Daily
the Brown
vol. cxlviii, no. 5
INSIDE
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Heat wave
Irregular dorm heating ignites continued complaints
The former power plant, listed as endangered, has changed hands frequently in recent years By Katie lamb
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StyleWeek NE promises week of innovative design Page 7
Let’s talk Enriquez ’16 totes the value of public speaking today
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tomorrow
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since 1891
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
U. considers purchase of historic Jewelry District site
Senior Staff WRiter
Fashion fix
Herald
The vacant historical building known as the Dynamo House, located in the Jewelry District, has become the subject of renewed speculation as government and local university officials push to redevelop the neighborhood into a hub of science, technology and research. The University has “shown interest in (purchasing the Dynamo House), but nothing definite,” said Edward Wing, dean of medicine and biological sciences. Built as a power plant in 1912, the Dynamo House has seen potential tenants fall through since it was sold to the Heritage Harbor Museum in 1995
— a Dynamo LLC development project failed in 2007 and plans to use the space for a Rhode Island history museum dissolved in 2008. After years without a stable tenant, the building was placed on the Providence Preservation Society’s “Ten Most Endangered Properties List” last June. Dynamo LLC still owns the property, but the company is not using the space. The building’s features — including “arched windows and thick brick walls,” the New York Times reported, as well as an unconventional layout — and large amount of open space make it “awkward for a regular office,” said Colin Kane, chairman of the I-195 Redevelopment District Commission. A new tenant would need to be creative to use the space functionally, he said. To take on the building would be “essentially starting from scratch,” Kane said, since the building’s large masonry shell / / Historic page 2
Courtesy of tim hiebert
The Dynamo House poses challenges and opportunities to those looking to invest in Jewelry District.
Rep. seeks to pass term-limit legislation While unlikely to become law, resolution sparks discussion in General Assembly By will fesperman Contributing writer
A state representative introduced a joint resolution to the House Judiciary Committee Jan. 17 that would impose a three-term limit on state lawmakers in the General Assembly and lengthen the span of a term from two years to four years. If adopted by both houses, the resolution, introduced by Rep. John Lombardi, D-Providence, would go before Rhode Island voters in 2014. A three-term limit would cycle out older legislators who might become ineffective the longer they serve, Lombardi said. Extensive experience in the General Assembly “doesn’t necessarily mean that they’re qualified,” he added.
Newly elected members may bring fresh ideas and approach certain problems differently, Lombardi said. “There’s much to be said about changing the guard (and) reviewing things through different eyes,” he added. Term limits could also create a legislature that better reflects the changing demographics of Rhode Island by preventing the continuous reelection of traditional candidates, Lombardi said. He said his 26 years on the Providence City Council influenced his support for term limits. Lombardi was in office when the City Council suggested term limits for the mayor and council members following an FBI investigation into corruption in city hall in the 1990s, he said. Providence voters approved the council’s measures in 2006.
Sen. Dawson Hodgson, R-North Kingstown, proposed similar legislation in the General Assembly last year to limit state legislators to eight years in office. Hodgson’s resolution was discussed in the Senate Judiciary Committee but never came up for a vote. “There was no overtly hostile reaction,” Hodgson said, but “there was also not a consensus that term limits were needed.” Richard Niemi, professor of political science at the University of Rochester, said he thinks term limits do more harm than good. “It takes some time to build up expertise on various topics,” he said. “Legislatures are well served by having people who actually know what they’re talking about.” Fifteen states currently have laws imposing term limits, the majority of which were passed in the early 1990s by voter referenda. In six states, the
legislature or state Supreme Court have recently repealed term limits from the 1990s. Niemi said research shows legislature composition is not drastically affected by the introduction of term limits. Legislatures that are predominately white or male before term limits are introduced may experience slight changes in membership when the limits are implemented, he said, but only “in the short run.” The House Judiciary Committee must approve Lombardi’s bill before it can be voted upon by the full House. Rep. Edith Ajello, D-Providence, chairperson of the judiciary committee, refused to comment on whether she would support Lombardi’s bill. “The ballot box is really the most effective term limit,” she said. Niemi said the relatively liberal term limits in Lombardi’s resolution could improve / / Limit page 3
Positions in foreign language instruction expected to rise Increase points to postsecondary awareness of the pertinence of globalization By Jasmine Fuller Staff Writer
The Modern Language Association predicted the number of 2012-13 job openings in postsecondary foreign language instruction will exceed comparable English positions for the first time in 18 years, according to the association’s December Job Information List. The report predicted the number of foreign language openings will be 10.5 percent higher than in the previous year, while the number of English positions will decrease by 3.6 percent. The number of foreign language and English positions has been increasing since the 2010-11 academic year, after decreasing for the three
years prior, according to the report. The MLA’s prediction indicates the number of English positions will level off while the number of foreign language positions should continue to climb this year. Most MLA openings in the past three years have been listed after the December report is issued. The increase in foreign language jobs at universities is an indication “that institutions recognize the importance of multilingualism in students’ educations,” the report states. “We’re a little agoraphobic as a country, so it’s a positive prospect that the MLA predictions suggests a potential shift toward greater globalization,” said Stephen Foley ’74 P’04 P’07, department director of under-
graduate studies and associate professor of English. But he added, “I don’t think we could make any predictions about long-term trends until we have more data.” Karen Newman, professor of comparative literature, also said more data would be necessary to determine “if this is an ongoing trend or a blip.” But in response to “globalization of economic and financial markets,” there exists a growing consensus that university students should study multiple languages, she said. Language course enrollment at Brown increased by approximately 8 percent between 2000 and 2012, wrote Elsa Amanatidou, director of the Center for Language Studies and senior lecturer in classics, in an email to The Herald. French, Spanish, Chinese, Italian and Arabic are the five most frequently studied languages at
Brown, she wrote. Students at the University “want to become not just translingual, but transcultural in their experience,” Amanatidou said. “The students at Brown are not ignoring the fact that we live in a global society,” she said. “They actually give the word ‘global citizen’ its rightful meaning.” The MLA data does not necessarily indicate there is a greater postsecondary interest in foreign literature or culture, Amanatidou said. Graduate students “are very well aware that they may be doing a PhD in literature, in French or in Spanish, but it is very likely that their first job will be teaching the language in a university or high school,” she said. The increase in foreign language position offerings “may not mean these people are go/ / Jobs page 2
Providence College ups payments to city New multimillion-dollar deal with Providence answers mayor’s call for aid from local nonprofits By ADAM HOFFMAN Contributing writer
Providence College announced it will pay $3.84 million to the city in additional funds over the next 10 years, joining several other local tax-exempt institutions that provide voluntary aid to help ameliorate Providence’s financial strife. The private school has agreed to contribute $1 million of the total sum upon final approval of the deal by the City Council, and the new payments will supplement the $264,000 the school has been giving annually since 2003. Upon taking office, Mayor Angel Taveras encountered a $110 million structural deficit, and in February 2012 asked the city’s major non-profits — including Brown — to collectively contribute an additional $7.1 million annually to help rescue the city from potential bankruptcy. After months of heated negotiations, the University agreed last May to contribute an additional $3.9 million in 2012 for a total $31.5 million over 11 years. The agreement roughly doubled the University’s annual payments to the city, increasing them from $4 million to $7.9 million. Brown’s payments amount to about 1.2 percent of its $663 million annual operating budget. Providence College’s $580,000 annual contribution makes up .3 percent of its $160 million budget. / / Pledge page 2 Both aca-