SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2017
VOLUME CLII, ISSUE 66
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
Bears open season at home Saturday against Bryant
COURTESY OF BROWN BEARS
Bruno looks to capitalize on the experience of their defense and an up-tempo style offense in the upcoming 2017 season. In their home opener, the team will face off against the Bryant Bulldogs for the third year in a row. Captains Richard “Dewey” Jarvis ’17.5 and Isaiah Thompkins ’19 hope to lead the team to victory before heading toward Ivy League play.
Bruno eyes matchup at Fenway Park, aims to maintain game-by-game mentality entering season By TESS DEMEYER SENIOR STAFF WRITER
It’s been 300 days since the football team finished the 2016 season at Brown Stadium. Saturday, it will return to the gridiron to face off against in-state rival Bryant University. The Bears have won two of the last three against Bryant (1-1), but the Bulldogs have an advantage in starting their season two weeks earlier. “The unknown is that we have to play a team with two games under their belt that probably know what
they are and who they are and have been able to make corrections,” said Head Coach Phil Estes P’18. “That’s where most teams make the most improvements — after the second game. We’re not going to know that … I’m more worried about our team and how we execute than I am about our opponent.” Despite all the uncertainty surrounding the opening game, one thing is clear: The Bears are hungry for a win and have high expectations for 2017. “I really want to go out there and just destroy this team,” said co-captain
Isaiah Thompkins ’19. “We want to go 10-0 and win a championship. We have a lot of guys coming back who are really passionate about football, so I’m optimistic about this season.” After finishing last season fourth in the league with a 4-6 record, Bruno will have a chance to start fresh and rise from the ashes, literally. “It was a disappointment,” Estes said. “There were games that we could’ve won that we let go, and I don’t think we played completely up to our capabilities. But that’s over with. We dealt with it. We had a ceremony, and we burned that. We burned the media guide. We burned everything. We do it every year, so we can get rid of last
year and move on.” Since leaving the 2016 season behind, the Bears have reshaped themselves, implementing a dry season and adopting the team motto, “Be Elite.” “This year, our team is all in,” said co-captain Richard “Dewey” Jarvis ’17.5. “Everyone is committing to the team and committing to the season. I like our resilience. After the Yale scrimmage — it wasn’t a great scrimmage for us — our team’s just bounced back with so much energy.” Nicholas Duncan ’19 is set to lead the Bears’ up-tempo spread offense as the starting quarterback. He’ll be supported by running back David Moodie ’19, whose impact on the field was cut
short by injuries last season. On the defensive side, veteran standouts like Terrell Smith ’18, Connor Coughlin ’18 and Jarvis — who led the league in tackles for loss in 2016— will ensure opponents don’t venture too close to the redzone. Numerous unique and complex defensive schemes will also prove troublesome for opposing offenses. One offense Bruno hopes to stop short is Harvard. The Crimson bested the Bears by just ten points a year ago, but Thompkins is anticipating a hard-fought game in Cambridge Sept. 23. And in November, Brown will return to the city for the most » See FOOTBALL, page 4
PawSox owners propose new stadium U. to update religious
affiliations survey
With McCoy Stadium’s deteriorating conditions, plans for new home near urban center underway
Current survey inadequate reflection of religious diversity among students
By PAULINA SENGERIDIS STAFF WRITER
“Pawtucket is home,” read the red shirts of Rhode Islanders who came out to the Senate Finance Committee Hearing Thursday to endorse the proposal for a new $83-million Pawtucket Red Sox Stadium at Slater Mill. After the PawSox received an offer in July to make Worcester, Mass. the team’s new home, the Rhode Island community came together to review the proposal that would keep the PawSox in Pawtucket. The hearing at the Rhode Island State House is the first in a series of six that will take place through mid-October and result in a definitive conclusion regarding
INSIDE
By PRIYANKA PODUGU SENIOR STAFF WRITER
PAULINA SENGERIDIS / HERALD
Locals came to the hearing that will decide the next home of the Pawtucket Red Sox with red shirts emblazoned with the text: “Pawtucket is home.” the construction of a “Fenway replica” in downtown Pawtucket. The Pawtucket proposal would replace the old McCoy Stadium that housed the triple-A team for the past 75 years. Both the co-owner of the PawSox Larry Lucchino and PawSox
Vice-Chairman Mike Tamburro listed some key issues of sustainability with the existing publicly-owned McCoy stadium — the location is distant from the city’s urban center and the stadium faces deteriorating conditions. Built on » See PAWSOX, page 2
In addition to asking for an address and emergency contacts, the University also asks students to indicate their religious affiliation. The Office of the Chaplains and Religious Life uses the data to ensure accommodations for all religious identities — but the survey is “horrifically outdated” and in “serious need of change,” said the Rev. Janet Cooper Nelson, chaplain of the University. Administrators and staff from the
Office of the Chaplains and Religious Life will meet to discuss changing the survey, though a specific date has yet to be set. The voluntary survey, accessible to students through Banner, asks students to indicate their “current religion.” Students are allowed to select one religion out of a list of 33 options. Cooper Nelson said the University has been using this list since she arrived at Brown in 1990. Before the survey became available on Banner, incoming students would record their religious affiliation through a paper survey mailed to their home address, she added. “It’s not really representative of the range of religious identities that are in the University,” Cooper Nelson said, as » See SURVEY, page 2
WEATHER
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2017
METRO Providence elementary schools to provide free breakfast and lunch for all students
U. NEWS Computer science becomes most popular concentration, department hires additional staff
COMMENTARY Friedman ’19: Though stigmatized on campuses, social isolation has its advantages
COMMENTARY Prasad: While progress has been made in supporting nternational students, feedback is welcomed
PAGE 2
PAGE 3
PAGE 7
PAGE 7
TODAY
TOMORROW
81 / 61
82 / 63