The Brown Daily Herald M onday, O ctober 1, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 79
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
Lead-contaminated water found in campus buildings By Whitney Eng Contributing Writer
Chris Bennett / Herald
Hundreds of students marched silently on the Main Green Friday in support of protests against Myanmar’s military regime.
300 rally in red for Myanmar By Sam Byker Contributing Writer
Hundreds of students dressed in shades of red and purple gathered Friday at noon on Lincoln Field to draw the campus’ attention to ongoing anti-government protests in the Southeast Asian nation of Myanmar. Attendees at the event — organized by Brown’s recently inaugurated chapter of the U.S. Campaign for Burma — were urged to wear red or maroon to show solidarity with Myanmar’s monks, whose rust-covered robes have come to symbolize the protests. The demonstration, which included several speeches followed by a silent march around the Main Green, was possibly the largest gathering in support of Myanmar on an American campus, according to the Brown chapter’s director, Patrick Cook-Deegan ’08. Over the past week, peaceful crowds of up to 100,000 have taken to the streets in Myanmar — formerly known as Burma — only to be brutally dispersed by the military junta that has ruled the country for decades. Dissident groups have put the death toll as high as 200, the Associated Press reported. The United States and members of the European Union have condemned the Myanmar regime’s actions and have begun freezing finances of leaders associated with the junta. President Bush has called on countries in the region to pressure Myanmar to end its violent
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Several University buildings, including the applied math building and Meiklejohn House, were found to have high levels of lead-contaminated water, according to a study conducted by a group of Brown undergraduates last spring. Environmental science students Libby Delucia ’09, Matthew Wheeler ’09 and Megan Whelan ’09 set out to compare lead levels in drinking water in some of the oldest and newest buildings on campus, and they were alarmed by what they found. “I don’t think we ever expected to find something like this,” Delucia said. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, the acceptable amount of lead in water is 15 parts per billion. In some of the oldest buildings on campus, the students found lead levels reaching 15 parts per million — more than 10 times the federal limit. “It’s just really surprising that Brown wouldn’t have done anything about this or have told their employees sooner,” Whelan said. The students who conducted the study sent their report and a copy of the raw data to Stephen Morin, director of environmental health
and safety. “I think we’re going to take this opportunity to look into it further, and if there’s a need, we will make recommendations on how to fix the problem,” Morin told The Herald. Morin said he wasn’t surprised that the students found high levels of lead in the water, and that flushing the water for some time helped to decrease those numbers. The students conducted the study as part of ENVS 0490: “Environmental Science in a Changing World,” a spring semester course taught by Steven Hamburg, associate professor of environmental sciences. The students’ initial assignment was to look at the influence of heavy metals on the environment, and the group decided to focus their efforts on College Hill. The students took water samples from taps on the highest and lowest floors of some of Brown’s oldest and newest buildings and compared the amount of lead found in drinking water from each. Meiklejohn House and the applied math building are two of the oldest non-renovated buildings on campus, and levels of lead found in some water samples from these buildings greatly exceeded the continued on page 4
Bombing, hijacking exercise staged at airport
crackdown. A few minutes after noon Friday, Andrew Lim ’08 mounted a platform on Lincoln Field to address the crowd. Lim, whose parents emigrated from Myanmar 25 years ago, has been a leader of the Brown chapter of the campaign since its founding earlier this semester. “The Burmese government is extremely scared,” Lim said. “This might be the time that they can finally fall. ... One day maybe we can all say together that we helped to overthrow this terrible regime.” A number of speakers from the Watson Institute for International Studies also addressed the crowd. Former Sen. Lincoln Chafee ’75, now a visiting fellow at the Watson Institute, spoke first, excoriating the Bush administration for responding insufficiently to the crisis. Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, a visiting professor of Latin American studies and the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Myanmar, lamented the intractable nature of the situation. “Every morning I ask myself: ‘How many dead?’ ” he told the assembled crowd. Pinheiro will attend a special U.N. session on Myanmar next week in Geneva, and he promised to carry the crowd’s message with him. Fernando Henrique Cardoso, the former president of Brazil who is a professor-at-large at the Watson Institute for International Studies,
By Nandini Jayakrishna Senior Staff Writer
WARWICK — A bomb exploded in the upper-level departure terminal area of T.F. Green Airport late Thursday night, leaving more than 12 passengers wounded or unconscious and creating a diversion as unidentified terrorists proceeded to hijack a US Airways plane on the north ramp of the airfield with about 40 passengers aboard.
The “terrorist attack” was part of an exercise to test response time, security measures and coordination among various federal, state and local agencies in the face of such crises.
METRO About 150 volunteers and 25 agencies took part in the drill, including the Transportation Security Administration, the FBI, the Rhode Island State Police and Rhode Island Hos-
pital. The Rhode Island Emergency Management Agency Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program paid for the exercise. The Federal Aviation Administration requires that all airports conduct such exercises every three years. Thursday’s simulation was the largest to be conducted at T.F. Green in 20 years, said Patti Goldstein, spokeswoman for the Rhode Island continued on page 4
‘Hold that line’: Simmons on football By Michael Bechek Senior Staf f Writer
Some football fans enjoy closefought gridiron battles that go right down to the last second. President Ruth Simmons is not one of them. “I’m all about lacerating the other team,” she said. In that case, Simmons may have picked the wrong game to attend in Saturday’s 49-42, double overtime loss to the University of Rhode Island, despite the pleasant weather. Just over an hour before game time (12:30 p.m.), Simmons arrived at the white tailgating tent outside Brown Stadium, dressed in a bright red, slightly oversized Brown Basketball jacket and carrying a black purse. Ashley Hess / Herald
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ANNA NICOLE LIVES Tara Schuster ‘08 has penned a play about the life of Anna Nicole Smith, opening at PW this week.
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Cheerleader-in-chief Ruth Simmons got riled up at Saturday’s football game.
CAMPUS NEWS
DIGGING UP THE HILL Students in “The Archaeology of College Hill” are excavating history at the First Baptist Church.
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OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
THE BIG MOVE Alison Schouten ‘08 has tips for moving buildings around campus after Peter Green’s recent relocation.
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RAMS BEAT BEARS The football team fell in a hard-fought Governor’s Cup game, 49-42, to the University of Rhode Island.
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