The Brown Daily Herald T uesday, N ovember 13, 2007
Volume CXLII, No. 109
Since 1866, Daily Since 1891
How green is Brown?
THE HERALD POLL
Students favor Obama, Herald poll finds
Sidney Frank Hall to become first LEED-certified building
President Ruth Simmons maintains high approval rating
By Taryn Martinez Staff Writer
As the University’s physical campus expands at a rapid pace, the plans for new buildings are energy efficient but do not necessarily meet the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design standards set by the U.S. Green Building Council. The Sidney Frank Hall for Life Sciences will be Brown’s first LEEDcertified building — the building, which opened in 2006, is currently going through the certification process — but the University’s dedication to constructing energy efficient buildings predated the widespread adoption of LEED as a standard, said Kurt Teichert, Environmental Stewardship Initiatives manager. LEED, the widely accepted benchmark for high-performance green buildings, has four certification levels — certified, silver, gold and platinum — which represent how many “points” a LEED project has earned for meeting standards such as sustainable site development, water savings, energy efficiency, materials selection and indoor environmental quality. New and
By Isabel Gottlieb and Franklin Kanin Senior Staff Writers
Chris Bennett / Herald File Photo
After it completes the certification process, the Sidney Frank Hall for Life Sciences will be Brown’s first LEED-certified building.
existing buildings, building shells, schools and homes may all be registered for LEED certification. In Sidney Frank Hall, for example, energy efficiency measures focused on electronic control systems. The building’s cooling system uses the most efficient non-ozone depleting chiller plant technology available, Teichert said. Sidney Frank Hall also serves as a chilled water
“core plant,” which feeds a number of buildings in that area, saving effort and energy. “Free cooling” in Sidney Frank Hall allows outside air that is already the appropriate temperature to flow through the ventilation system without being heated or cooled, Teichert said. Additionally, lighting occupancy sensors were set up to control the
heating and ventilation systems. “When the room is unoccupied, it sends a message to the system to scale back the temperature,” Teichert said. In general, with features like Sidney Frank Hall’s, Brown makes good use of sustainable design principles, said Julia Beamesderfer ’09, continued on page 6
Where religion and politics intersect, Brown students diverge By Stefanie Angstadt Staff Writer
When Hillel’s Brown Street building first opened its doors in 2004, Brown Hillel staff intentionally refrained from hanging the Israeli flag within its structure, concerned that students would see the flag as a symbol of political partisanship.
Two years later, student leaders to the American flag in the Hillel at Hillel influenced the decision to building lobby. raise the flag for the first time. To While some students oppose the them, the symbol flag’s tenancy, sayrepresented supFAITH ON CAMPUS ing that support por t for Israel for Israel should last in a series on from a standpoint religious life at the University not be inferred by a strictly apolitical of religious identity rather than political partiality. religious organization like Hillel, othToday, the Israeli flag hangs next ers support it, saying support for
Denzel in Providence? GISP members hope so by Marielle Segarra Staff Writer
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sc u lpt i n g a speech
FEATURE
Hollywood is no stranger to the underdog story: Audiences have watched the little guy triumph over adversity ad nauseum in sports films such as “Remember the Titans,” “Million Dollar Baby” and “Little Giants.” But 13 Brown students have discovered that Denzel Washington wants to bring attention to a different type of underdog story — and they want to help him with his project. The Oscar-winning actor is starring alongside Oscar winner Forest Whitaker in the movie “The Great Debaters,” which is loosely based on the true story of the 1935 debate team at Wiley College, a historically black institution. In the movie, the team upsets Harvard’s all-white team to win a national debating champion-
INSIDE:
Israel is important for non-political reasons. “Currently, we do have the flag up because we stand by Israel,” said Eytan Kurshan ’08, Hillel president. “The stance of the national Hillel organization is, ‘Wherever we stand, we stand with Israel,’ and we live by
ship. Oprah Winfrey’s production company, Harpo Productions, is working with Washington to produce the movie, which is set to open Christmas Day. The Brown students, led by Jeremiah Kittredge ’08 and Shiyin Wang ’08, designed a Group Independent Study Project to promote the film for the Weinstein Company, which is distributing it. The students have a loftier goal than box office sales, though — they want to use the movie to gain support for debate programs in Rhode Island. The message of the film fits well with the students’ aims to bolster urban debate across the state, Kittredge continued on page 8
RECYCLE yOUR NIKES A plucky Wheeler School student is leading an effort to recycle old sneakers in Providence.
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CAMPUS NEWS
Meara Sharma / Herald Sculptor Mark di Suvero delivered the Agnes Gund Presidential Lecture Monday afternoon in List Art Center.
WINTER BREAK WORK Students will eat and sleep in a church downtown for a week in January while doing community service.
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OPINIONS
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
Free taiwan Taiwan and the People’s Republic of China have always been two countries, six alums and students say.
Brown undergraduates overwhelmingly favor Sen. Barack Obama, DIll., in the 2008 presidential election, according to a Herald poll conducted last week. 37.5 percent of students said they believe Obama would make the best president of the United States, versus 18.4 percent who said they favored Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y. Former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina came in third with 5.6 percent, and U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas led among Republican candidates, with 3.1 percent of the Brown vote. The Herald poll was conducted from Nov. 5-7 and has a 3.9 percent margin of error with 95 percent confidence. A total of 621 Brown undergraduates completed the poll, which was administered as a written questionnaire to students in the University Post Office at Faunce House and in the Sciences Library. Though 83.4 percent of students expressed an opinion about their favorite presidential candidate, only 5.6 percent said they currently work or volunteer for a presidential campaign. 66.5 percent of students said they support converting some or all multi-user restrooms in residence halls into gender-neutral facilities. But just 12.6 percent of respondents said they want all bathrooms to be converted, and 53.9 percent said they want some bathrooms to remain single-sex only. 23.2 percent of students said they do not want any bathrooms to be converted. Currently, over half of the University’s single-use, lockable bathrooms in residence halls are gender-neutral, and some multiuser bathrooms in residence halls have also been converted to genderneutral status. The University is in the process of mapping on-campus bathrooms and deciding which can be designated gender-neutral. President Ruth Simmons remains highly popular among students, according to the Herald poll. 84.9 percent of respondents said they approve of the job Simmons is doing as president, with 43.2 percent of those students strongly approving. Just 4.3 percent of students said they somewhat or strongly disapproved of the job Simmons is doing, and 10.8 percent didn’t know or had no opinion. In a Herald poll conducted in January and February, 81 percent of students said they approved of Simmons’ work. The Undergraduate Council of Students did not elicit the same positive reaction as Simmons. 39.3 percent of students said they somewhat continued on page 4
12 SPORTS
PUCKS a-FLASHING The men’s hockey team went 1-1 at a weekend homestand, downing Colgate but falling to Cornell.
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