Thursday, October 29, 2009

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Daily Herald the Brown

vol. cxliv, no. 95 | Thursday, October 29, 2009 | Serving the community daily since 1891

Living next door, but a world apart

Watson program facing elimination

By Anne Speyer Senior Staf f Writer

It can be easy to forget while hurr ying from class to class that not ever yone on College Hill is a student. But Providence is not just a college town, and the streets surrounding Brown are filled with people who have long ago ceased to lead the student life. Though many of Brown’s neighbors enjoy living near a university campus, the dramatic differences in lifestyle can lead to some tensions, especially when Brown undergraduates live side-by-side with local residents in of f-campus houses. There are currently 1,263 students living off campus, approximately 900 seniors and 300 juniors, according to Richard Bova, senior associate dean of residential and dining ser vices, and many of them share neighborhoods — and even buildings — with East Side residents. “In general, our relationship with the neighbors is pretty

By Claire Peracchio Contributing Writer

town/brown

The Herald examines Brown’s multifaceted relationship with the city it calls home.

Fourth in a five-part series.

good,” said Tim Leshan, director of government relations and community affairs. “But when there are issues, it can get strained.” Love thy neighbors Brown is an important presence on the East Side, and some homeowners say the prospect of

Kim Perley / Herald

Williams Street, a popular area for off-campus housing, is often a nexus of town-gown relations, both positive and negative.

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Flu-like illnesses abate, but worst may be on the way By Suzannah Weiss Senior Staf f Writer

The frequency of influenza-like illnesses on campus has dropped since it hit a peak in late September, but Health Ser vices Director Ed Wheeler said this improvement is most likely “the calm before the storm.” Over two-thirds of the 487 ILIs reported to Health Services since

Sept. 1 occurred last month. But the increase in overall cases in Rhode Island likely indicates that cases at Brown have not subsided for good, Wheeler said. According to a report on the Center for Disease Control and Prevention Web site, New England has been seeing an increase in ILI patients over the past week. “It would be pretty naive for us to think that we’re not going

to get it,” Wheeler said of the current wave of ILIs hitting the state. “Cases in Rhode Island are generally starting to have an uptick and I’m sure we’ll follow them.” Of the 28 students tested for the H1N1 virus, Wheeler said, 12 tested positive, with the majority of positive results in October. Only one student has been hospitalized for an ILI this fall, he said. “So far we’ve been lucky.

It has been relatively mild.” Wheeler said Brown’s H1N1 task force, which meets ever y other week and includes representatives from the University and the Rhode Island Department of Health, discussed last week how to prepare for a potential rise in swine flu and other ILIs. The state most likely will

An almost decade-old program that brings scholars from developing nations to the Watson Institute is in danger of ending after this semester if it does not find future funding. The Watson Institute Scholars of the Environment come to Brown for one semester to contribute to dialogue on sustainability and gain the knowledge and essential connections needed to improve conditions in their home countries. But the program’s funding cycle ends this year, and the University is searching for grant money or donations that would allow it to continue. Launched in 2001, the environmental scholars program began with a $1.2 million grant from the Henry Luce Foundation, a philanthropic organization devoted to “international understanding,” according to its Web site. That money sustained the program’s first four-year cycle, but the Luce Foundation is “not inviting new proposals” for environmental initiatives as of 2007. When the initial funds ran out, it took the University two years to secure another grant from the Luce Foundation, this time with a special land-use focus, said Laura Sadovnikoff, project manager for Watson. This second grant funded the 2007 group of scholars and was slated to cover a three-year cycle ending this semester.

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Activities fee increase proposed to UCS By Kyla Wilkes Senior Staf f Writer

inside

A resolution proposed to the Undergraduate Council of Students last night would seek to raise the student activities fee by $8. Brady Wyrtzen ’11, student activities chair for UCS, presented the resolution to the full council at Wednesday’s UCS general body meeting. The increase would bring the student activities fee to a yearly total of $178. This increase would not affect student tuition, Wyrtzen

News.....1-5 Metro.....6 Spor ts...7-8 Editorial..10 Opinion...11 Today........12

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said, just the portion of student tuition allocated to student activities. The fee hike is necessitated by the growing number of student groups on campus, rising salaries of public safety officers and increasing costs for event ser vices and staffing, according to Wyrtzen. Wyrtzen said the current financial crisis also played a factor in his decisions. continued on page 3

Claire Huang / Herald

The increase proposed to UCS last night would bring the student activity fee to $178.

Metro, 6

Sports, 7

Opinions, 11

Unfinished business The General Assembly meets for the first day of a special session

friars ICED Women’s ice hockey tops Providence College to claim the Mayor’s Cup

BETTER vibrations Campus needs a concert hall, writes Adrienne Langlois ’10

195 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island

herald@browndailyherald.com


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Thursday, October 29, 2009 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu