Tuesday, April 16, 2013

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Daily

Herald

THE BROWN

vol. cxlviii, no. 52

INSIDE

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Senior panel

Students exhibit capstones at Theories in Action

NO U. STUDENTS REPORTED INJURED IN EXPLOSION At least 20 students and alums attended the Boston Marathon Monday By ALEXANDRA MACFARLANE AND SARAH PERELMAN UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR

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Vacated space

City officials debate the fate of “Superman” building

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Gun control

Firearm legislation moves to R.I. General Assembly today

61 / 51

tomorrow

65 / 54

since 1891

TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 2013

AND SENIOR STAFF WRITER

No Brown students were reported injured after two bombs exploded by the Boston Marathon’s finish line around 2:50 p.m. yesterday, though at least 20 students and alums attended the event. Three people were killed, and almost 150 people were injured in the incident, multiple news outlets reported Monday. Gov. Lincoln Chafee ’75 P’14 told the Boston Globe no Rhode Island citizens had been reported injured as of Monday night. The White House has not yet determined whether the attack was foreign or domestic, Reuters reported, but the FBI and Secretary of Homeland Security are taking appropriate measures, President Obama said in a speech in response to the events.

Five minutes after the explosions, the site was filled with debris, ambulances and people fleeing the scene, said Julien Ouellet ’12, who works in the Prudential Tower, located approximately 200 yards from the scene. Ouellet, a former Herald senior editor, witnessed the aftermath at the marathon’s finish line from a window in the tower. Half an hour after the attack, the site was like a “ghost town,” Ouellet said, adding that the “whole scene was entirely deserted save for policemen.” National Guard and SWAT teams entered about an hour later and began turning over trash cans — likely looking for other possible explosives — and sifting through debris, he said. When Ouellet first heard the bombs, it sounded “as if someone dropped books on the floor above,” he said, adding that he didn’t know anything had happened until he heard ambulance sirens outside. The workers in his office were / / Boston page 5

DAN ZHANG / HERALD

Three individuals died and nearly 150 were injured after two explosions near the finish line at the Boston Marathon Monday afternoon.

TouchNet stalls Spring Weekend ticket sales UFB, The site caused problems with morning sales, but BCA released more of the tickets in the evening By ABIGAIL SAVITCH-LEW CONTRIBUTING WRITER

After thousands of students were unable purchase Spring Weekend tickets Monday morning due to technical issues with TouchNet, a third-party service that handles credit card payments, Brown Student Agencies and Brown Concert Agency successfully resumed sales Monday evening. Out of 6,400 tickets intended to be released to the student body 8 a.m. Monday — 3,200 tickets for each day of the concerts — only 1,000 were successfully sold, said Connor Shinn ’14, executive

director of BSA. This marks the fourth year in a row that the online sale of Spring Weekend tickets has faced technical issues. BCA and BSA rescheduled sales for Monday night and Tuesday morning to sell the rest of the tickets intended for release Monday morning. Ticket sales Monday night went smoothly, said Emma Ramadan ’13, booking chair for BCA. “We’re really happy that TouchNet finally pulled through and did what they’re supposed to,” Ramadan said. In response to past problems with the site, BCA and BSA made changes to the sales website this year, Shinn said. Shinn said TouchNet hosted the sales website last year and didn’t have enough capacity to serve the influx of student customers, resulting in a site crash. This year, BSA created its own ticket-selling

server on Amazon that could handle 30,000 customers at once, Shinn said. But the University has a contract with TouchNet that mandates that BSA’s website use TouchNet to process payments. Though Shinn said TouchNet assured BCA and BSA the service would be prepared for a high number of payments, the site still experienced difficulties this morning. TouchNet did not respond to requests for comment as of press time. Many students had charges pending on their credit card statements Monday morning but did not receive an email with their tickets attached. “I woke up at 7:45 to get those tickets,” said Jason Addy ’16, who said he received an error message the first time he tried to purchase tickets and later found he had been charged without receiving a ticket. BCA posted on its blog Monday

afternoon that students who had been charged but did not receive an email confirmations had not actually purchased tickets, and their pending charges would be canceled. It is TouchNet’s responsibility to contact credit card companies and cancel pending charges, Shinn said. About 120 students requested a negative number of tickets Monday morning, further overloading TouchNet and interfering with the BCA website, Shinn said. Each of these students were charged $10 but didn’t receive tickets, he added. Diane Chouinard, coordinator of Financial Services, refunded each student individually, Shinn said. “Today sucked. It really did,” BCA members wrote in their blog post Monday afternoon. The post also said BCA and BSA were working with TouchNet and University administrators to reopen ticket sales on / / Tickets page 2

Housing renovation plans aimed to bolster community The University’s extensive renovation plan is meant to unify students based on class year By MATHIAS HELLER UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR

As the University undertakes major changes to its housing system with a multimillion-dollar investment on the line, students expressed mixed views on how well residential life builds community. First-year units and mutual friends are the most common ways students form connections that lead to housing groups, with 35.7 percent of current sophomores, juniors and seniors having met most of the people with whom they currently live through other friends

NEWS ANALYSIS

LYDIA YAMAGUCHI / HERALD

About 34 percent of juniors and seniors reported meeting their current housemates in their first-year dormitories such as Keeney Quadrangle.

and 35.2 percent having met most of their housing mates through their first-year units, according to results from a poll The Herald conducted last month. Twenty-two percent of students in all class years met most of the people with whom they live or plan to live through teams or student groups, and 19 percent found most of their housing mates through academic settings. Ten percent of students met most of the people with whom they live or plan to live through a fraternity, sorority or program house, 3 percent were randomly assigned housing and 8 percent indicated the poll question did not apply. An additional 9 percent of students, including some who studied abroad last semester or chose to live alone, indicated they are not in standard housing groups. Poll respondents circled all options that applied to them. The Corporation allocated $56 mil/ / Housing page 3 lion for hous-

Visions controversy resolved

Leaders of the magazine petitioned against the board’s funding cut and threat to control content By KIKI BARNES SENIOR STAFF WRITER

After controversy flared online Sunday over a proposed budget cut to the literary arts publication Visions, a meeting Monday afternoon between Undergraduate Finance Board representatives and Visions leaders appeared to partially resolve what UFB members described as a misunderstanding. But Visions continued to circulate an online petition as of Monday evening criticizing UFB for a general lack of transparency and what the publication’s leaders saw as an initial attempt to usurp its editorial independence. Next year the publication is likely to receive all the funding it originally requested, said Zachary Fischer ’13, UFB chair. Initial budgets for student groups next year were released the week before spring break, marking the first time Visions editors heard the publication was slotted to receive 85 percent of its proposed funding. When Visions, a Brown-Rhode Island School of Design Asian/Asian-American literature and art publication, went to a UFB appeals meeting April 9, its leaders were told the cuts were due to the high number of RISD student contributions in its most recent issue, said Larry Au ’14, Visions editor-in-chief. In response, Visions posted a petition online Sunday lambasting UFB’s decision and demanding the board revise / / Visions page 5 its decision in a


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Tuesday, April 16, 2013 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu