Daily Herald the Brown
vol. cxliv, no. 89 | Wednesday, October 21, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891
For city and U., a political standoff By Lauren Fedor Senior Staff Writer
Brown has long enjoyed an enviable position in Rhode Island politics, with numerous alums holding some of the state’s highest elected offices. But when one of Brown’s most prominent alums, Providence Mayor David Cicilline ’83, announced earlier this year that he wanted to levy not one, but two new taxes on the city’s private universities, the University found itself at odds with the city it calls home. Administrators spoke out against the proposed legislation, stressing the University’s long-standing economic and cultural contributions to both the city and state. As the seventh-largest employer in the state, the University employs over 4,200 local residents, University officials contended. Student spending alone generates over $54 million in statewide economic output. And last fiscal year, Brown paid $3.3 million to Providence in property taxes and voluntary payments, they said. But Cicilline insisted that Providence — a municipality whose annual operating budget is about $140 million smaller than Brown’s — needed the cash. Though the two tax bills have stalled in the Rhode Island General Assembly, the arguments over taxation continue, tainting Brown’s relationship with state and local
By Ashley Aydin Contributing Writer
Kim Perley / Herald
This structure in the Jewelry District will soon house a new Medical Education Building. Brown wants to acquire more property downtown to complement it, but disagreements with the city have complicated the effort.
lawmakers. Most recently, the tax debate has taken a central role in discussions as the University considers whether to expand into the Jewelry District downtown. In recent interviews, Brown administrators said Cicilline’s tax initiatives would make land acquisition for the University all but impossible in coming years. Looking to the Jewelry District Brown has long had its eye on three parcels of land that will be
Latest Soldiers Arch facelift completed BY Max Godnick Contributing Writer
inside
Two weeks of construction on Soldier’s Arch concluded late last week after an $80,000 restoration of the campus landmark. Soldiers Arch, which was dedicated in 1921 as a memorial to the 42 Brown alums and faculty who died in World War I, had seen excessive deterioration on its right side recently, said Stephen Maiorisi, vice president of Facilities Management. “Concrete tiles engraved with the names of the deceased individuals had been falling off of the arch due to weathering,” Maiorisi said. The project had been in the early planning stages since May, with construction starting earlier this month. “The bottom portion of (the arch) had deteriorated to the point
News.....1-2 Spor ts.....3 Editorial....6 Opinion.....7 Today.........8
www.browndailyherald.com
Prof., alum named finalists for Book Award
sold as part of the state’s ongoing “Iway” project to relocate the junction of I-95 and I-195 downtown. The Iway project will be complete — and more than 20 parcels of reclaimed land will be ready for use — by the end of 2012, according to the Rhode Island Department of Transportation’s Web site. The University has expressed interest in four acres in the city’s Jewelry District because it already continued on page 5
town/brown
The Herald examines Brown’s multifaceted relationship with the city it calls home.
First in a five-part series.
Professor of Literary Arts Keith Waldrop and Deborah Heiligman ’80 are among the finalists for the National Book Award, the National Book Foundation announced last Friday. Waldrop’s “Transcendental Studies: A Trilogy” was nominated in the poetry category, and Heiligman’s “Charles and Emma: The Darwins’ Leap of Faith” was nominated in the young people’s literature category. The National Book Award is one of the most prestigious nationwide prizes for literature. The foundation judges books nominated in four categories: fiction, nonfiction, poetry and young people’s literature. Waldrop has been teaching at Brown since 1968. He was a 1969 National Book Award finalist for the poetry category for his “A Windmill Near Calvary.” Waldrop’s nominated collection includes three poem sequences: “Shipwreck in Haven,” “Falling in Love through Description” and “The Plummet of Vitruvius.” The sequences are experimental collages that he created by pulling language from outside texts, he said. continued on page 2
Profs to FacMan: Can you hear us now? By Emily Kirkland Contributing Writer
where you couldn’t see the names,” said Michael Guglielmo, assistant director of project management who oversaw the Soldiers Arch restoration. Only the right side of the arch was repaired in the project, but Guglielmo expects that the left side will eventually require similar restoration if deterioration occurs again. “One side could deteriorate a lot faster, depending on the stone,” Guglielmo said. “You can’t control how nature responds to these stones or how they react to weather.” This was the second time within the last year that Soldiers Arch has required restoration. In November 2008, Facilities Management restored masonry and cleaned the arch. The project redirected masonry joints connecting the stones and repaired and reset stones as needed.
A T-Mobile cell phone tower installed on the roof of Barus and Holley has angered some engineering and physics professors concerned about the tower’s impact on sensitive research equipment used in the building. According to Professor of Engineering William Patterson, faculty members are concerned that radiation from the tower, which was installed late last spring and has been in operation for several months, might interfere with powerful but sensitive measurement equipment. No problems have been reported, Patterson said, but problems may still arise in the future, he added. In the early 1990s, he said, a radio transmitter on top of the Sciences Library wrought havoc on two experiments, leaving the faculty worried about a repeat of the problem. Tim Wells, director of telecommunications and network technology for Computing and Information Services,
Nick Sinnott-Armstrong / Herald
Professors are concerned about possible interactions between T-Mobile’s new cell tower and research equipment in Barus and Holley.
said CIS and Facilities Management had not considered the impact on research when they initially approved the cell phone tower. “We did miss that we were installing it in a research facility,” he said. Sherief Reda, an assistant professor of engineering who works in
Barus and Holley, said faculty members were unaware of the project until after construction began, so they were unable to voice concerns about the project until after it had already been approved. continued on page 2
News, 2
Sports, 3
Opinions, 7
all dried up A leaky pipe turned out to be the culprit in Salomon 101’s indoor rain
Men’s CreW places 5th Crew teams compete in international Championship Eights
Cultivating the mind Brian Judge ’11 defends the humanities
195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island
herald@browndailyherald.com