SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2022
VOLUME CLVII, ISSUE 4
BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
UNIVERSITY NEWS
UNIVERSITY NEWS
Faculty delay vote on creation of PPE Center
U. students launch Dear Blueno site
Updates from President’s Report, discussion of task forces also addressed BY ALEX NADIRASHVILI UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR Members of the University’s faculty and administration opted to postpone a vote on the establishment of a proposed Philosophy, Politics and Economics Center at the first faculty meeting of the semester Tuesday. The vote will instead be held at the next faculty meeting March 1. Govind Menon PhD’01, professor of applied mathematics, opened the meeting on behalf of the Faculty Executive Committee and brought forth the initial motion to establish a PPE center on campus. Provost Richard Locke P’18, who has previously expressed his support for the PPE Center, prefaced the discussion by asking faculty members to “focus (the) discussion on what the PPE Center actually proposes to do and not
Site follows in footsteps of popular Dear Blueno Facebook page after its removal
turn this into some sort of referendum on broader political issues.” Locke also brought up the “active campaign” among faculty and students opposing the PPE Center. These campaigns have partially focused on the proposed PPE Center’s connection to the Political Theory Project, which previously received funding from the Koch Foundation, a foundation run by billionaire and conservative political mega-donor Charles Koch, The Herald previously reported. Locke assured faculty that none of the “efforts to try to link the PPE Center to these outside groups … (through) guilt by association … provide evidence that there is a linkage between these outside groups and funding for the PPE Center.” Paul Guyer, professor of humanities and philosophy, later echoed this sentiment in the faculty discussion. “The proposed PPE Center would be a replacement project, not a continuation of the Political Theory Project,” Guyer said. “Whatever people might think has been the case with (the) PTP is, strictly
BY NEIL MEHTA SENIOR STAFF WRITER On Jan. 26, three University students launched a new, standalone Dear Blueno website. The site’s launch follows the removal of the original Dear Blueno Facebook page, which was in November 2021, The Herald previously reported. The Dear Blueno Facebook page, which launched in 2018, served as an anonymous message board for University students until its removal by Facebook. The new website is similar to the Facebook page in functionality: Students can post messages anonymously, comment and react to posts. Three developers, all current University students, built the site without involvement from the moderators of the original Dear Blueno page. The Herald spoke to two of the three de-
SEE FACULTY PAGE 6
LOKI OLIN / HERALD
SEE BLUENO PAGE 4
UNIVERSITY NEWS
UNIVERSITY NEWS
Diman, Sayles flood due to pipe issues
Grad students demand U. change COVID-19 policy
Flooding prompts Diman evacuation, Sayles Hall class relocation
Grad students call for increased flexibility, transparency during pandemic
BY JACK TAJMAJER SENIOR STAFF WRITER Buildings on different corners of campus — Andrews Hall, Diman House and Sayles Hall — flooded over the weekend and on Monday. But according to the University, the causes of flooding have all been resolved. Diman House is the most recent source of flooding, with a burst pipe in the basement leading to a “brief, temporary evacuation spurred by an alarm” early Monday morning, University Spokesperson Brian Clark wrote in an email to The Herald. The flooding, he added, did not “impact student rooms.” Facilities Management contained the flooding quickly. Zandy Swartzman ’24, a resident of Diman House, said he and his friends were extremely confused after being woken up by the alarm. “It really did look like a scene from the Titanic,” he said. “Just water spewing down.”
BY CHARLIE CLYNES AND CALEB LAZAR SENIOR STAFF WRITER AND UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR
AINSLEY SMITH / HERALD
Thirty-six Andrews students relocated following flooding in the dorm and were told to stay with a friend or in University emergency housing. “We were just waiting outside for about half an hour,” he added. “We went into Goddard for warmth.” His friends on the first floor weren’t impacted, according to Swartzman. “We got back at like two (in the morning) or something,” he said. Shortly after students returned to their rooms, the alarm went off a second time, Swartzman said. The
second time, though, he and his roommate decided to stay inside. “My roommate was asleep and was really not happy,” he said. “We covered our heads with pillows until the alarm stopped.” Still, he noted that the situation has since been resolved and “could
SEE FLOOD PAGE 8
Citing concerns over recently-announced COVID-19 testing and instruction policies, the Graduate Labor Organization formally delivered an open letter condemning University reopening plans Jan. 24. The letter, signed by more than 230 graduate student employees, 200 undergraduates and dozens of community members, urges the University “to grant graduate workers the agency to choose, without penalty, whether working in person is a risk they are willing to take.” The letter reflects general dissatisfaction among surveyed graduate students surrounding the University’s COVID-19 policies for the spring semester. The letter cites an internal
Arts & Culture
Arts & Culture
S&R
Commentary
“Yellowjackets” effectively blends horror and drama Page 2
R.I. arts council awards $3.4 million in grants to cultural organizations Page 3
Experts discuss the best practices for taking COVID-19 antigen tests Page 5
Levine ’23: What language can tell us about culture Page 6
GLO survey that polled nearly 150 graduate student workers and found that 90% of respondents support classes moving online for the duration of shopping period, while 86% believe the University should provide data regarding positivity rates and 79% “want remote work options … without risk of penalty.” As of 2020, 2,600 graduate students were enrolled at the University. Seventy-six percent of surveyed graduate students support the return of optional PCR testing, which was phased out by the University in favor of rapid tests at the beginning of the semester. “A vast, vast majority supported grads — and all staff — having the choice to work remotely … without fear of repercussion,” said Beckett Warzer GS, GLO steward for theatre and performing arts and literary arts. Warzer added that it is currently extremely difficult for graduate students to secure remote permission. The University has defended its reopening plan in emails to graduate and undergraduate students and
SEE GLO PAGE 3
TODAY TOMORROW
DESIGNED BY BRANDON WU DESIGNER
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RAPHAEL LI DESIGN EDITOR