsure of their polling venue to the Web site of the Secretary of State of Rhode Island. The address is http://204.17.96.7/divs/elections/pollfin der/show_place. The Brown Democrats funded signs posted For a list of throughdorm-by-dorm out camto polling locations, go pus inform to www. students f browndailyherald.com o polling l o c a tions, said Brown Democrats President Seth Magaziner ’06. Providence polls will be open between 7 a.m. and 9 p.m. Same-day registration is available at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center at One LaSalle Square in downtown Providence from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. today, according to Dawn McCormick, acting administrator of elections for the Providence Board of Canvassers. Voters who register on Election Day can only cast ballots for president and vice president — they cannot vote in local races or on ballot initiatives. Same-day registration is designed to allow citizens who have failed to meet Rhode Island’s 30-day registration deadline a chance to vote because of the importance of the presidential race, McCormick said. It also provides a convenient last chance to vote for Brown students who are registered in their home state but did not send in an absentee ballot. She added that people who are registered elsewhere but did not complete an absentee ballot should tell poll officials at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center that they are registered in another state. People who want to register to vote

see ELECTION, page 3

BY ROBBIE COREY-BOULET

Nick Neely / Herald

Hope High School students strolled through campus Monday carrying political signs and urging those they met to vote in today’s election.

Students grapple with question of where to vote BY KIRA LESLEY

Liz Knights ’07 is not a native Rhode Islander. But tonight, she’ll be waiting along with long time Ocean State residents to see the outcome of local elections and ballot measures. Although Knights is from Acton, Mass., she is registered to vote in Rhode Island. When deciding whether to register in their home state or in Rhode Island, many Brown students weigh the influence they think their votes will have and their knowledge of candidates and issues. Although Knights does not live far from campus, she said she registered in Rhode Island because she thought she would be more informed about local issues in the state where she spent most of the year. “Partially it was just for convenience and partially because I thought I’d end up knowing more about the local candidates in the Providence area than the local candidates in the Boston area,” she said. Knights said she doesn’t want to vote in any election without being informed, and at this point she feels more informed on Rhode Island issues than Massachusetts issues. Local residents believe it’s important that students take time to inform themselves about local issues. Professor of Religious Studies Susan Harvey said long-term residents sometimes see elections and local issues differently from students who are only living in Providence for four years. But she said she believes students who choose to vote in Rhode Island can be informed and responsible voters. “Wherever you vote, you have a moral, an ethical obligation to know the issues and their long-term ramifications,” she said. Some students feel they are more informed about politics in their home states than Rhode Island politics. Shepherd Laughlin ’07 registered in his home state of Oklahoma because while Oklahoma and Rhode Island are both safe states — Republican and Democratic,

respectively — he wants to vote in his hotly contested senatorial election. “I still feel more connected to the political situation in Oklahoma than the political situation in Rhode Island,” Laughlin said. In addition, Laughlin said he wants to vote on Oklahoma’s ballot measures, including the definition of marriage bill, which would define marriage as strictly between one man and one woman. Laughlin said he is against the bill, and although it is likely to pass, “symbolically, I’d really like to have my say in that.”

Brandie Lustbader ’07 says the real problem in America is Florida — it’s time to get rid of it column, page 7

Things are already ugly in the 2004 election, and it’s only going to get worse, writes TePing Chen ’07 column, page 7

“I feel more significant as a liberal in a conservative state than as just another liberal in Rhode Island,” he said. Most students agree that no matter where they register, they have a responsibility to stay abreast of current political issues. The question of where to register takes on added significance at a college like Brown, which is known for its political participation. But no matter where they chose to register this year, one thing students seem to agree on is that today’s election is one of the most important in years.

14 referenda await Rhode Island voters at polls today BY CHRISTOPHER CHON

Voters in Rhode Island will have the option of supporting or opposing 14 referenda that will appear on today’s statewide ballot. The 14 proposals — ranging from bonds to rehabilitate the Quonset Point/Davisville Industrial Park pier to appropriations to create connections between the state’s water systems — request from the state a total of $392 million, the most expensive list to ever appear on a Rhode Island ballot. Out of the 14 questions, the most attention has been paid to Question One, a separation-of-powers bill that would attempt to more clearly define and separate the state’s three branches of government — legislative, executive and judicial. The referendum would prohibit any state senator or representative from being appointed to any state agency’s board or commission during his term in the legislature. For years, many Rhode Island legislators have simultaneously served as officials on state boards and commissions, but there has been mounting opposition against such dual office-

I N S I D E T U E S D AY, N O V E M B E R 2 , 2 0 0 4 See the list of referenda Rhode Island residents will vote on at polling stations across the state inside, page 4

see MUGGING, page 5

holding. While lawmakers insist their dual roles allow them to better understand their responsibilities, opponents claim there is a lack of oversight and a dangerous opportunity for abuse. In many cases, opponents argue, the same people executing laws on boards and commissions are those who wrote the laws. Phil West, executive director of Common Cause Rhode Island, a nonpartisan organization dedicated to promoting a representative democracy, said the passing of this referendum would lead to a “much more accountable government, more transparency, less patronage, fewer opportunities for corruption.” Behind voting, separation of powers is “the most basic foundation principle of American government,” and it is conspicuously lacking in Rhode Island politics, West said. “There’s a vast energy of excitement across the state among people who understand this,” he said. “As a result of this, boards and com-

see REFERENDA, page 3

WEATHER FORECAST Men’s cross country unable to recapture last year’s victory at Heptagonal Championships sports, page 8

Football loses early advantage to Penn’s Quakers, despite opponent’s weak kicking sports, page 8

TUESDAY

showers high 52 low 44

WEDNESDAY

mostly sunny high 54 low 33


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Tuesday, November 2, 2004 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu