Thursday, October 2, 2008

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The Brown Daily Herald T hursday, O ctober 2, 2008

Volume CXLIII, No. 83

Off the hill, afloat in the Old World

Reported sex crimes more than double from ’06 to ’07 By Joanna Wohlmuth Senior Staff Writer

Gondolier sees a bit of Venice in Providence

The number of sex crimes reported at Brown more than doubled from 2006 to 2007, according to a report released last week, a change that University officials said demonstrated students’ increased willingness to seek campus resources following an incident. “The number change does not mean the prevalence (of sexual assault and rape) increased. It means that people reported and got support,” said Sexual Assault Response and Prevention Program Coordinator Trisha Glover. “It’s a success in that way.” The number of “forcible sex offences” committed on campus increased from four in 2006 to nine in 2007, according to the annual crime report from the Department of Public Safety. “I think to talk about the number, you have to understand the context

By George Miller Senior Staff Writer

They call Federal Hill Providence’s Little Italy, but there’s a little bit of Venice in the rivers, too. Just ask Michele (pronounced “Mee-KELL-ay”), who pilots gondolas on the Providence and Woonasquatucket five nights a week. Michele — real name Evan Smith ’09 — has seen Rhode Is-

FEATURE landers get romantic on the rivers. Smith says he’s heard a “huge” number of people pop the question from his perch at the stern of the gondola, and has never witnessed a rejected proposal. (He wonders, though, if sometimes the person proposed to waits for a private moment — sans Michele — to decline the offer.) Smith rowed in high school and his freshman year at Brown before starting as a gondolier with Providence-based “La Gondola” in June. The traditional Venetian boats don’t just carr y passengers on WaterFire nights—May through October, they ferry people celebrating birthdays and anniversaries, and more than a few getting engaged. The base fee for such an excursion is $79, though prices are higher on WaterFire nights and for trips that include special treats, like gold-rimmed keepsake wine glasses, framed photographs and specialty chocolates. The black-and-white-striped getups worn by the gondoliers seem straight out of the Old World,

Courtesy of Matthew Haynes

Evan Smith ‘09 pilots a Venetian gondola through the Providence River, dressed as a traditional Italian gondolier.

and the company’s two boats are even authentic Venetians, according to its brochure. But, Smith says of his fellow gondoliers, “none of us are even vaguely Italian.” Raphael is a student at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Leonardo at the University of Rhode Island and Marcello, the company’s owner, teaches physics. Marco, at least — real name Alan Days — was trained in Venice. Smith had no such luck, having to settle for 30 hours learning how to guide the long scull with a single 14-foot oar. If he dared to wear his striped shirt and straw hat, the traditional gondolier’s uniform, in that city, they’d “toss (him) off the boat.” The Venetian gondoliers’ guild requires all its

members to be native male Venetians — so the striped shirt stays out of the suitcase for now. Days founded the gondola company with his wife Cynthia in 1997, not long after the completion of a significant downtown revitalization that included uncovering and moving the rivers. He got the idea from the gondolas at Marco Island, Fla., he said. Days has since sold the company to new owners. Being a gondolier and rowing crew are both difficult, “but in very different ways,” Smith says. He wasn’t fully trained until mid-July, he adds. “The boat just wants to move in a circle,” he says. And with a continued on page 4

Beyond checking your heartbeat and curing your cold, Health Services now wants to help you orgasm — if you’re female, that is. An information page on female orgasm is in progress and should be posted on the Health Education Web site in a couple of weeks, said Naomi Ninneman, health educator and project coordinator. “It’s a piece of sexual health that will help develop comfort and familiarity with your body,” Ninneman said. “We want sex to be a positive experience.” Frequent visits from students concerned about not being able to attain the “big O” prompted the

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Students may have to pay for set-top boxes By Emmy Liss Senior Staff Writer

The future of cable on campus is filled with static. The campus’ cable infrastructure is in a “vast state of decay and has exceeded its usefulness,” said Richard Bova, senior associate dean of residential life. The system will be turned off completely at the end of the academic year. Students who would like to watch shows on a television set instead of on a computer may have to pay for set-top boxes

continued on page 4

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after the change. The cable television system in dormitories was installed in 1980, according to Timothy Wells, director of telecommunications and network technology for Computing and Information Services. “At the time, it was state of the art,” he said. “In the ’80s they probably thought, ‘Gee, this will last forever.’” Fixing the current system — the legacy system, Bova calls it — would incur astronomical costs. The cables running across campus have physically eroded, and the accompanying electronic equipment is more than 25 years old, Wells said. Wells’s staff continued on page 4

Donald Kendall / Herald

Zipcar has changed its policy to allow Brown students as young as 18 to rent its cars.

METRO

continued on page 7

Aging cable TV system to be turned off after this year

project, Ninneman added. The Web site was compiled through the efforts of a variety of people, including students who had come to Health Ser vices with questions about climaxing and were contacted by staff members to help with the project, Ninneman said. She added that the site will be made public sometime this fall after revisions are complete. Allie Wollner ’10, a columnist for post-, The Herald’s weekly arts and culture magazine, and a member of an independent study on female orgasms, was sent a draft of the page. Wollner, who has been in con-

POSTSits down with Brown’s rock-star professors and learns to be happy

of the issue,” said Director of Health Education Frances Mantak. “It’s the most underreported crime across the country and across campuses.” “Anytime you see an increase in reporting,” she said, “it’s a positive thing that people came forward.” Glover’s position was created last year to provide more resources to victims of sexual assault. The work of the student-led Sexual Assault Task Force — which resulted in the announcement of a peer education program, a 24-hour campus sexual assault hotline and other resources — could have prompted more students to report sexual offenses last year, said Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services Margaret Klawunn. Most studies suggest that about 5 percent of college women will be victims of completed or attempted sexual assault each year, and fewer

ris k y b u si n ess ?

Health Services working to help some reach the ‘big O’ By Alexandra Ulmer Staf f Writer

Since 1866, Daily Since 1891

breaking the chains Waterfire marks 200 years since the abolition of slavery at Saturday’s lighting

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CAMPUS NEWS

sust-’A’-inable Brown gets top grades for environmental responsibility from a nonprofit group

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

12 SPORTS

See Metro, Page 3 turn for the better The field hockey team comes up with a big win to stanch a long losing streak

News tips: herald@browndailyherald.com


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