Thursday, February 7, 2013

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Daily

Herald

the Brown

vol. cxlviii, no. 12

INSIDE

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Check out next week’s Valentine’s Day Issue

Gun violence Rhode Island responds to Sandy Hook shootings Page 11

Just eat it Corvese ’15 defends dining halls and city restaurants

today

27 / 22

State leaders confront gun violence following shootings

Debates on gun control, school safety, mental health and gun research emerge in Rhode Island By Adam Toobin

Pages 4-9

tomorrow

34 / 22

since 1891

thursday, february 7, 2013

City & State Editor

The Dec. 14 murder of 20 first graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. shook the nation and ignited debates about how best to ensure no such tragedy occurs again. In Rhode Island, the discourse began immediately as parents clamored for safer schools, residents questioned why military-style weapons are available to the public and health professionals warned that the state’s mental health system was allowing people who need help to become a risk to themselves and to others.

The Herald’s spread today investigates some of the conversations that arose in the city, state and on campus in reaction to the Newtown shootings. Rhode Island legislators have expressed interest in banning military-style assault weapons. The state’s congressional delegation — two representatives and two senators — have all pushed for additional national controls on firearm access. Rhode Island’s mental health care system — once the envy of the nation — has fallen into disrepair, and attempts at reformation and restoration are underway. Schools are reviewing their safety protocols with a focus on limiting casualties should a violent intruder threaten student safety. And President Obama’s executive order to increase federal funding for gun research has ignited hope on College Hill about renewed investigation of gun violence in the country. / / Gun violence spread pages 4-9

Sc h o o l S a f e t y

Herald File Photo

Among the conversations started in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting was a new proposal for school safety plans.

Corporation to discuss tuition, financial aid Bill would The agenda will also legalize feature strategic planning and a proposed public health school marijuana in R.I. By Mathias Heller and Eli Okun University News Editors

Herald file photo

The Corporation will meet for the second time since Paxson’s inauguration and will discuss campus planning and technology-related issues.

The Corporation will address a host of priorities when it meets this weekend, including potential tuition and financial aid increases and the approval of the annual budget, said Russell Carey, executive vice president for planning and policy. The meeting will mark the second time the Corporation — the University’s highest governing body — has convened since President Christina Paxson assumed office last summer. The Corporation will assemble as a group Saturday morning, at which point

members are expected to vote on the creation of a school of public health. The faculty voted to recommend establishing a separate public health school last fall. If approved by the Corporation, the program in public health would apply to the Council on Education for Public Health for accreditation this year. As in past years, the Corporation will review a report from the University Resources Committee to consider whether and by how much to increase tuition for the next academic year, and members will discuss how much money to allot to financial aid. Carey said he cannot predict what the Corporation will decide regarding tuition and fee increases. The Corporation will also address the preliminary recommendations announced in interim reports released last month by Paxson’s six strategic planning / / Corporation page 2 commit-

Dual degree students forge their own paths Administrators discuss the program’s developments since it began five years ago By Loren Dowd Contributing writer

Bringing together concentrations as varied as haute couture and computing, the first class of Brown-RISD Dual Degree program students will be graduating this May. After five years, these students will leave College Hill this spring with both a Bachelor of Arts degree from Brown and a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from RISD. The program has been changing ever since this year’s senior class arrived in 2008 , and its feedback has contributed to the program’s evolution, administrators said. “I think we’ve been learning a lot

feature

from this first class,” said Michele Zager, the dual degree advising assistant. “They’ve really had the opportunity to sculpt the program.” Students reside at RISD for the first year while they take foundation classes, but in the past few years, they have also been able to take one class at Brown — usually a first-year seminar. Students transition to Brown residence halls for the second year, though they take at least one RISD studio class during this time. For the last three years of the program, students move between the two schools. Seniors will complete independent study projects that culminate in capstone presentations. While this is the first official class of the dual degree program, these students are not the first to complete two degrees from both schools. Before the program’s creation, several students were already pursuing degrees at Brown and RISD by “transferring in and out” of both / / Dual page 3 schools, said

Erik Olson / Herald

The first class of students will graduate from the Brown-RISD Dual Degree program this May, receiving a B.A. from Brown and a B.F.A. from RISD.

Proponents say the state could save money on law enforcement and raise revenue from sales taxes By Emily boney Senior staff Writer

State Rep. Edith Ajello, D-Providence announced a bill at a press conference yesterday that would legalize marijuana for retail and consumption by adults 21 years and older and provide for taxing and regulating the substance. Ajello introduced the bill to the Rhode Island House of Representatives and was joined yesterday by State Sen. Donna Nesselbush ’84, D-Pawtucket, a sponsor of the bill in the Senate. “People seem to be concerned about their children,” Ajello said at the press conference, noting constituents’ concerns that her bill would make access to marijuana easier. But Ajello said the bill aims to do the opposite and keep the drug out of the hands of young people. Currently, four out of five high school seniors report that marijuana is easy to acquire, Nesselbush said at the press conference. “People who are selling it have no compunction,” Nesselbush said. Both Ajello and Nesselbush said prohibition of marijuana was “ineffective,” resulting in criminal profits and easy access to the drug for minors and students. “Public officials are compelled to act,” Nesselbush said. Law enforcement officials spend far too much en/ / Pot page 7

city & state


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