SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015
VOLUME CL, ISSUE 64
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
Ordinances could restrict off-campus housing City Council to vote Sept. 17 on zoning ordinances that would place limits on student renting By EMMA JERZYK METRO EDITOR
No more than three students will be allowed to live in a single-family home in certain areas of the city if the Providence City Council passes new zoning ordinances Sept. 17. The Council will vote on two distinct ordinances. One would define the term “student” under zoning law, and the second would bar more than three students from living in singlefamily homes at one time in R-1 and R-1A zones. R-1 and R-1A zones encompass single-family homes in “neighborhoods of low-density residential development,” according to Providence zoning ordinances. The ordinances were introduced by City Councilwoman Jo-Ann Ryan, representing Ward 5 which includes areas around Rhode Island College and Providence College, places where students have exhibited disruptive behavior, according to multiple sources. Ryan did not respond to multiple requests for comment. There are several R-1 zones around the University. The non-campus areas between Governor and Benefit streets and between Williams and Waterman » See ZONING, page 3
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DREW WILLIAMS / HERALD
Provost Richard Locke P’17 leads a Q&A with Academy Award-winning filmmaker Davis Guggenheim ’86 after an advanced screening of his new documentary, “He Named Me Malala,” at the Granoff Center Tuesday. “I like when it’s not just a movie, it’s a movement,” Guggenheim told The Herald.
Malala doc takes human look at girl behind a movement Guggenheim ’86 uses mix of animation, narrative forms to tell story of youngest Nobel peace laureate By DREW WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR
“It is better to live like a lion for one day than to live like a slave for 1,000 years,” Malala Yousafzai says over the beautiful opening sequence of, “He Named Me Malala.” The quote comes from Malalai, her namesake and a girl who led Afghani forces over the British Empire in 1880. This name bestows upon Malala the dual
identity of “grief-stricken” and “brave.” “He Named Me Malala” explores the mission of Malala Yousafzai, who won the Nobel Peace Prize at 17 for her work advocating women’s education in her native Pakistan and abroad, despite an assassination attempt from the Taliban that left her without feeling in the left side of her face. “I like when it’s not just a movie, it’s a movement,” Academy Award-winning
documentarian Davis Guggenheim ’86 told The Herald before the screening, discussing the call-to-action present in his latest creation. He is known for his socially poignant films, including “An Inconvenient Truth” and “Waiting for Superman.” Guggenheim’s storytelling and Malala’s remarkable humility collide in a documentary that is as surprising as it is poetic, as down-to-Earth one minute as it is Earth-shattering the next. Guggenheim did not make a film about Malala. He made a film about why everyone needs to see a film about Malala.
“If you think about Malala, people know she was the girl shot on a school bus,” Guggenheim said. “You have the additional responsibility of helping audiences rethink who this person is.” The film never shies away from the attack on Malala, bringing it up at the start and then throughout in flashbacks that show a man walking up to a school bus, bright lights in a hospital room and a firing gun. At one point Malala even draws a layout of her location on the bus for the camera. But for much of the film, the portrayal » See MALALA, page 2
After fines, ‘lonely’ tagger sparks debate about public art Cumberland man fined over $12,000 for spreading graffiti around Providence last spring By EMMA JERZYK METRO EDITOR
A fundraiser has raised over $2,700 on the crowdfunding website IndieGoGo to help Devin Costa, a 19-year-old from Cumberland, Rhode Island, pay $12,390 in restitution for leaving graffiti around Providence over a period of several months. The campaign’s Facebook page has 600 likes at press time. Nicknamed the “lonely” tagger,
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Costa left messages like, “lonely as I’ve ever been” and, “I love you even when you don’t notice” on six buildings in the city, including the office of his now-defense lawyer, Tom Thomasian. Costa turned himself in last spring after the Providence Police made a surveillance photo of him public, and he pleaded no contest last month to six misdemeanor charges of vandalism. A business owner estimated it would cost about $4,000 to clean up Costa’s graffiti, said Timothy O’Hara, the downtown district commander of the Providence Police, in a Providence Journal article. “We had a lot of complaints, not only from businesses, but people who don’t want to see that kind of stuff,” he told the Journal. In response to this sentiment, » See GRAFFITI, page 3
MARIANNA MCMURDOCK / HERALD
Though some community members and business owners were upset by the Devin Costa’s graffiti, others, such as Micah Salkind GS, believe that Costa’s work contributes to a dialogue on public art in Providence.
WEATHER
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015
ARTS & CULTURE PieZoni’s, replacing Wings & Things, offers chain store atmosphere with free Wi-Fi
ARTS & CULTURE “Phoenix” at the Avon tells the story of a Holocaust survivor reconciling past with future
COMMENTARY Lennon ’18: Choosing a major is not as important as making the most of your time at Brown
COMMENTARY Maier ’17: Autistic students’ difficulty emphathizing is often mistaken for bigotry
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