Daily Herald the Brown
vol. cxlv, no. 38 | Tuesday, March 23, 2010 | Serving the community daily since 1891
news in brief
U. announces 60 staff layoffs
A z tec madness
Spring Weekend tickets tomorrow Tickets for this year’s Spring Weekend concerts featuring Snoop Dogg and MGMT will be available Wednesday morning at 8 a.m. on Brown Student Agency’s online store at http://bsa.brown.edu, according to Abigail Schreiber ’11, Brown Concert Agency’s hospitality chair. Tickets will cost $18 for each concert for Brown and Rhode Island School of Design students, who will be allowed to purchase up to two tickets per show. BSA will sell 3,000 tickets for each concert on Wednesday. Currently, BSA can only sell tickets up to the capacity of Meehan Auditorium. Weather permitting, both concerts will be held on the Main Green, and BSA will sell 1,500 more tickets on April 22, the Thursday before the concerts. Schreiber said she does not expect students to encounter any problems on BSA’s Web site when purchasing tickets, despite the expected high traffic. Unlike last year, reducedprice packages will not be available. According to Schreiber this is partly to allow for a portion of tickets to be offered at reduced prices for students who qualify for financial aid. — Ana Alvarez
By Alex Bell Senior Staff Writer
the Moose will be $200,000. But it will increase to $500,000 if he gets called up to the NHL. He will receive half of the $200,000 signing bonus this year and half of it next season. Volpatti — who finished his senior season Saturday — led the Bears with 17 goals this year, including a team-high six power-play and three game-winning goals. He also set the Brown record for penalty minutes in a season, reaching 115 minutes on a game misconduct Saturday. The signing didn’t come as a surprise. Head Coach Brendan Whittet ’94 predicted it a month and a half ago in an interview with
The University will lay off approximately 60 staff members in June, administrators announced to employees via e-mail message Monday morning. This figure does not include the 139 staff members who have opted for voluntary early retirement packages. Executive Vice President for Finance and Administration Beppie Huidekoper said in an interview with The Herald shortly after the e-mail was sent out that the elimination of these currently filled positions was based on the February report from the Organizational Review Committee. The committee was tasked with finding $14 million of savings in Brown’s budget for the 2010–11 fiscal year. “As we have stressed throughout this process, in addition to improving efficiencies while protecting our academic programs and student life experiences, the plans are focused on limiting the number of layoffs that will become effective on July 1, 2010 and providing support for those whose jobs are being eliminated,” Provost David Kertzer ’69 P’95 P’98 and Huidekoper wrote in their e-mail to employees. According to the e-mail, these employees’ severance packages will provide four weeks of compensation for every year worked at Brown, up to 40 weeks. The packages will also provide health coverage during the severance period. The message emphasized services the University will provide to the employees whose positions are being eliminated, including training programs, career counseling, financial planning, outplacement support and “placement wherever possible in alternative positions at Brown.” Though the review committee report recommended the elimination of certain positions, the University will also create some new jobs and merge other existing positions. Some positions vacated by retirees will be refilled. Huidekoper said the training programs would not be geared toward obtaining other jobs at Brown, but the skills employees could learn through them would be helpful to finding future employment. She said she cannot be certain yet how many of the 60 terminated employees will seek or obtain alternative positions at Brown. “We want to make sure the individuals are fully supported,” Huidekoper told The Herald. Huidekoper said last year’s 31 terminated employees were offered similar outplacement and support
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Fred Milgrim / Herald
Shirtless San Diego State alums rallied at the Dunk during last week’s March Madness. See story on page 5.
Senate panel endorses pot decriminalization By Mark Raymond Staff Writer
A commission studying marijuana policy in Rhode Island recommended last week that the state legislature decriminalize possession of marijuana in small amounts. The Special Senate Commission to Study the Prohibition of Marijuana, which was composed of experts in relevant fields — including Professor of Economics Glenn Loury — released its final report, which outlined various benefits of decriminalization for the state, earlier this month. The commission found that decriminalization of under an ounce of marijuana would create “significant” savings for the state through lower administrative costs and fewer arrests for minor cases of possession. The report states savings would
accrue to agencies such as the Rhode Island Department of Corrections and the Office of the Public Defender. A report published by OpenDoors, a Rhode Island organization that works on behalf of released convicts, estimates the change will create $12.7 million in savings for the state. But others have projected more
METRO modest savings. Rep. John G. Edwards, D-Tiverton and Portsmouth, told The Herald last month that he believed decriminalization would save the state between $250,000 and $2 million annually. “It would make what is already close to true de facto,” said commission member Jeffrey Miron, a senior lecturer in economics at Harvard and the director of undergraduate studies.
“People found with small amounts of marijuana are rarely incarcerated under the current system.” Miron, a supporter of not only decriminalization but full legalization of marijuana, said, “Painting this as a panacea for state budgets is a fairy tale.” But, he added, “the burden of proof should be on the government when the government wants to infringe on what people can do.” Col. Joseph Moran, Central Falls chief of police and president of the Rhode Island Police Chiefs’ Association, also said the current system does not result in as many marijuana-related incarcerations as some may think. Moran said he opposes decriminalizing marijuana. “Many of the people in jail for marijuana are there for violating procontinued on page 4
Volpatti ’10 signed by Vancouver Canucks By Dan Alexander Sports Editor
Jonathan Bateman / Herald
inside
Aaron Volpatti ’10 is being vetted by the NHL’s Vancouver Canucks.
News.....1–3 Metro.....4–5 Editorial.....6 Opinion.....7 Today........8
www.browndailyherald.com
The NHL’s Vancouver Canucks signed tri-captain Aaron Volpatti ’10 to a two-year, $400,000 contract with a $200,000 signing bonus Monday, fulfilling Volpatti’s lifelong dream of playing for the team he rooted for as a child. “It’s kind of surreal still,” Volpatti said. “It will probably sink in tomorrow when I fly out to Vancouver and meet everyone and Wednesday night when I’m watching the game with all of the general managers.” Volpatti will begin his career with the Manitoba Moose, an American Hockey League team affiliated with the Canucks. His season salary with
Feature, 2
Metro, 5
Opinions, 7
title on the table The table tennis team competes for a national title next month
money madness Basketball’s biggest month means big bucks for Providence
spring apathy Ethan Tobias ’12 calls to students to get out of the sun and into action
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