Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Page 1

Daily

the Brown

vol. cxlvi, no. 5

Herald

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Since 1891

Students safe after evacuation

R.I. officials confront homelessness By michael Danielewicz Contributing Writer

By Nicole Boucher News Editor

The two Brown students studying abroad in Alexandria, Egypt through a Middlebury College program are safe after being evacuated from Alexandria’s Borg el Arab airport to Prague late Monday night. Program administrators decided to pull participating students, including Michael Dawkins ’12 and Amanda Labora ’12, out of Egypt due to ongoing civilian protests against President Hosni Mubarak. All the students on the program — a Brown-approved alternate study-abroad program — are safe and accounted for, though likely a bit “tired and anxious,” said Michael Geisler, vice president for language schools, schools abroad and graduate programs at Middlebury. Labora’s mother, Deborah WhiteLabora, told local NBC news program WHDH-TV Jan. 31 that she spoke to her daughter last weekend. “She said, ‘We’re not safe here. We’re not safe,’” White-Labora said in the television report. “It was pretty scary to hear that and to hear for the first time the fear in her voice.” Though Middlebury initially planned to use a transport provider that would fly the students through Athens, the program also had a back-up plan in place to connect through Prague if the option would continued on page 3

status as a defendant in the case will also be formally discussed. Going to court over swords is not a matter in which the University is lacking experience. In 1993, Brown sued the estate of John Donelan Jr. for the return of another of Hawkins’ presentation swords — also believed to have been stolen in the mid-1970s — and won on the premise that Donelan was not a “good value purchaser” of the relic. Peter Harrington, the presentday curator of the Brown military collection at the John Hay Library, said he has never been directly responsible for the Hawkins collections nor has he seen either of the swords. An Annmary Brown Memorial curator watched over the relics until the University de-

As temperatures plummeted during the month of January, Rhode Island policymakers turned their attention to the state’s homeless population. According to a report released by the National Alliance to End Homelessness, the homeless population in Rhode Island increased 34 percent between 2008 and 2009. The number of people living with friends and family as a result of economic problems increased 89 percent, the report found. Legislators at the State House held a series of hearings last month on homelessness in the state. Sen. John Tassoni, D-Smithfield, North Smithfield, chairman of the Committee on Housing and Municipal Government, visited the Harrington Hall shelter in Cranston prior to the hearings, where he said he did not “particularly care for” some things he saw there. Tassoni said some aspects of life at Harrington Hall were “inhumane.” The 88 men who sleep there at night stay in one large, open room and do not have access to meals or adequate bathroom facilities in the shelter, he said. Tassoni said he intends to have some Harrington Hall residents speak at the next hearing, to be held today. Tassoni proposed closing Harrington Hall and housing the men who stay there in a building formerly used as the state’s correctional facility for juveniles. “Those guys have to line up at three in the afternoon” to get a place in the shelter, Tassoni said. “That’s not America,” he said, adding that he believed past policymakers prioritized “pet projects” over the well-being of the state’s homeless population. Homelessness is also a key issue for Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I. Reed announced Jan. 19 that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development would provide $4.7 million to 40 homeless assistance programs in Rhode Island. Since 2000, federal grants have brought more than $51 million to state homelessness programs. With sub-zero temperatures in mid-January, shelters such as Crossroads in Providence “saw more people coming in for emergency shelter than we have in months,” said Karen Santilli, vice president of marketing and development for Crossroads. Other emergency shelters in the city are

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Hilary Rosenthal / Herald

Professor Melani Cammett discussed the political unrest in Egypt and Tunisia during Monday’s forum at the Watson Institute.

Watson panel addresses Middle East protests By Caroline Flanagan Contributing Writer

Panelists attributed the ongoing protests in Egypt and Tunisia to oppressive living conditions and changing demographics at a forum held Monday by the Watson Institute for International Studies. “The usual suspects are not the ones who have been organizing the protests,” said panelist Melani Cammett, associate professor of political science and director of the Middle East studies program. “It’s these youth-based groups.” The four speakers at the forum — Cammett, Interim Joukowsky Family Librarian for Middle Eastern Studies Ian Straughn, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Cogut Center for the Humanities Shiva Balaghi and Assistant Professor of Archaeology Laurel Bestock — sought to pinpoint the central reasons behind the

protests. Michael Kennedy, director of the Watson Institute, served as the moderator for the discussion. Both Cammett and Straughn identified poverty as one of the main catalysts of the protests. “Poverty is a huge issue,” Cammett said. “Half of Egypt is living at or below the poverty threshold.” Straughn emphasized the severity of inflation in Egypt, mentioning that many Egyptians can barely afford bread. Poverty is even worse in Tunisia, Cammett added. But Cammett stressed that “economic reasons alone do not explain why protests erupt.” She and Straughn said corruption and unemployment also incited the protests. “In both Tunisia and Egypt, there were opposition groups that were incredibly repressed, especially in Tunisia,” Cammett said. Because Tunisia is less well-known

in America, many people were not aware of the repression, she added. Many Tunisians did not even know about the extent of the repression, Balaghi said, but “Wikileaks made people aware of specific incidents and was one of the triggers of the protests.” Unemployment is another major issue in both countries. Straughn said many protests in Tunisia were instigated by young people. “Even skilled university graduates with many degrees have no opportunities — only those with connections get jobs,” he said, adding that the dearth of opportunities has contributed to a “brain drain.” “Many professionals who had the potential to play a big part in developing the country left to seek opportunities elsewhere,” he said. The speakers also emphasized continued on page 2

By Amy Rasmussen Senior Staff Writer

inside

In pursuit of a priceless relic that has been missing for more than 30 years, the University is suing the city of Newport News, Va. and noted Civil War collectors Donald and Toni Tharpe for the return of a Tiffany and Company silver presentation sword and ornamental scabbard. The ceremonial sword, presented to Col. Rush Hawkins at the end of the Civil War, is referred to in the suit as a “unique and very valuable artifact” that is part of the Annmary Brown Memorial collection. The sword has been missing from the University since it was stolen in the mid-1970s. The suit, which was filed Jan. 6 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of

news....................2-3 CITY & State.........5 editorial..............6 Opinions...............7 SPORTS....................8

Courtesy of University archives Col. Rush Hawkins had two of his swords stolen from Brown in the 1970s.

Virginia, asks for the University to be immediately recognized as the true owner of the sword and its accompanying scabbard. According to the suit, Brown is still in possession of the sword’s matching Tiffany presentation box. Earlier in 2010, the University was notified by an unnamed source that the sword had been loaned by its current owners to the

New station Rail will connect North Kingstown and other cities

City & state, 5

Lee Hall Mansion — a museum run by the city of Newport News. According to the suit, the blade was returned to the Tharpes Dec. 7. The defendants have since transferred the sword to Day and Meyer, a New York-based warehouse for art. Because the defendants moved the sword so quickly, U.S. District Judge Robert Doumar ordered a 60-day extension to the restraining order that prevents the Tharpes from selling or transferring the artifact. A status conference — a pretrial meeting between the judge and lawyers from both sides — has been set for Feb. 10, according to Beverly Ledbetter, vice president and general counsel. Details of the University’s past attempts to locate the sword will not be disclosed until the next court date, Ledbetter said. At that point, Newport News’

Wikileaked Information leaks promote accountability

Opinions, 7

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U. sues Newport News over stolen sword

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