Wednesday, September 23, 2015

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SINCE 1891

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015

VOLUME CL, ISSUE 70

‘Ginger with soul’: Seniors see start-up success Brown Venture Launch Fund supports Easton ’16, Enriquez ’16 with popularizing craft beer

WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM

Meal plan math

N

PLA $Cost per meal

Though they have the highest price tags, the Flex 460 and 20 meals-per-week plans have the best value per meal. The Herald calculated the value of each meal plan by subtracting flex points from the total cost of the meal plan and dividing the remainder by the number of meals included.

$7.55

$10.24

$4,728

S

AL

LS EA K E M E 10PER W

LS EA K E M E 14PER W

LS EA K E M E 20PER W

$13.13

$4,450

$Total

E K 7 M WEE PER

$4,038

$3,660

$17.10

By ISABELLE DOYLE CONTRIBUTING WRITER

After getting their hands dirty juicing hundreds of pounds of ginger root, Max Easton ’16 and Nico Enriquez ’16 can now see their product — Farmer Willie’s Alcoholic Ginger Beer — at 40 retail locations on Cape Cod. Enriquez, a former Herald opinions columnist, and Easton used seed money from the Brown Venture Launch Fund to market Farmer Willie’s this summer, ultimately creating a viable beverage business from the ground up. Enriquez and Easton had been planning the venture since the spring of their sophomore year in 2014, when they applied and were accepted into Brown Venture Lab, a program run by the Swearer Center for Public Service, the Brown Entrepreneurship Program and the Office of the Dean of the College. The program is designed to help creative, entrepreneurial students accelerate startups by providing them with grants. Over the next year and a half, Easton and Enriquez won pitch contests, created a website, a YouTube channel, a Facebook page and a Twitter handle, conducted interviews with over 200 » See BEER, page 2

X FLE

460 $9.19

X

FLE $4,728

330

$12.42

X

FLE $4,450

$15.78

S

PU

240

AM F- C F O

$4,038

$1,580

$21.60

JILLIAN LANNEY / HERALD

Meal plan offerings dish out varied per-meal values

Flex 460, 20-meals-per-week plans offer lowest cost per meal credit, remain most popular options By GABRIELLA REYES STAFF WRITER

Students have just one week left to decide on a meal plan before the Sept. 30 deadline for changing or canceling a meal plan. The eight primary meal plans — three “flex” varieties, four fixed meal varieties and an off-campus plan — ­ are priced differently and offer dramatically different values. The Herald calculated the approximate cost per meal for each plan by subtracting flex points — which are equal to $1 each — from the total and dividing the remainder by the total number of meals

included in the plan. The results were clear: The meal plans with the highest total price tag offer the best per-meal value. Though it is the most expensive meal plan, the 20-meals-per-week plan is the best deal at $7.55 per meal, while a single meal on the off-campus plan is the costliest at $21.60, according to the calculations. For comparison, Brown Dining Services uses $7.30 as the meal credit equivalent in campus eateries. Meals on the flex plans are more costly than their equivalent fixed meal plans. A meal on the Flex 460 plan costs $9.19, compared to $7.55 for the 20-meals-per-week plan, which has

the same total price. Meals on the Flex 330 and Flex 240 plans cost $12.42 and $15.78, respectively. As the total price tag and number of meals for meal plans declines, the average meal becomes more expensive. For example, the 14-meals-per-week plan costs $10.24 per meal, while meals on the 10-meals-per-week and seven-mealsper-week plans cost $13.13 and $17.10, respectively. Approximately 72 percent of students on one of the meal plans chose either 20 meals per week or Flex 460 during the last academic year, wrote Gretchen Willis, director of Dining Services, in an email to The Herald. “I do believe that meal plan is a good value,” Willis wrote.

Students expressed preferences for certain meal plans based on convenience and value. “Flex 460 is a better deal than Flex 330,” said AJ Whitman ’17, who chose the plan in order to “never have to worry about food.” “I can’t say it’s the best deal, but it’s not horrible. I have easy access to food and don’t have to cook,” Whitman said. Shanelle DeJournett ’17 also expressed satisfaction with Flex 460. “I’m an athlete, so I’m terrible at going to breakfast — sometimes I don’t even have time for lunch,” she said. “On Flex 460, I can spend points on cereal and snacks.” But DeJournett added, “I feel like (the University is) jacking up the prices.” » See MEAL PLAN, page 3

Lack of funds for river refurbishment project may put out WaterFire Silt deposits in shallow waters threaten river’s ecosystem, increase city’s risk for floods, hurricanes By AGNES CHAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER

WaterFire organizers are facing an urgent need to refurbish the Providence River to ensure the popular event’s longevity, but financial limitations are preventing restorative action. “After 25 years of use and success there is now understandably a need to return our attention back to the river and the parks to make the needed refurbishments to assure another 25 years at least of further success,” WaterFire Providence wrote in an April 15 Facebook post.

INSIDE

Growing silt deposits in the river threaten WaterFire because event boats need at least three-and-a-half feet of water to traverse the river, according to a report on WPRI 12 Eyewitness News. The riverbed has not been dredged since its construction in 1977, and deposits have since built up the floor of the riverbed, decreasing its usable depth. Increasingly shallow waters affect more than just WaterFire by threatening the river’s ecosystem and increasing the city’s risk of flooding. Dredging the river would also make it navigable for recreational boaters, who currently cannot dock in Providence due to the river’s low water level, said Barnaby Evans, executive artistic director of WaterFire Providence. But preparing a dredging project would require at least a year of

planning. “You’ve got to test the materials, you’ve got to figure out where it’s going to go, you’ve got to figure out how you’re going to extract it without causing damage, and it’s got to be coordinated with … biological activity in the river. So it’s not going to happen anytime soon,” Evans said. No concrete plan to dredge the river has been put forth yet, primarily because of limited funding for the project. The dredging project is priced around $5 million, not including the additional cost of preventing future infilling of the river, said Dan Baudouin, executive director of the Providence Foundation. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the federal government carried out an analysis of the river a few years ago, and determined that the » See RIVER, page 3

COURTESY OF BROWN UNIVERSITY

Large silt deposits have brought the Providence River’s water level down and may eventually prevent boats from traversing it.

WEATHER

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015

ARTS & CULTURE Art, aliens invade Thayer Street for annual Festival Fete, bringing together Providence vendors

ARTS & CULTURE In advance screening, ‘The Intern’ offers heartwarming story of friendship across stages of life

COMMENTARY Esemplare ’18: NCAA restrictions to student-athletes’ off-the-field opportunities are too rigid

COMMENTARY Mitra ’18: Students should not be afraid to take a step back from the rat race and live a little

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Wednesday, September 23, 2015 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu