Wednesday, February 13, 2008

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The Brown Daily Herald Wednesday, F ebr uar y 13, 2008

Volume CXLIII, No. 16

Since 1866, Daily Since 1891

U. will give students off-campus parking

BUCC votes to join fair labor nonprofit consortium

Officials discuss dorm life, energy issues By Emmy Liss Senior Staff Writer

Students showed support for a proposal to increase the fair treatment of workers who produce university apparel at a Brown University Community Council meeting Tuesday. The council also discussed dorm living and recent energy announcements. Returning to an issue the BUCC has discussed before, Walter Hunter, vice president of administration and chief risk officer, presented a proposal for the Designated Suppliers Program. The DSP is designed to ensure that textile workers’ rights are not violated in the production of university apparel. This is built on two components: requirements of factories to treat workers fairly and requirements on licensees to ensure fair contracts and price standards. The newest report from Hunter and the committee he worked with on the topic, which included faculty, students and administrators, recommends the University issue a statement in support of DSP and join the Worker Rights Consortium Working Group, a non-profit organization working to imple-

By Sam Byker Senior Staff Writer

Courtesy of Sarah Adler-Milstein

Students from the Student Labor Alliance and other student groups display their opinion at the BUCC meeting Tuesday.

ment similar programs at other universities. “The key is for Brown to be at the table,” Hunter said. Katie Panella ’07, who has worked with the group, also spoke and praised the student, faculty and administrator collaboration. “This is a result of a lot of different opinions,” she said. “Impor-

tant decisions should not be made behind closed doors,” The Student Labor Alliance was in full attendance to support Hunter’s announcement of the DSP proposal. SLA first brought this issue to the attention of Simmons in 2005 and has since focused a lot of time and energy on making this program work at Brown, student

representatives said. “SLA has been present and will continue to be present,” Lenora Knowles ’11 said. The BUCC unanimously voted to follow the steps outlined in the DSP proposal.

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Former Columbia prof. hired to lead global initiatives By Jenna Stark Senior Staff Writer

Vasuki Nesiah, a senior associate at the International Center for Transitional Justice, was named director of international affairs, a new position created as part of the the University’s ongoing initiative to give Brown a more global identity. Arriving on campus in early February, Nesiah, a native Sri Lankan, is to work alongside Vice President for International Affairs David Kennedy ’76 in steering the new initiative. Nesiah is a former adjunct associate professor of international

and public affairs at Columbia. The University held a national search with hundreds of applicants to fill the new position, Kennedy said. The search committee included three senior deans and two senior faculty members who were involved in the interview process, he said. The final five candidates were brought to campus. Of the five, Nesiah was the strongest candidate, Kennedy said. “I’m thrilled she accepted our offer,” he added. “She was our firstchoice candidate and I’m excited to welcome her to campus.”

Nesiah applied for the position because she was looking for a way to return to academic work without being confined to the classroom. Nesiah said she enjoyed her work at ICTJ and Columbia, and thought the work at Brown would combine the elements of both jobs that she liked. “The more I found out about Brown’s approach to academic vision, the more it seemed perfect,” she said. Nesiah’s first step as the new director is meeting with different groups on campus to determine what students and faculty want

from the internationalization initiative. “We’re not keen on coming in with a program that’s preordained, but one that’s based on the direction people would want it to go,” she said. Nesiah has already met with faculty in the physics, engineering and chemistry departments, she said. “It was the beginning of a dialogue,” said Professor of Physics Chung-I Tan. “We would like to have recognition that science in itself is very much global and incontinued on page 6

The ‘dormitory to end all dormitories’ turns 40 By Marielle Segarra Staff Writer

Occupying an entire square block on the south end of campus, the Graduate Center is a lot of things to a lot of people. Some students see the building as a cement fortress.

FEATURE Others say it’s an example of modern architecture and geometry. But all agree it is not being used as was intended when it was built in 1968 — to house graduate students. The Graduate Center was designed by architectural firm Shepley, Bulfinch, Richardson and

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HIGHER ED

Abbott and built by E. Turgeon Construction Company, according to the Encyclopedia Brunoniana. Before it was built, graduate students lived at 67 and 69 Manning St. Grad Center was built “with the Oxford (housing) model in mind,” said Barrett Hazeltine, professor emeritus of engineering. “It was sort of fashionable in its time, this idea of small rooms all structured around a central corridor.” Hazeltine, who has taught at Brown since the 1960s, said Grad Center was built to create a space for grad students to socialize and

LOSING DIVERSITY Ending affirmative action leads to more Asians and fewer black and Hispanic students, a study finds

www.browndailyherald.com

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CAMPUS NEWS

Kim Perley / Herald File Photo

The Graduate Center was originally conceived as “the dormitory to end all dormitories,” said Professor of Mathematics Thomas Banchoff. Now, it inspires as much bemusement as awe.

FORGET FLOWERS A Brown professor knows the perfect Valentine’s Day gift for the man in your life

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OPINIONS

SELLING BROWN Maha Atal ‘08 thinks banning early admits at ADOCH will hurt the University

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

The University plans to eliminate all on-campus parking for undergraduates next semester and will begin offering students spaces in an offcampus garage or lot with a shuttle service to College Hill, University officials have announced. Currently, about 200 spaces in various lots around campus are allocated to rising juniors and seniors in a spring semester lottery. That practice will continue this year, but the spaces will be in an area off-campus, the location of which has yet to be determined, said Brendan McNally, special assistant to the executive vice president for planning. Brown has decided to expand by making its core campus denser, pushing space for auxiliary services like parking into other areas. Construction of the $50-million Nelson Fitness Center, will eliminate the large parking lot within the Erickson Athletic Complex. That, said McNally, will eliminate enough parking spaces that Brown would be out of compliance with city law if it didn’t replace them. Providence requires all businesses and institutions to have a certain amount of off-street parking based on the number of patrons, students or visitors they have, McNally said. Two spokespersons from the mayor’s office did not return calls from The Herald. “As we’ve done a lot of these major projects, we’ve had to find a solution for the parking. Leasing spaces off College Hill provided a solution that was the most cost-effective,” McNally said. “Underground parking is extremely expensive, and surface parking — there isn’t enough of it on College Hill. So as we moved forward, that put us to say, ‘Where can we do it off campus?’ That’s what we’re doing right now.” The off-campus site must be on or near a bus route and a safeRIDE shuttle route, McNally said. The spaces would need to be relatively close to College Hill and safe, both for cars and students, McNally said. The University has been considering such a project for a long time, but now administrators have decided to commit themselves to the plan, he said. Rates will be heavily subsidized by the University, McNally said, and should be comparable to current prices — $515 per academic year for undergraduates. Charlotte Lipschitz ’10 pays $50 a month for a private parking space near Hope and John streets, southeast of campus. As a sophomore, she couldn’t enter the parking lottery, so she picked the cheapest listing she could find on Craigslist. One listed at Angell and Thayer streets started at continued on page 4

sunny, 40 / 24

tomorrow’s weather The snow will disappear faster than your chances for finding convenient parking next year

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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