SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2016
VOLUME CLI, ISSUE 11
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
ELI WHITE / HERALD
Students gather in Wilson to watch primary results. Campus student groups supported both Democratic and Republican candidates in New Hampshire, working to increase voter turnout.
Students follow campaign trail to New Hampshire
While Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-VT, and Donald Trump may have won their respective primaries Tuesday night in New Hampshire, the many campaigns on both sides could not have been run without the support of student volunteers — including many from Brown — who spent their weekends canvassing through the snow to increase voter turnout. Their efforts were not lost on New Hampshire voters. New Hampshire Secretary of State William Gardner predicted that turnout for the primary would be 62 percent in New Hampshire this year, up 31.4 percentage points from last election season’s 30.6 percent voter turnout. Students represented Hillary Clinton, Sanders and Carly Fiorina as they
canvassed door to door, operated phone banks and planned events to garner visibility for their respective campaigns. Some polls in New Hampshire opened Tuesday at midnight for the earliest voters to fill out their ballots for the 2016 presidential nominations. While campaigning, the students primarily talked to voters in a last minute push to “get out the vote,” said Elena Saltzman ’16. The close race in Iowa demonstrated the importance of just a few voters, she added. The Iowa caucuses energized Sanders’ campaign, said Roro Oshobe ’19, adding that the close run between the top two Democratic candidates increased interest in the election. Buses drove students from Brown’s campus to New Hampshire Saturday for Sanders’ campaign, Oshobe said. He numbered among the group’s eight
Donald Trump
John Kasich
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES
By MEI NOVAK SENIOR STAFF WRITER
campaigners. They split up into teams — some students out in the community knocking on doors and others manning stations at phone banks. Through campaigning, students made connections with voters in the state, using “different avenues to build a personal connection with the voter,” Oshobe said. In order to better connect with voters over the phone, he adopted a more common name — James — and spoke with a southern accent, he said. Oshobe added that when talking to voters, he had to work “through that resistance that they have towards political campaigns and just get them to go out and make their voice heard.” Brown Students for Hillary sent seven student volunteers to New Hampshire, where they divided their time between canvassing and phone banking, Saltzman said. Seven students can have a huge impact as they contact hundreds of potential voters throughout the two » See CAMPAIGN, page 2
34.4%
16.4%
Ted Cruz
11.5%
Jeb Bush
11.2%
Chris Christie
DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES
Campaigners canvassed, phone banked, planned events to bring in ballots for Sanders, Clinton, Fiorina
Results of the New Hampshire Primary
Donald Trump and Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-VT, won the Republican and Democratic primaries, respectively.
7.7% Bernie Sanders
Hillary Clinton
59.7% 38.6% EMMA JERZYK / HERALD
DIAP to double OCL’s Elorza delivers State of the City address Mayor announces $500 million in new Emergency Fund construction projects as Responding to feedback from high-need students, plan creates new position for financial advising By ROSE SHEEHAN STAFF WRITER
The Office of Campus Life and Student Services will double its Emergency Fund in response to feedback from high-need students regarding the Diversity and Inclusion Action Plan, said Dean of the College Maud Mandel. The fund supports “a vast array of
INSIDE
unexpected needs that come up for students who don’t have the resources to cover them and for which timeliness is of the essence,” Mandel said, citing emergency wisdom teeth removal and the destruction of a family home as examples. In past years, the Office of Campus Life has received more requests than can be covered by the fund, and emergencies have been covered on a caseby-case basis. The increase in the fund was also motivated by student feedback on the difficulty of financing a Brown education. » See FUND, page 2
part of ‘resurgence’
By KYLE BOROWSKI SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Mayor Jorge Elorza gave his annual State of the City address Tuesday night, focusing his speech on educational reform and business development. Thirty major construction projects in Providence totaling almost $500 million in expenditures are expected to break ground in 2016, Elorza said. These developments include the construction of downtown hotels and apartments and the building of an “innovation
economy” on the I-195 corridor, he added. The revenue from these projects will serve to counter the deficit inherited from the previous administration, Elorza said, adding that he is “committed to being fiscally responsible to fix the city’s finances.” A number of cost-saving measures have also been introduced. These initiatives include efforts to save $15 million over the next 10 years by buying streetlights back from National Grid, $9.5 million over the next 20 years from the renegotiation of a contract with the Roger Williams Park Zoo and $5 million annually from the restructuring of the Providence Fire Department, Elorza said. But reworking the structure of the
Providence Fire Department has proved quarrelsome for Elorza’s administration. Claims of savings in that field have yet to be corroborated, leading to tension with local firefighters, firefighter Tom Kenney wrote in an op-ed in the Providence Journal. Nevertheless, Elorza commended Providence’s men and women in uniform, who he said are “the finest … any city can have.” He specifically praised the Providence police force for preventing “many of the issues other cities have had to endure in the past couple years.” Elorza has pledged to lead an administration that is devoted to government transparency. “There is no tolerance for corruption,” Elorza said, adding that under his supervision, “we » See STATE OF CITY, page 2
WEATHER
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2016
NEWS Diversity of views showcases complex relationships among Birthright, students, Israel
NEWS Google recruitment targets CS concentrators with alumni visits, promotional events
COMMENTARY Vilsan ’19: Current unrest in Romania mirrors post-Cold War era, but new regime offers hope
COMMENTARY Rowland ’17: Liberals must realize that Trump’s success reveals popular beliefs
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TODAY
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TOMORROW
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