Daily
Herald
THE BROWN
vol. cxlviii, no. 67
since 1891
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2013
In wake of violent crime spike, OnCall to expand service
By JILLIAN LANNEY SENIOR STAFF WRITER
The University will soon launch a pilot program to expand Brown OnCall, the nighttime shuttle service currently available only to students living offcampus, President Christina Paxson wrote in a community-wide email Wednesday. A task force headed by Executive Vice President for Policy and Planning Russell Carey ’91 MA’06 will also be formed to further examine issues of
campus safety and how to deter crime. The campus has recently seen a series of armed robberies that “motivated” action, Carey said. “There’s no question there’s concern from parents, from students, members of the community,” he said. “And we’re seeking to respond to that.” Brown OnCall is currently only available to transport registered students to and from off-campus residences. Once the changes are implemented, “all community members with a Brown ID” will be able to call for the shuttle service, according to the email. More information about this program is forthcoming, but Carey said the changes will happen “very quickly.” The University has been “trying » See BUS, page 4
Search begins for new ESL coordinator
The former ESL coordinator left to become assistant dean for the Office of Student Life BY STEPHEN ARK SENIOR STAFF WRITER
inside
The Office of the Dean of the College has launched a search committee to select a new English as a Second Language Coordinator in the Writing Center, said Douglas Brown, director of writing support programs in the Writing Center. The search comes in the wake of former ESL Coordinator Ashley Ferranti’s move to the position of assistant dean in the Office of Student Life at the end of last semester, leaving vacant the post that oversees the Writing Center’s services for students whose native languages are not English. While the position remains vacant, Ferranti has helped the center by coordinating this semester’s preorientation writing workshops for international students, Brown said. He added that the search committee hopes to find a permanent replacement by the end of this academic year. The coordinator post has been vacant so far this semester, but ESL students said they were not concerned about a reduction in the University’s ESL assistance, saying other support systems have helped fill the void. “In addition to the standard resources, they have a lot of other things to help these students,” said Deesha Misra ’14, president of the » See ESL, page 2
DAVID DECKEY / HERALD
The expansion of Brown OnCall is part of a broader examination of campus safety, following a recent increase in violent crime.
U. sees high faculty yield rate New female and minority hires are part of an ongoing effort to boot faculty diversity By KIKI BARNES SENIOR STAFF WRITER
After 97 percent of potential hires who were offered tenured or tenuretrack positions in the 2012-13 academic year accepted their positions at Brown, the University will try to curtail its hiring push in the coming year while looking to grow faculty diversity, a priority previously emphasized in President Christina Paxson’s strategic planning process. Typically, only about 50 to 75 percent of those offered positions at the University accept the job offers, said Associate Provost for Academic Development and Diversity
Planning committee concludes work Senior administrators said the ad hoc committee’s work was vital to the strategic plan draft
Liza Cariaga-Lo. Administrators attributed the unusually high number of tenure-track hires accepting offers of employment — a figure known as the yield rate — to the University’s currently strong reputation and the chance to work with a new president and provost. Of the new hires, about 30 percent identified as underrepresented minorities — blacks, Latinos or Native Americans — or women in science, research, technology or mathematics, said Dean of the Faculty Kevin McLaughlin P’12. Hires for the University as a whole were relatively evenly distributed across departments — 30 percent in the humanities, 30 percent in the social sciences, 24 percent in the physical sciences and 16 percent in the life sciences — for a total of 55 new faculty members, McLaughlin said. Eight new hires
were women in STEM fields and six were underrepresented minorities, according to data the dean of the faculty’s office provided to The Herald. Because of the high yield rate, the University will ask some departments to wait to conduct searches to fill vacancies until next year, McLaughlin said. The hires to which the data refer are either on the tenure track or entering tenured positions, most of which are assistant professors and junior faculty members, McLaughlin said. The University is currently trying to recruit faculty members early in their careers in order to bring them to Brown for mentorship and development purposes, he said. McLaughlin did not have data on the number of adjuncts or » See DIVERSITY, page 4
By MICHAEL DUBIN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Nearly 11 months after President Christina Paxson announced the formation of two ad hoc working groups to focus on campus master planning and digital technology, the campus planning task force has completed its work, while the digital technology committee has been in a holding pattern, wrote Marisa Quinn, vice president for public affairs and University relations, in an email to The Herald. The temporary committees were formed to advise on issues “that cut across several areas of University governance,” Quinn wrote. Responsibility for campus planning falls jointly on the standing committees of the Corporation in charge of facilities and design, academic priorities, student life and University budgeting, motivating the formation of an ad hoc committee that draws on all of these areas, Paxson told The Herald in October. The master planning task force comprised about a dozen people: a mix of Corporation members from several standing committees, alums » See PLANNING, page 3
After 27 years, Chafee ’75 changes course Chafee said he will prioritize local issues and policy for the remainder of his term By KATHERINE LAMB SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Gov. Lincoln Chafee ’75 P’14 P’17 announced Sept. 4 he will not seek re-election in the 2014 gubernatorial race, presumably marking the end of his 27-year career in Rhode Island politics. Having served on the Warwick City Council, as mayor of Warwick and in the U.S. Senate, Chafee told reporters during a press conference he wants to avoid the confines of electoral politics and focus on the issues residents are most
CITY & STATE
concerned about during his remaining time in office. Chafee dedicated his term to “doing what is necessary for Rhode Island to be stable through good economic times and bad economic times,” said Christine Hunsinger, Chafee’s press secretary. Chafee’s decision to not run for reelection will allow him to dedicate the remainder of his term to “cementing those programs and processes,” she said. Maureen Moakley, professor of political science at University of Rhode Island, said she thinks his explanation is believable. “Campaigning would have been a huge distraction in terms of governing, and he would have had to make some compromises,” Moakley said. “Whatever you want to say about Chafee, he » See CHAFEE, page 5
HERALD FILE PHOTO
Chafee ‘75 P’14 P’17 announced that he will not run for re-election, ending his 27 years of government service in Rhode Island.
post-
Wind Wins
Sexual assault
WBC, Wakarusa and wuv woes
R.I.-based Deepwater Wind wins two leases in federal auction to build an off-shore wind development
Tennis ’14 emphasizes consent and putting an end to victimblaming culture
POST
CITY & STATE, 8
OPINIONS, 8
weather
The shuttle program, formerly available only to off-campus students, will soon be available to all
t o d ay
tomorrow
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