Friday, March 17, 2006

Page 1

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 2006

Volume CXLI, No. 36 LOUNGE LIZARDS Housing crunch forces ResLife to place some students in temporaily converted lounges CAMPUS NEWS 5

RUE-DE AWAKENING The Resumed Undergraduate Students Association is working to increase the presence of RUE students on campus CAMPUS NEWS 5

Student recovering after fall from 3rd-floor Buxton window BY REBECCA JACOBSON SENIOR STAFF WRITER

A female student fell out of a third-floor Buxton House window early Thursday morning, sustaining minor injuries, according to University spokesperson Molly de Ramel. Two Department of Public Safety officers responded to the incident, which occurred at about 3 a.m. The student was taken to Rhode Island Hospital with “minor injuries,” de Ramel said. Local fire and rescue officials also responded to the scene. The incident occurred after the student and friends returned from Fish Co Bar and Grill, according to John Shields ’07, a Buxton resident. Shields, who had been at Fish Co with the student, said she “had been drinking a bit.” Shields accompanied her to the hospital after the fall and remained with her until 10 a.m. yesterday. As of last night, the student was still recovering in

SMALL TALK Eric Perlmutter ’06 encourages sports commentators and athletes to express their inner voices SPORTS 12

the hospital, Shields said. He declined to provide details about the student’s injuries, but said he expected her to suffer “no permanent damage.” On returning to Buxton from Fish Co, the female student entered a women’s restroom, while others waited outside. After several minutes, Shields said he entered the restroom, which was empty. He said he saw the open window and went to look outside, where he saw the student lying on the grass about 30 feet below. Shields said he ran downstairs, yelling for people to call emergency services. Before DPS and local fire and rescue officials responded, Shields said he supported the head of the student, who he said was breathing, but added that she could not move her feet and was bleeding. De Ramel said the student was alert enough to tell the officers that the fall “was an accident.” — with additional reporting by Eric Beck

ing a criminal enterprise, who presided over one of the most corrupt governments in the city’s history. Both made Providence the city it is today. Buddy I and Buddy II Cianci, a native of the Silver Lake neighborhood of Providence and head of the Organized Crime Unit in the state attorney general’s office, was first elected mayor in 1974, running as a Republican to take advantage of a split in the Democratic Party machine. His campaign posters announced he was “the anticorruption candidate,” ready to clean up City Hall as Providence’s first Italian-American mayor. Cianci clashed often with the Democratic-dominated City Council during his first period in office — popularly known as Buddy I — but brought an influx of federal funding into the city. Re-elected in 1978, Cianci steered Providence through a fiscal crisis in 1980 and ran for re-election again in 1982 as an Independent. He won, but even as he did, the FBI was moving in on corruption in City Hall. Patronage, bribes and city employees being required to buy tickets to Cianci fundraisers were all investigated, leading to the indictment of 24 city officials and the jailing of 19, including several top Cianci aides. Rita Williams, who now represents Ward 2 on the City Council, remembers being on a grand jury for six weeks during those investigations.

Editorial: 401.351.3372 Business: 401.351.3260

TOMORROW

mostly sunny 36 / 23

Meg Boudreau / Herald

The Fusion Dance Company is performing its annual dance show March 15 through March 19 at Ashamu Dance Studio.

see ARTS & CULTURE, page 3

‘Elegant’ revamped admissions mailings greet accepted students

The fall of Buddy Cianci and the rise of cleaner city government

More than anything else, Providence over the past three decades has been defined by one man: Vincent “Buddy” Cianci. Cianci was the longest serving mayor in the city’s history, elected PROVIDENCE to six terms and serving TODAY: a total of 21 Fifth in a series years in office. When Cianci first took office in 1975, Providence was a decaying industrial town, blighted and failing. He left it in 2002 as the “Renaissance City,” a modern city with a rebuilt downtown and, perhaps more importantly, a thriving sense of civic pride. “There was no one more brilliant or more dedicated. He was just incredible,” said a former Cianci aide who asked not to be identified. “I think one of his major contributions was drawing everyone in and making everyone feel like they had a stake in the city.” But, as U.S. District Judge Ernest Torres said when he sentenced Cianci to 64 months in prison in September 2002, “there appear to be two very different Buddy Ciancis.” One was the beloved visionary who uncovered the river, moved the railroad and remade downtown into a more attractive, safer place. The other Cianci was the felon convicted under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act in 2002 of head-

TODAY

sunny 42 / 21

INFUSED

Providence after Plunder Dome BY BEN LEUBSDORF METRO EDITOR

www.browndailyherald.com

An independent newspaper serving the Brown community since 1891

“I remember hearing things about the stolen things at (the buddycianci.com Department Buddy Cianci at of Public the post-verdict Works) and press conference, the corrup- as shown in the award-winning tion there,” d o c u m e n t a r y W i l l i a m s “Buddy.” said. She said her grand jury made indictments that led to convictions. Cianci had legal troubles of his own. On March 20, 1983, he summoned a man he believed was having an affair with his ex-

BY MELANIE DUCH SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Mailings from the Office of Admission got a makeover this year. About 2,400 accepted students from both the regular and early decision applicant pools will receive a “stylish” and color-coordinated assortment of written materials and a car decal in their forthcoming deliveries from Brown, according to Dean of Admission Jim Miller ’73. Michael Goldberger, former director of admission and current director of athletics, said

see CIANCI, page 4

admissions mailings became more and more weighed down with information over the 20 years he worked in the admissions office. He added that this trend caused “all sorts of problems” with coordinating the individual packages sent to accepted students. Miller, who was appointed dean of admission last year, brought up the possibility of revamping the packets several months ago, and others in the admissions office were receptive to the idea. see ADMISSIONS, page 6

Singing group to provide outlet for students with eating disorders BY ALISSA CERNY STAFF WRITER

As any campus tour guide will tell you, Brown already has more students in a cappella groups per capiFEATURE ta than any other school. But that number grew this Wednesday when Menia Pavlakou started a new singing group for students with anorexia and bulimia. The group will provide an outlet for students suffering from eating disorders, and its activities and impact will also be the subjects of Pavlakou’s the-

sis project. Pavlakou currently holds a courtesy appointment with the Department of Music after completing one music degree in Greece and a master’s degree in music psychology at Sheffield University in England. “I am very interested in the everyday effect of music outside of therapy, and how people use music to consciously alter their moods,” Pavlakou said. Because singing involves the entire body, Pavlakou said she thinks a singing group will provide a friendly, safe and noncritical atmosphere where students with anorexia or bulimia

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

are free to explore their voices and bodies. Heather Bell, a nutritionist at Health Services, said she was familiar with the concept of expressive art therapy. “Arts and music can be very emotionally powerful and people have the potential to communicate thoughts and feelings through art that they are unable to articulate verbally, and that means in a good — or potentially vulnerable — way,” Bell said. “People can feel opened up and very exposed.” see SINGING, page 6

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Friday, March 17, 2006 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu