THE BROWN DAILY HERALD THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 2006
Volume CXLI, No. 35
www.browndailyherald.com
An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891 ITS A WRAP Diane von Furstenberg, designer of the wrap dress, discusses the challenges and joys of a working woman ARTS & CULTURE 3
RHODY ON THE RIPTA post- takes you on a ride to examine the highs, lows, tales and woes of the Ocean State INSIDE
Bookstore supporters rally against outsourcing BY ROSS FRAZIER SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Approximately 150 Brown students, faculty and staff along with East Side residents and merchants turned out for a half-hour rally yesterday to support preserving the independence of the Brown Bookstore. The rally, which was held on the Angell Street side of the building, was organized by the Save the Bookstore Coalition, which was formed by Brown graduate students in response to a March 3 finding by the Bookstore Review Committee that operation of the bookstore should be outsourced to an external vendor. Rally leaders signed people up for the coalition’s mailing list, handed out tshirts and distributed signs before calling up various speakers. Those at the rally cited various reasons for their support of the bookstore’s inde-
pendence. “From what I’ve heard, Barnes and Noble is going to raise prices and is not a good deal,” said Randall Rose GS, one of the rally’s organizers. “This is real important to me as an independent bookseller that we have another one in Providence because I’m going to retire one of these days and there aren’t going to be any left,” said Sarah Zacks, owner of Books on the Square, which is located in Wayland Square. “I doubt I’ll be able to sell my bookstore, and then Brown will be the last one left. It would be really sad for me to see my friends and all those folks out of jobs,” she said. “I’m a grown-up. I know what happened to the (Harvard) Coop. It’s not the Coop anymore, and Brown Bookstore is not going to be the Brown Bookstore anymore — and that’s going to be a shame for the community,” Zacks said. see BOOKSTORE, page 7
Jacob Melrose / Herald
Yesterday evening, about 150 members of the College Hill community protested outsourcing the Brown Bookstore to a private vendor such as Barnes and Noble.
OUT OF THE SHADOWS Lance Williams ’72 makes up half the duo that uncovered Barry Bonds’ rampant steroid use SPORTS 12
BY SIMMI AUJLA SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Members of the class of 2006 have been in Providence longer than Chief of Police Dean Esserman. In three years, however, Esserman, along with Mayor David Cicilline ’83, has reduced overall crime rates and worked to improve the public image of the Providence Police Department. Overall crime rates between 2003 and 2005 dropped 14 percent from crime rates between 2000 and 2002, PROVIDENCE according to PPD statistics. Murders decreased TODAY: Fourth in a series by 21 percent, while incidents of both rape and aggravated assault increased by 1 percent. Robbery decreased by 20 percent, burglaries by 22 percent, motor vehicle thefts by 15 percent and larcenies by 12 percent. Deputy Police Chief Paul Kennedy credits community policing with the turnaround. New strategies for preventing crime Before Esserman implemented changes, lieutenants commanded all officers who worked the same hours. Esserman broke the city into nine patrol districts to encourage officers to think in terms of neighborhoods rather than shifts. “People are now responsible for geography, not a shift (for a specific amount of time),” he said. The decentralization of responsibility allows officers to learn more about the neighborhood in which they work, Kennedy said. Esserman hoped this knowledge would help officers fight crime throughout Providence, he added. Kennedy emphasized the importance of statistics in detecting crime trends and pinpointing potential trouble spots. At weekly meetings, command staff share problems in their districts and analyze statistical in-
The College Republicans and intellectual diversity
BY ROSS FRAZIER SENIOR STAFF WRITER
It’s not easy being a Republican at Brown, but a sense of humor helps. That might be why Professor of Economics George Borts responded to a Herald inquiry about conservatives on campus with FEATURE his own question: “Do you have a microscope?” You may have to look hard to find them, but Republicans do exist at Brown. The College Republicans is certainly not the largest or highest profile group on campus. Though the organization has a mailing list of over 300 students, President Evan Pettyjohn ’06 said only 25 to 30 of those come to meetings, and only 10 or so come regularly. But Pettyjohn suspects there are a lot of “closet conservatives” at Brown. Pettyjohn said conservatives get various reactions from the University comsee REPUBLICANS, page 4 Editorial: 401.351.3372 Business: 401.351.3260
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Local police cope with recent spike in violent crime, reputation of corruption
ResLife extends deadline, sets second lottery segment Responding to an apparently inordinate number of students who missed the deadline to enter the housing lottery, the Office of Residential Life has extended the entrance deadline, according to an e-mail posted on its Web site. Students who enter the lottery by March 20 will still have the opportunity to select housing, though not until all students who entered on time have selected first. The e-mail, sent yesterday by Assistant Director of Residential Life Rosario Navarro to all individuals who did not enter the lottery, points out that while most students did successfully enter the lottery, ResLife received several complaints that changes to the lottery, coupled with the 9 a.m., March 13, deadline, caused confusion. As a result, instead of putting those students on the housing waitlist, ResLife will give them a second opportunity to select housing, albeit in a different segment with fewer options.
TOMORROW
New policing strategies, stronger neighborhood presence help lower crime
Lonely on the Right BY CHLOE LUTTS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
TODAY
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The second segment will start immediately after the end of the normal lottery, which will run from March 20 to March 22, according to the e-mail. According to Justin Glavis-Bloom ’07, chair of the Residential Council’s Lottery Committee, ResLife staff held a two-hour “emergency meeting” yesterday before calling Glavis-Bloom and ResCouncil Chair Brendan Hargreaves ’06 to ask for their opinions. “There were a lot of students who approached ResLife and e-mailed me — more so than in previous years,” Glavis-Bloom said. “We all agreed there was a problem and that this was a good solution.” “Our office is confident that the lottery information was thorough and accurate and that the information was disseminated in multiple formats including our Web site, posters, information sessions and e-mails,” Navarro wrote in the e-mail. “However we recognize that some students may have missed the deadline.” ResLife officials could not be reached for comment last night. Glavis-Bloom said it was unclear ex-
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
formation, he said. Lieutenant Paul Campbell, the District 9 commander who directs the police substation on Brook Street, said the creation of special units, such as a robbery squad, a drug task force, a gun task force and a gang unit, have also helped limit crime problems. In the wake of Sept. 11, 2001, the PPD started a homeland security division, Kennedy said. “We have identified (trouble) areas within and around the city,” he said. “(Terrorism) is one of the things we take very seriously here.” The PPD’s license enforcement unit checks nightclubs for overcrowded conditions, Kennedy said. In 2003, 100 people died in a fire at The Station, a nightclub in West Warwick, R.I. The gun task force has been particularly successful in removing guns from the streets of Providence, another means by which the department hopes to preempt incidents of violent crime. But violent crime — which is defined as murder, non-negligent manslaughter, forcible rape and robbery — has increased in the past three years, Kennedy said, and there has been a spike in homicides in the past year. Although he could not explain the increase, he said factors such as the health of the economy and see POLICING, page 6
DARFUR AND THE HOLOCAUST
Min Wu / Herald
New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine lectured on the importance of immediate action and individual lobbying to aid the crisis in Darfur last night in Salomon 101. The talk was part of the 3rd Annual Conference on the Holocaust. actly how many students missed the deadline because some students who do not enter the lottery are seeking offcampus housing or transferring out of Brown. According to the e-mail, the lottery application will be posted online again today at 5 p.m and must be turned in by Monday, March 20 at 5 p.m. Lottery numbers for new entrants will be posted in Wayland Arch the following day. News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com