SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2018
VOLUME CLIII, ISSUE 7
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
Community activists honored at annual ceremony Community organizer, city councilor, librarian inducted into MLK Hall of Fame By ALEX REICE STAFF WRITER
Three Providence community activists were inducted into the 15th Annual Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Hall of Fame at a ceremony held at City Hall Wednesday evening. The event honored the late Philip Addison Jr., Pilar McCloud and Mary Jones for upholding King’s legacy. The ceremony stressed unity and community spirit, beginning with a speech by Mayor Jorge Elorza. He emphasized the impact that King’s lifelong work had on him as a young teenager struggling to find his way. Elorza said that the Talent Development Program at the University of Rhode Island, which was created to honor King after his assassination, provided him with a chance as a “skinny 18-year-old who didn’t have his head on straight.” The community members being honored at the ceremony “embody Dr. King’s legacy,” Elorza said, including King’s belief in “the beloved community.” A note of appreciation was then given by Council President David
Cable Car features romance exploring morality, philosophy, psychosexuality By LIYAAN MASKATI SENIOR STAFF WRITER
ALEX REICE / HERALD
The inductees were celebrated at the Providence City Hall for their work in 2017. Those honored dedicated significant time and effort to serving their community and the constant pursuit of civil rights. Salvatore, followed by a message of who never considered anyone “beneath the Alliance of Rhode Island Southeast peace and hope by Reverend Chontell … or above him.” Asians for Education. Washington. Before the three inductMcCloud, National Association for Jones, one of the founders of the ees were honored, actor Joe Wilson Jr. the Advancement of Colored People Smith Hill Community Corporarecited one of King’s speeches. at Providence Youth Works chair- tion and a librarian at the Smith Hill The ceremony first honored Addi- woman, was the next to be inducted. Library was the last to be honored. son — the first black member of Provi- She “dedicated her life to social justice,” Known as the “grandmother” of Smith dence City Council who served from Salvatore said. “King is a civil rights Hill, she “instilled in us a thirst for 1969 to 1981. He was a Freemason, a icon that I look up to,” McCloud said. knowledge,” said Jones’s daughter, Alleader of the Mount Hope Neighbor- “Civil rights and social justice don’t thea Graves, who accepted the award hood Association and “helped thou- take a nap.” on her behalf. sands of youth in the City of ProviMcCloud centers “the voices of “Mary did a lot for Smith Hill Lidence,” Salvatore said. Addison’s wife, young people in her work, and that’s brary. … Everyone who went into that who accepted the award on his behalf, what we value,” said Chanda Wom- library knows who she is,” said Diane described him as a “people person” ack, founding executive director of Tina Jones, a friend of the awardee.
UCS reconvenes in new semester General body briefed on new course evaluation questions, re-addresses Campus Consent Bill By MELANIE PINCUS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
At its first general body meeting of the semester, the Undergraduate Council of Students discussed proposed additions to the student course evaluation survey and debated changes to the Campus Consent Bill Wednesday evening. Dean of the College Maud Mandel and Director of the Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning Mary Wright presented a revised version of the feedback form to the general body. Students can currently submit the form either on Banner or in class before they receive grades at the end of each semester. “We’re going to actually pilot (the new questions) in some courses” this semester, Mandel said. “Based on that
INSIDE
‘Phantom Thread’ explores toxic love
and on student feedback from that, we will hopefully launch a new form next year.” She added that a committee of faculty, staff, undergraduates and graduate students h elped to develop the form in the fall 2017 semester. A draft of the form presented at the meeting included new open-ended questions that address academic integrity and in-class atmosphere regarding diverse student perspectives. For example, a proposed question on the form asks how a student’s professor “communicate(d) and explain(ed) the expectations for academic honesty” in class, and another question inquires whether students “were treated with respect and their questions and perspectives welcomed,” according to a copy of the proposed form obtained by The Herald. General body members were offered the opportunity to suggest additional changes and comment on the form’s questions at the meeting. Among other » See UCS, page 2
The toxicity of love can be strangely appealing — whether experienced directly or vicariously. Naturally, this does not hold true for all romances — indeed, it would not appear to hold true for most. Yet “Phantom Thread,” currently playing at Cable Car, explores a paragon of this mysteriously enticing je ne sais quoi born of a largely twisted relationship. Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, the film stars Daniel Day-Lewis as Reynolds Woodcock — a dominating, fastidious and obsessive dress designer in the 1950s in England, who almost defines peculiarity. Living in a realm » See PHANTOM, page 2
ARTS & CULTURE
RISD Museum exhibit engages community Flag represents pUN as part of 16 installations that will be featured nationwide By ELISE RYAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Hanging above Bolt Coffee at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum is Pedro Reyes’ flag “Hands On With A Vision,” the latest installment in “Pledges of Allegiance,” a nationwide art project put on by the New York-based public arts nonprofit Creative Time. With each opening of the cafe’s heavy doors, the sky-blue flag ripples slightly, revealing more of the image obscured by its folds. The flag’s graphic plays on the recognizable flag of the United Nations, which depicts a similar white emblem centered on a blue background. The emblem on Reyes’ flag reinterprets the UN » See REYES, page 2
ARTS & CULTURE
SAM BERUBE / HERALD
Predo Reyes’ latest piece is the eighth part of a 16-part art project. The artist is one of many working on this collaborative venture.
WEATHER
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2018
SCIENCE & RESEARCH U. study shows that cuts in copays increase the number of mammograms
ARTS & CULTURE Brown Student and Community Radio, local organizations acquire new station
NEWS Chemstry PhD student looks to expand NGO that donates used books to African countries
COMMENTARY Friedman ’19: Costs might not outweigh benefits to become Amazon’s new HQ2
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