Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Page 1

THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 87

since 1891

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2014

FOOTBALL

50 R O C K

Bears upend Holy Cross in double overtime Strachan ’15 scores thrice, Senne ’16 kicks 23-yard game-winner to lift Bruno to .500 record By CALEB MILLER SPORTS EDITOR

ASHWINI NATARAJAN / HERALD

The Rockefeller Library’s newly renovated reading room, which opened Friday, features lounge chairs and glass-walled study spaces.

Though Brown Stadium was packed to the brim for the game against Harvard two weeks ago, fans were few and far between on a cold and rainy Saturday for the football team’s matchup with the College of the Holy Cross. But the Bears outlasted the Crusaders this weekend in their most exciting game of the season so far, a 27-24 double-overtime thriller. The nail-biter was the latest in a series of perennial dogfights between the New England rivals: Six of their last seven meetings were decided by

one possession. The victory also marked the 100th career win for Head Coach Phil Estes P’18. Kicker Grant Senne ’16 put a bow on the wild game with a 23-yard, game-winning field goal in the second overtime. Bruno (2-2, 0-1 Ivy) fell behind early and then surged to a lead, only to falter in the fourth quarter, letting Holy Cross (2-5, 0-2 Patriot) tie the game with two late scores. But after the foes traded touchdowns in the first overtime, the Bears’ defense forced Holy Cross to try a long field goal — which kicker Connor Fitzgerald hooked — and the offense set up Senne for the decisive chip-shot. Only two Bears scored on the day: Senne, who hit two field goals and three extra points, and wide receiver

Brian Strachan ’15, who had a career day with all three Bruno touchdowns. When all was said and done, the receiver-turned-tailback-turned-receiver hauled in a diving touchdown catch, a go-ahead touchdown catch and an overtime touchdown catch — as well as five other receptions and 98 yards receiving. Quarterback and co-captain Marcus Fuller ’15 led the charge for Bruno. A rocky start left him with just 44 yards on six completions at halftime, but he went 14-27 for 196 yards and two touchdowns after intermission. The senior performed better than his line indicates, given the first-half drops he endured from his receivers. After sputtering through much of the first half on its way to a 7-0 halftime deficit, the Bruno offense came out of » See FOOTBALL, page 7

Airbnb makes presence felt on city rental scene Alternative Officials consider tax on short-term rentals, while residents enjoy supplementary income By JOSEPH FRANKEL CONTRIBUTING WRITER

With increasing usage in Providence, the short-term rental website Airbnb has garnered support from some residents who praise the site for expanding housing and supplementary income opportunities. But the website’s rising popularity has also led local authorities to consider how to enforce local tax payments by Airbnb users.

METRO

Airbnb has facilitated peer-to-peer transactions for more than 430 rentals in the Providence area, allowing hosts to rent out spare bedrooms or entire apartments and taking a commission for performing the service, according to the company’s website. Founded in 2008 by Rhode Island School of Design alums Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia, Airbnb started as the pair’s attempt to leverage their empty living room into rent money for their San Francisco, California loft. Since then, the company has expanded to 34,000 cities in over 190 countries, according to the company’s website. But the hospitality industry and some local lawmakers have called for Rhode Island to close the tax loophole that allows Airbnb’s users to pay lower

lodging taxes than visitors at traditional hotels. Under Rhode Island law, shortterm rental properties with two or fewer rooms are not subjected to the state lodging tax, a discrepancy that some say causes a loss of revenue for the state, given the rising usage of Airbnb. A ‘rising tide’ for the city? While rental services like Airbnb may take away business from “traditional lodging properties,” they may also bring in visitors who would otherwise not have access to the city, said Martha Sheridan, president and CEO of the Providence Warwick Convention and Visitors Bureau. Citing Providence’s ranking as America’s favorite city by Travel and Leisure magazine this month, as well as the city’s recently

rising hotel occupancy rates on weekend nights, Sheridan said she believes Airbnb allows the city to accommodate guests who otherwise might have nowhere to stay when hotels are filled. “A rising tide floats all boats,” Sheridan said. Even if they choose not to stay in traditional hotels, visitors who use Airbnb bring business to the city in other ways, Sheridan said. “They’re shopping in our retail outlets, they’re dining in our restaurants and they’re experiencing our community. At the end of the day, their impact is still very important to us.” As Providence adapts to the growing short-term rental business, Rhode Island continues to debate whether to » See AIRBNB, page 2

‘Earliest America’ initiative rethinks history Student protest leads library to offer resources, symposia about new perspectives on history By KERRI COLFER STAFF WRITER

Last fall, the words “the Third World will rise again” were scrawled in chalk on the side of the John Carter Brown Library. The inscription, and the campus reaction it elicited, spurred the development of “The Earliest Americas: A New Initiative in Indigenous Studies at the John Carter Brown Library,” said Neil Safier, director of the John Carter Brown Library. “It made me think that people believe that the JCB is a place that is » See INITIATIVE, page 2

DAVID BRAUN / HERALD

In a lecture kicking off the John Carter Brown Library’s “Earliest America” initiative, Yale historian Ned Blackhawk discusses the role of individual stories in shaping understandings of historical narratives.

Metro

Commentary

Rhode Island charter schools rank high on National Alliance for Public Charter Schools report

Vote on constitutional convention set for November ballot

Mills ’15: Brown needs to recruit military leaders in order to diversify its faculty

Willig ’16: Environmental protection and capitalism are not inherently at odds

PAGE 3

PAGE 4

PAGE 11

PAGE 11

weather

inside

ARTS & CULTURE

to Common App sees surge in use U. keeps Common App, but some peer institutions turn to UCA after last year’s technical glitches By STEVEN MICHAEL SENIOR STAFF WRITER

As deadlines approach for many higher education institutions’ early admission programs, more elite universities have decided to allow applicants to use either the Common Application or an online alternative following widespread technical problems last year for the Common App. But the University has decided not to sign onto an alternative platform to the Common App for this admission cycle, said Dean of Admission Jim Miller ’73. Last year, the Common App — used by over 800,000 applicants last admission cycle — faced a number of glitches amid the launch of its new website. These technical problems prompted numerous universities to delay deadlines for their early decision and early action programs. While the University did not delay its early decision deadline past Nov. 1 last year, the Office of Admission gave extensions to students on an individual basis, The Herald reported at the time. Several peer institutions have also joined a competing application » See COMMON APP, page 2

HIGHER ED

t o d ay

tomorrow

74 / 61

75 / 64


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.