Daily
Herald
THE BROWN
vol. cxlviii, no. 105
since 1891
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2013
Investing in city, U. to expand downtown Stakeholders hope to see the area revamped, but concern about campus unity remains By ALEXANDER BLUM AND DAVID CHUNG SENIOR STAFF WRITER AND UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR
Expansion in the Jewelry District will be a focus of the University’s growth
The third in a four-part series GREG JORDAN-DETAMORE / HERALD
Brown’s presence downtown — anchored around spaces like the Alpert Medical School — will grow under the University’s strategic plan.
over the next decade, based on the vision articulated in President Christina Paxson’s strategic plan. While
undergraduate teaching will remain based on College Hill, the proposed development of administrative offices, research buildings and graduate student housing in the Jewelry District demonstrates the University’s intention to play a leading role in revitalizing the neighborhood across the river. The project has attracted widespread support from local leaders, but given the Jewelry District’s current underdeveloped state, the success of these ambitious goals will require significant collaboration with government officials, private entities and other academic institutions in the area. The University’s commitment to a major project of urban renewal and transformation will shape the evolution of Brown’s physical campus and define the school’s relationship with its home city and state in the coming years. Brown in the district With the establishment of the I-195 » See DOWNTOWN, page 6
Poll shows mixed opinions on Ray Kelly, coal divestment A poll conducted by The Herald revealed shifting approval of President Christina Paxson By MATHIAS HELLER AND ELI OKUN UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITORS
Roughly three-quarters of undergraduates do not support the protests inside List Art Center 120 that caused a scheduled lecture by New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly to be canceled last week, according to the results of a poll The Herald conducted Monday. Despite opposition to shutting down
the lecture, strong majorities of students agree with protests outside the building and the circulation of a petition beforehand to prevent Kelly from coming to campus, the poll found. And in the wake of the Corporation’s decision last month not to divest the University’s endowment from large coal companies, student support for divestment has fallen, though it remains the plurality opinion. Though President Christina Paxson’s approval rating has risen slightly over the past month, the proportion of students who disapprove of her has increased threefold, from about 9 percent to near » See POLL, page 3
Do you agree with the following actions taken by student and community protesters surrounding the cancelled lecture by Ray Kelly last week? Circulating a petition beforehand to cancel the lecture: 8% 21% Disagree N/S*
71% Agree
*N/S = Not Sure
Protesting outside the building: 80%
8%
13%
Causing the lecture to be shut down via protests inside the auditorium: 13%
14%
73% JILLIAN LANNEY / HERALD
U. begins to implement strategic plan initiatives Faculty members discussed plans to adapt financial aid, sabbaticals and internship support By KIKI BARNES SENIOR STAFF WRITER
The University has begun to implement proposals outlined in President Christina Paxson’s strategic plan after the Corporation approved the document at its Oct. 26 meeting, Paxson said at a faculty meeting Tuesday. Faculty members and administrators also discussed the University’s decision not to divest from coal companies, faculty benefits, a program for excellence in teaching and changes to the faculty rules and regulations before retreating to a restricted session so that faculty members could discuss recent events at the University. The University is moving forward with plans to recalculate financial need for international students each year, implement a new post-tenure sabbatical policy, boost support for student summer internships and Undergraduate Teaching and Research Awards, create sophomore seminars that emphasize diversity, develop a laboratory for educational innovation and identify more focuses for future TRI-Lab projects, Paxson said. “These are things that we can do immediately,” she said. The post-tenure sabbatical policy will offer faculty members a sabbatical at full salary six months after » See FACULTY, page 2
Brown, Stanford unite to reach world finals in synthetic biology competition
By ISOBEL HECK SENIOR STAFF WRITER
“I’m not looking for the prima donnas,” said Lynn Rothschild, an adjunct professor of molecular biology, cell biology and biochemistr y and astrobiologist/evolutionary biologist at NASA Ames who helped advise this year’s Stanford-Brown iGEM, or International Genetically Engineered Machine, group. “We rise and fall as a team.”
inside
SCIENCE & RESEARCH
Brown and Stanford University have worked together as an iGEM team for the past three years, and the 2013 group qualified for the world championship at the North America Regional Jamboree in Toronto last month. Despite being locked out of their lab at NASA due to the government shutdown, team members rallied to present four projects to judges at the World Championship Jamboree at Massachusetts Institute of Technology this past weekend. Though the 2013 team did not win any special awards and were not finalists this year, “we have a reputation as one of the really strong teams,” Rothschild said. “We have the coolness factor.” » See IGEM, page 4
COURTESY OF LYNN ROTHSCHILD
Students from Brown and Stanford joined Lynn Rothschild, an adjuct professor of biology and biochemistry and astrobiologist/evolutionary biologist at NASA Ames, at her lab in California to design four projects.
BDS contracts
Behave, doc
Hate holidays
Dining Services workers are set to begin negotiations this week for a new contract
The Corporation approved a behavioral and social health PhD program last month
Enzerink GS unpacks the role of race in holidays in Rhode Island and the Netherlands
UNIVERSITY NEWS, 8
UNIVERSITY NEWS, 8
COMMENTARY, 11
weather
Though the iGEM team did not win any prizes this year, it will send a project on a space mission
t o d ay
tomorrow
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