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8/4/2019 September 22, 2011 issue
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/september-22-2011-issue 1/8
Thursday, September 22, 2011
D aily H erald B
Since 1891vol. cxlvi, no. 71
72 / 65
tomorrow
74 / 65
today
news....................2-4
editorial.............6
opinions..............7
CitY & state...........8 i n s i d e
Post-, nsD
P-s gb (wc),
g C
C ’12: Ccm BCA juf
oPnons, 7 w e a t h e r
Face the music
B Katrina PhilliPs
Senior Staff Writer
he walls o t he Petteruti Loungeechoed with the deliberationso Undergraduate Council o Students members late into last
night and this morning as they determined the path o this year’scouncil in their irst general body meeting o the semester. UCS
President Ralanda Nelson ’12 ledthe group in electing eight new
internal positions and appointingthree representatives in a record-long meeting that had passed theive-hour mark as o press time
ad shwd sgs dg.Among the positions elected
wr u srtary, wUniversity Finance Board at-largerepresentatives, the appointments
chair and a communicationschair. he competitions ranged
in intensity rom Bonnie Kim’s’12 unopposed bid or Ivy Council
py har t th 0-addatbattle to ill the ive open UFBspts.
Nwy td UFB rprs-tatives Spencer Jae ’14, DavidCha ’2, Abba Chrt ’5,Oy Odwum ’4 ad Stpha-nie Hennings ’15 promised greatreorms to UFB. Chanin, who hasserved on the board the past two
years, said he wants to see on-line budgets ully launched in themg yar.
hough Alex Quoyeser ’15 was
unopposed in his run or appoint-
UCS elects
eight tonew posts
B MarK rayMond
Senior Staff Writer
President Ruth Simmons received$656,683 in total compensation dur-ing the 2009 calendar year, downrm $4, 200. Cmpsa-t gurs r tp as 200,
including salaries, bonuses, benetsand deerred compensation, are listed
on the Internal Revenue Service’sForm 990, which all nonprots mustle each year. Te 2009 orm reectssm th ts th 200 -nomic downturn or the rst time,including Simmons’ salary reduction.
Afer the nancial downturn in
2008, Simmons voluntarily requesteda pay ut. But baus thr s a agperiod between the tax lings andthe year the report is made availableto the public, the cut has not been
rtd ut ths yar’s rprt.“During the crash, many o us
voluntarily took salary cuts,” saidBeppie Huidekoper, executive vicepresident or nance and admin-strat.
Aside rom the signicant de-crease in Simmons’ compensation,
the most recent tax ling largely mir-rors the previous year’s. Tough com-
pensation is reported or the 2009calendar year, the Form 990 containsnancial inormation or the 2010
Tax lings
show 2009salaries for
top ofcials
B Kat thornton
Senior Staff Writer
It has no building yet, but witha $15 million endowment andhudrds s-t-b aatdresearchers, the Norman PrinceNurss Isttut prmssto make its presence elt in thewrd mda rsarh.
Te institute does not have a
mss statmt, but t sks t“build a strong clinical institutearound the neurosciences that hasa strong academic and researchbas,” ardg t Jh Rbs,the newly hired administrativedrtr r th sttut. H washired jointly by the University andRhode Island Hospital, and hispayhk s spt btw th twsttuts.
Development o the new in-sttut bga just r a yar agwith a $15 million grant romth Frdrk Hry Pr 32rust, which was the largest grantRhode Island Hospital has everreceived, according to a hospital
prss ras.Tugh th grat was g t
Rhode Island Hospital, it “stipu-
ats that Brw s t b d th ra pag ad strat-
New institute
merges study,
practice of
brain science
B sheFali luthra
Senior Staff Writer
One comes rom an Americanpolitical dynasty. One won thePulitzer Prize — twice. Another isthe most translated Arican author
a tm.And as o this spring, all o
thm w tah at Brw.
T thr — rmr grss-man Patrick Kennedy, journal-ist David Rohde ’90 and author
Chua Ahb — ar part thUniversity’s recent string o high-prole appointments. But JohnDonoghue, who is the directoro the Brown Institute or Brain
Science, where Kennedy is a visit-
ing ellow, said he does not like tous th trm “amus prssr”t dsrb Kdy. T phrasconjures up images o moviestars and musicians — celebritieswhose connection to academics istuus at bst, h sad.
Idd, hp-hp artst Wy Jean, who was named a visitingw t th Ursty ast yar,did not teach or interact muchwith students, said Corey Walker,associate proessor o Aricanastudies and chair o the depart-
ment. Jean’s impact on campusmight be best remembered by hissurprs appara at ast yar’sSprg Wkd.
“It was a one-year appoint-mt r hm t spd tm hr
High prole, high prestige:
U. courts celebrity profs
Rachel Kaplan / Heral
Last night’s Unergrauate Council o Stuents meeting broke the group’s recor or latest en time.
Alex Bell / Heral
Former Rep. Patrick Kennedy is one o several high-profle fgures who haveae Brown to their resumes.
B elizaBeth carr
Senior Staff Writer
S g r bakrupty Aug. ,Central Falls has been engaged inan arduous negotiation process as
city employees ght to protect the
benets included in their currenttrats.
“We’re making progress towardsrahg a agrmt abut sm
o the things we’d like to do in the
bankruptcy plan,” said Robert Flan-
drs Jr. ’, th ty’s apptd r-ceiver. Flanders, a ormer assistantadjunct proessor o public policy,
was appointed in February to helphandle the city’s impending bank-
ruptcy. Te city’s determination toavoid deaulting on its loans has putits employees’ pensions and benets jpardy.
Wh t d r bakrupty August, the city eared employeeswould sue, Flanders said. Te city
convinced the teachers union, the
re department and the police de-
partmt that t wud b bttr ttry “t gtat a rsut rathrtha gg thrugh a g, draw-out litigation contesting the bank-
rupty g,” h sad.“We’re listening to what they have
to say about various cost-cuttingproposals,” Flanders said. For ex-ample, instead o outsourcing rescuesrs, th r dpartmt ud
Central Falls struggles through bankruptcy
ctiu g 3ctiu g 3
ctiu g 2ctiu g 4
city & state
FeatURe
ctiu g 4
8/4/2019 September 22, 2011 issue
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/september-22-2011-issue 2/8
B Shrkgr, Prsdt
Sydy Embr, V Prsdt
Matthw Burrws, rasurr
Isha Guat, Srtary
T Brw Day Hrad (USPS 06.40) s a dpdt wspapr srg thBrw Ursty mmuty day s . It s pubshd Mday thrugh Fr-day durg th aadm yar, udg aats, durg Cmmmt, durg Ortat ad Juy by T Brw Day Hrad, I. Sg py rr ah mmbr th mmuty.POSMASER pas sd rrts t P.O. B 253, Prd, RI 0206.Prdas pstag pad at Prd, R.I.Subsrpt prs: $20 yar day, $40 smstr day.Cpyrght 20 by T Brw Day Hrad, I. A rghts rsrd.
www.wi.c
95 Ag S., Pvic, R.I.
D aily H erald B
IToRIAl
(40) [email protected]
BSInSS
(40) [email protected]
Campus ews2 he Brown Daily erald
hursday, September 22, 2011
lookie lookie by zoe Wheeer ‘12ACROSS1 Like Ken
JenningsRockoutcropping
10 Earth force,informally
14 Errand runnger15 Record, as
“Glee”
16 Shetland17 Rich dessert18 Staple character
in many crimedramas
0 “Jersey Shore”nickname
2 Controversieswith RichardNixon and TigerWoods, to nametwo
3 State with apanhandle:Abbr.
5 Directional suffix
6 Put down7 Gear for shaping
dough2 N.Y.C.’s Park or
Madison3 Make, as a
salary4 Take it easy8 Musical with
“Seasons ofLove”
0 Stop3 Hay unit4 Sweeper6 Kitty cries8 Labrynth lord of
film
9 Website knownas “The StarWars Wiki”
3 Coatroom hook6 “...boy ___ girl?”7 Capital of R.I .8 Get the demon
out of1 Stackhouse of
“True Blood”
65 Skip school67 Canine woe68 Tidbit in Toledo69 The Golden
Arches, e.g.70 Happening71 Yoked team
72 Canadian brandof gas73 Not the sharpest
tool in the shed
DOWN1 Some NCOs2 Show too much,
say3 Big haircut4 Filled in again,
as a test5 Shatner-
obsessed fan,say
6 Basketballposition: Abbr.
7 Streams of agua8 Long-legged
shorebird9 Fun park car
10 Essay in theTimes, say
11 Dieter’sphrase
12 ___ Gay(W.W.II plane)
13 Disney’s
Esmeralda, forone19 ___ Beauty21 Of an intestine24 Field unit27 Starchy food28 Not in a
relationshipanymore
29 Wine: Prefix
30 A friend, inFrance
31 Yank’s foe35 Org. in “The
Closer”and “LethalWeapon”
36 Jai ___37 Warrior
Princess of TV39 Wrecker’s job
41 Ooze
42 Pitchers45 Borrow,
slangily47 Parodied50 Baltimore
baseballer51 Buzzing
instruments52 Act like aPokemon, say
53 ___-Bismol54 Going brand?55 Snap59 “Green
Lantern” starReynolds
60 Heart lines:abbr.
62 Up for it63 Somerhalder
and Harding64 Italy’s Villa
d’___
Solutions andarchive online at
acrosstobear.wordpress.com
Email: brownpuzzles
@gmail.com
4 P.m.
“Getting to Success,”
Salomon Center, Room 001
7:30 P.m.“No, ou’re not craz. It IS sexism,”
Salomon 202
6 P.m.
MCM Cinémathèque 16mm lms ,
MCM, Room 101
8 P.m.Organ Concert b James Higon,
Sales Hall
SHARPE REFEC TORY VERNEY-WOOLLEY DINING HALL
LUNCH
DINNER
Roast Turke with Grav, Chinese
Bee an Peppers, Cheese an Corn
Strata, Raspberr Satin Fuge Cake
Pot Roast Giariniera, Manicotti
with Meatless Sauce, Raspberr
Satin Fuge Cake
Grille Ham an Swiss Sanwich,
Vegan Tou Ravioli, Cupcake
Extravaganza
Hot Turke Sanwich with Grav,
Bake Macaroni an Cheese,
Oatmeal Butterscotch Cookies
TO DAY S EP TE mB ER 22 TOm ORRO W SE PT EmB ER 23
AC ROS S TO B E AR
S U d O K U
M E N U
C A L E N d A R
at Brown to learn rom Brown,”
Walker said. “But he was not amember o the aculty. He was
r a mmbr th auty.”But in general, Walker said, a-
mous proessors bring distinctionand “intellectual excitement” to
th Ursty.“Students’ levels o curiosity
ar pqud,” h sad.
t, ‘’
Donoghue, a renowned neu-rstst hs w rght, m-phasized that big-name proessorsare hired or their experience, notgamur. “W’r brgg p-ple with dierent perspectives,”he said. “Not even dierent — it’s
unique perspectives.” Tese ap-pointments, he said, add richnesst ampus , brgg w-points that “arenot ordinarily ampus.”
Kennedy, orinstance, is nota neuroscientistby training. Hisnational initia-tive, One Mindor Research,which ightss tress-re latedbrain disorders,brought him to
the University.Kennedy willco-teach an up-per-level seminaror undergradu-
ate and gradu-ate students on eectively using
resources to research cures ordsass.
Donoghue said Kennedy brings
“many years o experience,” —rom his work in Congress, knowl-
edge o health care and amily history o brain disorders. Heas hps t Kdy ampus s that “may pp
a bt” rm hs prs.Rhd, wh w tah ENGL
1160E: “Advanced Journalism: In- vestigative and Online Reporting”this spring, said a amous proes-sor can add expertise and enhancea student’s learning experience.A ormer New York imes cor-rspdt ad authr a bk detailing his several months o captivity in Aghanistan, Rohde
is now a oreign aairs columnistat Rutrs.
Brw s t th y Ur-sity to hire well-known proes-
sors. For example, Jill Abramson,ut dtr th Nw Yrk imes, was ormerly a member Ya’s auty, ad wrtr JyCar Oats wrks th auty
at Prt.
‘t -22’
Tough real-world knowledgea b auab, Rhd sad pr-essional work could also distracta amous proessor rom teaching.
“Tat’s the catch-22,” he said.
“You’re away rom campus, soyou’re bringing a certain exper-
tise, but when you’re there oneday a week, it could be dicultr studts t t sg m tthr shdus.”
Rohde will have to travelabroad to research his column
during the semester. Tough hesaid he hopes to spend as muchtime with students as he can — he
pas t hd hurs ad bassb by ph ad ma —he knows it may not always beasy t d s.
“I think being there all the timemakes it easier or students to in-trat wth yu,” h sad.
Donoghue also acknowledgedthat students may not have asmuh ass t bg-am prs-
srs — Kdy, k Rhd, wtu wth hs w wrk adtats wh at Brw.
“I don’t know i it’s a drawback,but it’s a limitation that you don’tha as muh ass as yu’d kt ha,” Dghu sad.
Achebe, a proessor o Ari-cana studies and the author o many novels including “TingsFall Apart,” joined the aculty twoyars ag. H -tahs a tra-ture course and speaks in variouscolloquia and panels, Walker said.
Tough Walker said Achebe
holds oce hours and is a “vis-
ible” presence in the department,hs shdu smtms maks tdicult or him to interact with
students. Achebe was not available
or comment because he is prepar-g r a ampus spakg t.
a fm ‘p’
Jssa Bdt ’2 shppd aAricana studies class in spring2010 because Achebe was listed
as the instructor. But she soonound out the class was beingco-taught. Achebe attended two
classes the whole semester andpartpatd a sympsum thstudents attended, she said. Mostclasses, though, were led by Mi-
chael Telwell, a University o Massachusetts Amherst proessor.
Tough Achebe was not avail-ab t studts durg th ass,his “presence was elt,” Bendit
sad. Lstg thim and havinghim in classes wasan “incrediblehonor,” and shesaid his involve-ment al lowedher to connectuniquely with theass matra.
Sergei Khrush-
chev, senior el-low in interna-tional studies
and son o ormerSoviet PremierNikita Khrush-chev, said teach-g s ay auty member’s most
important obligation, regardless
am.“We belong to the past — soon-
er or later, we will go and you willcome,” he said. “Te qual ity o theknowledge we will present youwth s mst mprtat, s t mI’m putting my students in the rst
place and all other activity outsideBrw just sd r thrd.”
Khrushchev, who teaches theundergraduate seminar INL1800R: “Post-Soviet States From
th Past t th Futur,” sad hsexperiences in Soviet Russia might
make him a more eective teacher.“I came rom that environment,
rm that utur,” h sad. “S Ican tell students how it looked likerm th sd.”
Khrushh’s ass s targtdprimarily or seniors, though he
sad udrassm ar as w-m t tak t.
Dghu sad mst studtsh had spk t wr trstdin Kennedy’s course because o ts subjt mattr — t bausthey wanted to “rub shoulders”wth a bg am.
Gillian Horwitz ’14 said sheound Kennedy’s class interestingbecause it might introduce hert a w prspt s.I gra, sh sad, studts ardrawn to courses by a combina-tion o the subject matter and theprssr’s am.
I a amous proessor taught the
“worst class ever,” Horwitz said,the person’s name alone wouldn’tb ugh t draw hr . At thend o the day, you still want a
prssr wh “ts yu.”
ctiu fm g 1
Famous profs bring ‘unique perspectives’
“The qualit o the knowlege we willpresent ou with is most important, soto me I’m putting m stuents in therst place an all other activit outsieBrown just secon or thir.”
Sergei Khrushchevsenior ellow in international stuies
8/4/2019 September 22, 2011 issue
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Campus ews 3he Brown Daily erald
hursday, September 22, 2011
scal year, which began July 1, 2009.A prt th uds th -
dowment in scal year 2010 wererarragd t mt w rguatsadptd by th stat.
“Tere is a ederal law that says
how endowment unds are supposedto be managed and accounted or,”Huidekoper said. “Some states ad-
opted one set o rules while others
adptd athr.” Rhd Isad ad-opted new regulations or managingdwmts Ju 30, 200. Tstate used to ollow guidelines calledth Urm Maagmt Ist-tuta Fuds At ad w ws
th Urm Prudt Maagmt Isttuta Fuds At.
Huidekoper said the move to UP-MIFA by th stat w t adrsy aect the University’s ability to man-ag ts assts.
“It helped with our ratings andga us mr bty wth ur as-sts,” sh sad.
In 2008, the IRS began recordingmpsat gurs r th a-dar yar, rathr tha th sa yar,making comparisons with earlieryears dicult. Both the 2008 and
200 ta gs rt ths hag.Huidekoper said the University
managed to withstand the economicrss bttr tha may ts prs,argy du t rsk assssmts -dutd just mths br th rssbegan to take hold. “We had already d a t th aayss,” sh sad.
Former provost David Kertzer ’69P’95 P’98 earned $512,771 in total
compensation in 2009, up slightly rom $508,496 in 2008. Huidekoperearned $425,681 in total compensa-tion, down rom $436,024, largely due to a decrease in her deerredmpsat.
Te highest paid employee in200 was Cytha Frst, prs-
dent and chie investment ocer. Sheearned $1,011,351 in total compensa-
t, up rm $,2 200.Other top earners in 2009 includ-
ed more members o the nancialoce, including Kenneth Shimberg,managing director or private eq-uity, who earned $773,059 in total
compensation, down rom $834,554 200. Dad Shd, maaggdirector or marketing securities,earned $635,067, and Andrew Wert,managing director or marketablesurts, ard $640,02.
CIO Frost washighest paid in 2009
ctiu fm g 1
continue to provide these services
but ut rtm pay.Public Saety Strategies Group,
located in Massachusetts, released arprt Spt. 6 that rmmds thty sdr sdatg r sr- s wth stats arby twsand contracting out its emergency
mda sr as.Te city is “trying to preserve jobs
and not go to outsourcing … because
that’s the best way to save money,”
Flanders said. Functions currently indanger o being outsourced include jatra ad satat srs.
“T hag s t try t mup with a plan that’s workable despitethe act that we’re not going to be able
to provide the same level o benets
and other nancial inducements thatwere provided in the past,” Flanderssaid. “Tere’s going to be more cost-sharing and the benets are going tob urtad.”
Te report also recommendedthat the re department standard-
ize shifs to prevent unnecessary overtime and cut the positions o th thr batta hs — whhst th ty a tta $200,000 d-ars a yar — ar pubsaty admstratr.
Central Falls Police Chie JosephMoran III issued a nine-page rebuttalin response to the report. In it, he
expressed his concern that the report
“dd t ud trws, rwo job descriptions or surveys.” He
added that the report did not citeride-alongs with police ocers oray sts t th p dpartmtas d r ts ams.
“Nrmay wh yu d a study,you try to nd out about a placebr yu rp t apart,” Mra tdT Hrad.
Tis week, Flanders and his teamare ling a ve-year plan or balanc-ing the city’s budget, which includesbudgt uts ad gra rstrutur-g.
Flanders recently obtained an
extension to continue negotiationsthrugh th d Otbr bra judge hears the unions’ case that
bankruptcy law does not give thedistrict the right to renege on itsmpys’ trats.
“Te next month-and-a-hal isgoing to be the critical period ordag wth a ths,” h sad.
Tough the negotiations withteachers are still in preliminary stags, Jams Pars, d rprs-
tative in Central Falls or the RhodeIsland Federation o eachers and
Hath Prssas, sad h hpsthe negotiations will t within the
tm.
“It would be important or theteachers to have an understanding
what thr trat s,” h sad.Te city’s initial ocus was “try-
g t agr a trm pa thatwould allow the teachers to work and things to proceed as normally aspssb wh w try t wrk ut alonger-term arrangement,” Flanderssaid. At the end o August, he re-placed the school’s negotiation teamwith his own group: his Chie o Sta Gayle Corrigan, David Abbott,deputy commissioner and general
counsel or the Rhode Island Depart-ment o Elementary and Secondary
Education, and Joseph Whelan, aPrd awyr wh uss abr aw ad t-bargaggtats.
“Both sides are talking — thereare a lot o issues that are still out-
standing but the act that they’re stillat the table negotiating is a very posi-t thg,” sad Frak Fy, prs-dent o the Rhode Island Federationo eachers and Health Proessionals.
“You hope to get something that’sair or teachers, air and good toth studts ad ar r tapayrs.”
“Tere are a lot o language is-sues surrounding job transer and
reassignment and teacher evalua-tion” in contract negotiations, Flynnsaid. eachers who have retired or
resigned have not been replaced, headdd.
“Te teachers are looking to pre-serve their rights. Tey’re lookingt gt a ar bts pakag agrdto, and we are hoping to use thebargag prss t gt prgramsthat would help students,” Parisi,the teachers’ union representative,
said. “We would love to see com-prehensive review o curriculum.”T tahrs wud as k t sprgrams k mus, sua dua-t ad gfd ad tatd asssaddd r tdd.
Te Central Falls school district,
whh rs ts udg rm thstat, st a t my th m-plementation o the new undingrmua, Fy sad.
“Basay, t’s a stat-ru shtty,” h sad th dstrt.
“We have ollowed the budgetproblems o the Central Falls munic-paty, but ha aways udrstdour budget comes rom the state gov-ernment, not the local government,”Pars sad. “T Gra Assmby has signicantly reduced municipaludg th ast w yars.”
ctiu fm g 1
Bankrupt city negotiates with workers
10 highestpaid University
eployees (2009)
Cynthia FrostVice Presient an Chie Investment Ocer
$1,011,351
Kenneth ShibergManaging director o Private Equit
$773,059
Ruth SionsPresient
$656,683
Andrew WertManaging director o Marketable Securities
$640,027
David SchofeldManaging director o Marketable Securities
$635,067
michael SpeidelManaging director o Real Assets
$619,822
Edward Wingdean o Meicine an Biological Sciences
$594,113
Eli AdashiProessor o Biolog, Former dean o Meicinean Biological Sciences
$514,737
David KertzerProvost
$512,771
Rajiv Vohradean o the Facult
$489,995Got tips? [email protected]
8/4/2019 September 22, 2011 issue
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Campus ews4 he Brown Daily erald
hursday, September 22, 2011
morse ’11 wins ayoral priary by one vote
Four months ater Commencement, Alex Morse ’11 still has a
was to go beore laning a job.
But Tuesa, he brought himsel one step closer b winning the
preliminar election or maor o Holoke, Mass., his hometown.He nishe ahea o incumbent maor Elaine Pluta b just one
vote. He an Pluta will both be on the ballot or the general
election. The other two caniates in Tuesa’s election will not
be on the ballot.
Morse will ace of with Pluta, who is 67, in the general election
Nov. 8. I electe, Morse woul become the cit’s rst openl ga
maor an the oungest in its histor.
“M age is an increible asset,” Morse tol a Massachusetts
television station. “I’m the onl caniate raise in the igital
age,” he sai. “I haven’t been aroun or 20 ears. I’m not tie to
special interests — m special interest is the people o the cit o
Holoke.”
With 22 percent voter turnout in Holoke, Morse receive 2,023
votes, an Pluta receive 2,022. Both nishe signicantl ahea
o the other two caniates, who garnere 806 an 310 votes
respectivel.Morse, who was an urban stuies concentrator an the rst
college grauate in his amil, announce his caniac in Januar
ater hiring a campaign manager last ear an moving to start a
grassroots campaign.
Morse’s involvement in public lie stretches back several ears.
He has serve as a irector or several local commissions an
currentl hols positions on the Friens o the Holoke Public
Librar, the Holoke Communit Lan Trust an the Latino
Scholarship Association. Morse also oune the rst LGBT non
prot organization in Holoke.
While at Brown, Morse spent three ears working at Cit Hall,
where he was mentore b davi Cicilline ’83, the rst openl ga
maor o a state capital an now a U.S. congressman rom Rhoe
Islan.
As maor, Morse woul ocus on improving public saet,
spurring economic evelopment an promoting eucation b
ocusing on ropout prevention, accoring to his campaign
website. He also hopes to improve the cit b creating an arts
istrict, revitalizing major cit streets an engaging citizens in
government afairs, accoring to the site.
“I’m hoping to change the conversation in Holoke politics,”
Morse tol The Heral in Januar. “It’s reall a tale o two cities
— there is the cit o people who get opportunities, go to college
an get ecent jobs, an then there’s the cit where there is
povert an people on’t get eucate,” he sai. “I want to brige
that gap, make it a place where everone has equal opportunities.”
— shi luth
N E W S I N B R I E F
mts har, Ns mphaszdthe importance o this position
ad that th Crprat a-s pst th mg yar.Both students will be responsibleor providing student eedback inthe search or a new University
president or what one candidatedeemed “the post-Simmons era.”
Sam Gilman ’15 was electedthe new communications chairover two upperclassmen, since
the council elt his resh ideasoutweighed his inexperience.“My jb s t ray y yurmssags,” h sad.
hough Nelson tried to con- vince the group that class yeardoes not determine passion orskill, the majority o the delib-eration or Corporation liaisondwelled on the candidates’ classyears and the trade-o between
a sr’s pr ad a rst-year’s greater personal stake in the
Crprat’s dss.
“Once you’re a Brown student,you’re always a Brown student,”
said one UCS member, addingthat even an alum would have
interest in the selection o anew University president. heu argy smd t agr,inally electing Jennier Bloom’2, a dputy maagg dtr BlogDailyHerald, ater one o theght’s gst dbrats.
Alex Friedland ’15 was electedalumni liaison ater remindingthe council that UCS alums wereresponsible or the adoption o the Open Curriculum and “really contributed to everything we’re
prg w.”he position o the UCS/UFB
liaison went to Daniel Pipkin ’14,
who served on the Student Ac-tts Cmmtt ast yar adprssd a trst usg th atts dwmt.
Gregory Chatzino ’15 wasnamed the parliamentarian pro
tempore in an unopposed con-test. Gaurav Nakhare ’15 wonthe webmaster position, alsouppsd, th a t,giving a speech that began atermdght wth, “Gd mrg,ry.”
An unusually large number th g’s addats wrrecent transers. “his is a phe-nomenon,” Anthony White ’13,
a UCS member, told he Herald,rmarkg that trasr studtstypically do not participate inUCS.
he meeting was interspersedwth rqut strth ad dabraks durg t tayg. N-son began the meeting with sternadmts t hr w bardmembers to maintain proessional
composure, but she eventually jd th u, sgg ppu-ar sgs wth th rwd durgbraks.
UCS meeting runs until morning
egy,” said Ed Wing, dean o medi-cine and biological sciences and aproessor o medicine. “We all plantgthr,” h sad.
Te institute will be managed
through Rhode Island Hospital by a steering board and two directors.Robson reports to Rees Cosgrove,th sttut’s a drtr.
Csgr s prsty har th Dpartmt Nursurgry at Alpert Medical School and chie o neurosurgery at Rhode Island
Hospital and the Miriam Hospital.H w tu t hd a thrtts.
Previously, Robson was the vice president o operations orthe Caliornia Institute or Regen-erative Medicine. At the institute,h trd a $3 b budgtr mbry stm rsarh.He will also be the associate di-rector o the Brown Institute or
Bra S.Both Robson and Cosgrove
worked at the Montreal Neurologi-
cal Institute at McGill University atsparat tms prr t mg t
th Ursty, ardg t Rb-
son. He said this institute consoli-dated neuroscience research and aurga hspta th sampa. Rbs addd that h adCosgrove hope to create some-thg smar hr Prd.
“We believe that when you havery tgthr k that, a the same place, you get interac-tions between researchers at alldrt s that yu d’t gtwhen people are across town romah thr,” Rbs sad.
Cosgrove said that while col-
laboration already exists betweenscientists conducting basic re-search at the University and thosepursuing clinical applications at
Rhode Island Hospital, they are“not rubbing shoulder to shoulderin the same place,” which wouldbe “the best way to encourage col-abrat.”
Te two directors and the steer-ing committee are now working toaz a budgt ad a adms-trat strutur. Ty th hpt dty a w ky prgrams th Ursty’s bra s d-partments in which they can ocus ratg a abrat
ad jt rsarh prjts.
Udrgraduats a pt thave a role in this new institute.
Wing said there are already sev-eral undergraduates in labs in theJwry Dstrt ad th NrmaPrince Neurosciences Institute willollow suit. “Tey are welcomeand there will be opportunitiesin each o those departments, aswell as in the labs on campus,”he said. “Tat’s one o the goodthgs abut bg a udrgradat Brown. It’s pretty open.” He saidundergraduates should ask their
proessors about these opportu-nities, especially when summerbms sr.
“Having the chance to work hads- w b a ry drtexperience or undergrads,” said
Clara Kliman-Silver ’13, a cog-t urs tratrwho has worked in University labss hr rshma yar.
“Something like this, in a hospi-
tal environment, will be good,” sheadded. “Working in a University lab gives you an expectation o ra-wrd rsarh, but wrkgin a hospital would be a good newpr.”
Institute aims for joint brainstormingctiu fm g 1
ctiu fm g 1
8/4/2019 September 22, 2011 issue
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5he Brown Daily erald
hursday, September 22, 2011
Cabernet Voltaire | Abe Pressman
Fraternity o Evil | Eshan Mitra, Brenan Hainline an Hector Ramirez
C O M I C S
B daily Princetonian staFF
the Daily Princetonian, Princeton U.
via UWire
Udrgraduats watg r th rstsmar “Ctzshp ad Dm-ocratic Development” at Penn lastweek received some unexpected newsas they waited or class to begin: Teir
prssr, Hry u, had passdaway ve months previously, andth Ursty had rgtt t a- th ass, ardg t th ma
students received in the middle o th uad ass.
“PSCI 291-301 is canceled. Wear s srry r ths ast mut a-cellation. With Dr. Henry eune’spassing, this course should have beenad r th summr ad wasan oversight,” the brie email, sentby P durg th ass, rad tstrty.
u, a pta s prs-sor at Penn, passed away on April 12.H was 5. Afr jg th ur-
sity’s political science department in6, h had as srd as har
the department rom 1975 to 1979as w as da th GraduatSchool o Arts and Sciences rom1967 to 1969. eune’s research inter-ests included democracy, technology ad mparat urba studs.
Despite the oversight and delay
in announcing the tragic news, Pennplans to hold a memorial service orth prssr smtm ths a, a-cording to Te Daily Pennsylvanian.
Penn undergrads not told of professor’s death until rst day
B eMily stePhen
cavalier Daily, U. virginia via UWire
T Studts r Pa ad Justo Palestine led a Bias IncidentReport and notied the Minority Rights Coalition at the University o
Virginia yesterday aer the organi-zation painted Beta Bridge, a bridgeon campus oen used as a messageboard, to support Palestine’s UnitedNat’s bd r stathd, y tnd that the message had beendesecrated the ollowing morning.
he students inished paint-ing “Palestine deserves a state” th brdg by 2 a.m. Spt. 5.By a.m., a wht bk had b
patd r th wrd “Past”ad th wrd “dsrs” had bstruck through, SPJP OutreachChar Sara Amusa sad.
“I’ b gttg a t -cerns rom the community,” saidVirginia senior Omer Abdulhamid,a SPJP mmbr wh rst saw thpainted-over message. “A lot o pp ar ry hurt by ths.”
Amusa rprtd th dtthrough the “Just Report It” eatureon the University website, which
aws studts t submt Bas I-dt Rprts.
“It’s not that they had writtensadr t, but thy spay
targeted (our message) and tried tomake sure it was ruined,” Almousasad.
SPJP members met with As-
sociate Dean o Students AaronLaushway usday.
“We’ll have a conversation withthe students and support them andlisten to their concerns,” Laushway sad.
Allen Groves, associate vicepresident and dean o students,explained that afer students lea rprt, th O th Da Students meets with those studentsand investigates the incident basedon available evidence beore devel-pg “a apprprat rsps.”
“At times the appropriate resolu-t s t urag a mmuty rsps t th dg sph,consistent with the First Amend-
mt,” h sad.Groves said interpreting this in-
cident is challenging because it is
unclear whether the changes to themssag st a pta statmtr wr bas-mtatd. H adddthat someone could potentially say his action was a political statementmade in response to another politi-a statmt.
Groves added the best responseto situations like these is morespeech. “Anytime things like thishappen, it’s very upsetting to the
students involved,” he said. “Wed’t s a t ths at UVA, butasay ats d ur targt-
ing dierent groups and dierent viewpoints. We want a community where everyone respects each other thy dsagr.”
Spat at UVA after pro-
Palestine message erased
B JaMes chang
the Daily Princetonian, Princeton U.
via UWire
One o cosmology’s greatest un-solved mysteries is the nature o dark matter, a mysterious and invisiblesubstance that dominates over 20percent o the universe’s observ-able mass. But recent ndings by Princeton’s Shravan Hanasoge, apost-doctoral student in the geo-sciences department, and New York
University’s Michael Kesden aboutprimordial black holes — theoreticalremnants o the Big Bang and oneo a handul o potential sources ordark mattr — may g ststs anew way to unlock the secrets o theus substa.
Haasg ad Ksd ha u-covered a new method or detectingcollisions between stars and primor-dial black holes, which may provideconcrete, observable proo o theexistence o dark matter. Primordialbak hs ar sra magtudssmaller than the more widely knownstellar black holes. Te scientists
ound that because o the diminishedmass, a prmrda bak h dst swaw up a star a sas wud a star bak h.
Istad, th graty a prmr-dial black hole squeezes the star andcauses vibrations on the star’s suraceas t saps bak t pa afr thblack hole has passed through — andthe ability to detect these vibrationscould lead astronomers to nally bsr a bak h.
“T hp s that th bratscaused … are unique,” Hanasogesaid. “I you were able to conclusive-ly see a primordial black hole, this
would have proound consequencesin our understanding o early uni-
rs smgy ad dark mattr.”But the discovery, according to
Ksd, s st y a “prmary”step in actually identiying a primor-da bak h. A prmrda bak h passg thrugh a star suh asthe sun is a very rare event — one
that happs ry 0 myears, Kesden said. Given such a lowrequency o occurrence, Kesdenadmttd that th tam’s das may
not be entirely practical and thatthey now need to determine whetherthr smuats a b appd tstars thr tha th su.
“Since other stars are so mucharthr away (tha th su) ad wcannot see them with as much detail,w d t d auats that ahad ths argr sas,” Ksdsaid. He noted that the staggering
number o stars in the galaxy meansit is likely that every so oen a black h ud b s passg thrugha star i a suciently large sample o stars was bsrd.
“However, having said that much,
t s as hard as t s mprss t dit,” Hanasoge said o their endeavor.
o make their models, Hana-soge and Kesden simulated anddiagrammed the waves and oscil-lations that might be created be-tween a primordial black hole and
th su, th masss a prmrdabak h ad th ky path thobject through the sun. Meanwhile,NASA’s im Sandstrom used the Ple-iades supercomputer at the NASA
Ames Research Center in Caliorniato provide video simulations o theirauats.
Haasg ad Ksd sad thy
hope to nd inormation about otherstars rom existing NASA telescopesthat ar amg trasar pa-ets, but that big questions remainabut th asbty sa up thsamp sz.
“he bottom line is, no oneknows what dark matter is and soeverything should be considered,”
physics proessor Frans Pretoriussad, addg that utur rsarh th subjt w dpd whthrthe scientic community nds a di-
rt sur r dark mattr.T rprt was pubshd th
September issue o Physical ReviewLttrs.
New method could prove
existence of dark matter
igher d
8/4/2019 September 22, 2011 issue
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ditorial6 he Brown Daily erald
hursday, September 22, 2011
C O R R E C I O N S P O L I C Y
T Brw Day Hrad s mmttd t prdg th Brw Ursty mmuty wth th mst aurat rmat pssb. Crrts may b
submttd up t s adar days afr pubat.
C O M M E N A R Y P O L I C Y
T dtra s th majrty p th dtra pag bard T Brw Day Hrad. T dtra wpt ds t ssary rt th ws
T Brw Day Hrad, I. Cums, ttrs ad ms rt th ps thr authrs y.
L E E R S O H E E D I O R P O L I C Y
Sd ttrs t [email protected]. Iud a tph umbr wth a ttrs. T Hrad rsrs th rght t dt a ttrs r gth ad arty
ad at assur th pubat ay ttr. Pas mt ttrs t 250 wrds. Udr spa rumstas wrtrs may rqust aymty, but ttr w
b prtd th authr’s dtty s u kw t th dtrs. Aumts ts w t b prtd.
A D V E R I S I N G P O L I C Y
T Brw Day Hrad, I. rsrs th rght t apt r d ay adrtsmt at ts dsrt.
E d I T O R I A L C O M I C by andrew antar
“Normall when ou o a stu, ou tr to n out
about a place beore ou rip it apart.”— Joseph Moran III, Central Falls police chie
s central fallS p 1.
E d I T O R I A L
Rhode Island’s transportation unding dilemma is old news. In 2008,the Providence Journal mentioned the city’s consideration o “drastic
masurs” suh as mpsg ts majr hghways t ras my taddrss th stat’s wrsg trasprtat budgt dt. T pt-ta ts wr sm th pts bg trtad by th-GrrDad Carr’s ’65 Bu Rbb Pa r rasprtat Fudg.
In December 2008, the panel produced its report. Tey aulted an
r-ra dra udg — $220 m dra ad — adhgh dbt sr paymts — $6 m a yar — amg th atrscontributing to Rhode Island’s “unsustainable” unding system, and they provided alternative unding scenarios. Tese scenarios included measures
like increasing vehicle registration ees and certain taxes, introducing h mag s ad, ys, tg.
Dsuss a t Itrstat 5 rmrgd Ju ths yar,when Rhode Island Department o ransportation Director Michael
Lewis made a request to the Federal Highway Administration or permis-
s t t th Itrstat. T uds wud b usd t mata stgtrasprtat struturs.
Hs rqust has b dsy uppuar amg Rhd Isadrs,wth thr-quartrs ths pd ppsg th da. T rqust wasmet with cries o indignation rom taxpayers who eel they have already pad r th rads ad bam msmaagmt r th urrt stuat.Tis indignation is not without justication, as Rick Reed and Gary Sasserecently demonstrated in an opinion piece in the Providence Journal.It’s ar that th addta aa stra th t w b grat rsm th drrs wh ry th trstat r thr day mmuts.
It’s not ideal, but it looks like the toll might be necessary medicine ora struggg Rhd Isad trasprtat systm. A study rasd astOctober reported that Rhode Island will ace a $4.5 billion transportationdecit by 2020. At the same time, the need or maintenance and improve-mts t stg radways ad brdgs s gratr tha r, wth raddts kd t rythg rm hghr-tha-arag rura traataty rats t a stmatd $,300 pss pr Prd drr.
Imprd ass t duat, srs ad jbs, rasd r-mental sustainability and greater appeal to businesses are just some o therua adatags a w-utg trasprtat systm. Wht may t ha th mta tug thr tats, mprg RhdIsland’s transportation is essential or the long-term development o thestat ad ud ras rturs t thr mprmt prjts.
It’s estimated that a toll o $3 or cars crossing into Rhode Island romCtut Itrstat 5 ud yd abut $50 m auay rRhode Island transportation. olls have an element o “airness,” becausethey use money rom those enjoying the advantages o roads to undtheir maintenance. Improved saety and road conditions will have posi-tive eects on drivers’ wallets, and the toll could reduce over-reliance dra uds.
W ar dt that rsarh ad dbat w tu arud thsimportant issue, and we hope or the emergence o easier-to-swallowsolutions or improving Rhode Island transportation. In the meantime,
i coupled with a strong emphasis on accountability to taxpayers, wethink this toll is worth considering — a medicine worth swallowing,
s t spak — as part a w udg md r trasprtat.
editorials ar writtn by T hrald’s ditorial pag board. Snd commnts @b.c.
qUOTE OF THE dAy
Tolls could be necessary for
R.I. transportation funding
the brown daily herald
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pinions 7he Brown Daily erald
hursday, September 22, 2011
Tayr a Frday ght. Yu’r yurway t a adtur — yu hp — rmayb just burrt-bud. Yu’r ut wthyur rds ad mayb a bt mr ddup tha usua. Tr’s a dd m r-g bkrs, th asa hmss prsad yur w studts ut sarhg ra tt tmt. Ad th t happs —th tab y rm a ha-rd dwar wdw. T rpatd up-ad-dwk rm th grup guys trg ut-sd CVS. Yah, yu thk. I wr a shrtskrt. I sdr t a brat th sty wathr ad th at that I d tyt ha ut. “N gs, baby,” thy shut.
I wdr yu’ st k thm afrthy’ kkd yu th a.
Nt a my w studts md —sm s t as tab — but th ats that mst m ar physay strgrtha wm. Bg harassd a rwd-d strt a g ampus s uky t rsut , but t a b a sary pr thss. Ad t happsrywhr — rma sury by agraduat studt at th Grg Washg-t Ursty ud that prt wm ha b harassd th strt.Why s t that, a dpd utry whr wm suppsdy ha th sam
rghts as m, ur bds ar st sd-
rd ar gam r pub sruty — tth pt whr t’s sdrd rma tb harassd th strt wh yu’r justtryg t gt rm pt A t pt B?
Ad yt w usuay just r ur ysad wak , hs kg, baus that’s
th pr yu pay, rght? Nt rythks s. Ihabak.rg s a st whrpp pst pturs thr harassrs -. T ‘abut’ st purprts, “W b- that ry has a rght t sa
ad dt wthut bg bjtd.Sua harassmt s a gatway rm thatrats a utura rmt that maksgdr-basd kay.”
T at s that ssm ad agast wm ar ra, but thy ar w- mr subty t th thrads md-r utur tha thy wr 20 yarsag. W sg ag t ppuar sgs wthyrs k “bths a’t sht but hs ad
trks.” W’r dd wth ads a rgu-
ar bass, may whh atur wm’sbds as bjts usd t s rythgrm ay ass t sadwhs t pw-r ts. I ms, wm gt t k prtty ad m r m as thy ghtrm, sa th wrd, ha harus ad-
turs ad pursu thr drams.T mda ds t rt a qua
utur, yt mr wm tha r argg t g ad prrtzg arrsr hag ams. Ours s a sty u
tradts whr “msm,” as atrm ad as a mmt, s hard t d.At Brw, w ha th FmS wrkshpas a sa spa t dsuss ma suaty,but pty us — rm bth gdrs —st tss th wrd “sut” arud asuarsat t dsrb ur prs. Fm-sts ar t ghtg r th rght t tr gt drd r ha ass t tra-pt aymr — t Amra, at
ast — w’r ghtg r th rght t just
b.Sm mght say, “I yu drss a rta
way, yu’r askg r t.” “Rap utur”s th trm usd t dsrb bs kths — bs that urag sua ag-grss ad agast wm. O
urs, ry w pp ar atuay -dg rap. It’s muh ss rt tha that— t’s ratg a sty whh w bamth tms suh rms r ‘tg’thmss t b rapd. Fr drssg a r-ta way. Fr bg t sy.
Is ry ata a prursr t sua -? O urs t. Smtms t s justsmthg t r yur ys at. Fr sm,t s just a sg that thy k gd. Butt s f muh darkr tha that, baust mas that w ar tahg yug mthat bys w b bys — uab t trthmss th prs smthy thk s attrat. Ad w’r tahgyug wm that thy shud b arad,baus that’s just hw th wrd wrks.
I d’t ha a dt sut r at-ag r harassmt r sua ,but I d prps that w a thk mrrtay abut th ryday dtas urs. Wath r yur w dub sta-dards. Ar yu bamg sm r at-g wth hs r hr mst bas rghts s-prss? T t tm yu’r ut a wkd ght, pay attt t thpart yu’r payg as yu wak dw thatrwdd strt.
Camille SpencerSalmon ’14 is aneuroscience concentrator rom Miami,
Floria. She can be reache at
The problem with Thayer on a Friday night
T Brw Crt Agy as a t rtsm. Sprg at Brw s markd ty by warmr wathr ad mr ug-g th Ma Gr but as by th -tab ras mpats drtd atths studt-ru rgazat. Smstudts ar uhappy wth th st musa ats r th Sprg Wkd -rts. Othrs t thr rustrat wth atkt-purhasg prss that rqut-y prsts prbms. It f sms as
th BCA a y d wrg th ys may studts. But t shud b -dt that thy d prd auab sr-s, suh as prmtg th mus Brwstudts thrugh ts Spakasy Ssssad dag wth th may gsts - d puttg th Sprg Wkdrts.
Last wk, th BCA aud thup r ts Fa Crt, whh w takpa ths Saturday. Wh sm studtsmght t appr BCA’s st Starky ad Ra Estat, thy ha ttras t mpa s admss t thrt s r. It w st thm thgt g hk ut th prrmrs LFd — r th Rhd Isad Sh
Dsg Audtrum th as ra —ad s ths tw ats put a gd
shw, t th rwd ad th skpta ar. It’s dut t mpaabut r mus, spay a Sat-
urday ght.But what studts a dsappr
s th way whh th BCA ddd whh ats t wud brg r ts Fa C-rt. It startd ut rasaby w. Orth summr, thy, abrat wthBgDayHrad, put ut a p whh studts ud t r thr
prrrd at rm a st that wr“aaab ad ardab.”
S ar s gd. Oy 66 studts t-d th p, whh mas that rughy y 0 udrgraduats prssda p. T studt bdy thrrhas ry tt rm t mpa abut ay st baus thr wr s w trs.O urs, t must b ptd ut that th
p was dutd durg th rst wk August, whh s hardy a tm wh
may us ar rgusy hkg Bg-DayHrad.
T BCA sad at th tm th
p that thy had arady surd at.But th prbm s thy ga da-t wh t mght b. Why wud thatb mprtat? Fr th smp ras thatI, ag wth th thr 65 trs, mghtha td drty had I kw thatth arady bkd at was Starky, a dub-stp artst.
Mayb th trms Starky’s tratprtd ay aumt. But thatwud t prud th BCA rm sayg ts p aumt that th arady bkd at was rm th dubstp gr— a at that wud ha b su-t r trs th p t mak a mrrmd ds. put t bry, yud’t par a w wth th ma wh yu
ha da what yu’r atg.Athr prbm ars wh Ga
Brass ’2, BCA’s bkg har, sad aSpt. 2 Hrad art that th ats thatshd ab Starky, wh shd s-
th, wr “thr arady bkd r u-ab t mak t t th rt.”
Wh thr was a dsamr statgthat bkg th p’s wr was way guaratd, thr was as da-t that th sth ut ptswud b hs. Gratd, Curr$y brk hs ak, but th am th rg-a BgDayHrad p pst that th atswr “aaab” sms a tt t strg.
It’s a mmt that’s b mad b-r, but t’s wrth makg aga: Att mr traspary wud’t hurt thBCA. Othr studt grups wth m-parab u th Brw mmu-ty ar mr p. Ad wh ps ar
gd, wthut a u sat rmatt’s hard t b a rmd tr thm.E kg at th BCA’s wbst, thr’s “Abut” st — y adar, ga-ry ad tat sts.
Tr’s dubt that traspary a b tak t a trm. Ad wth thmay dtas d puttg -rts, t wud b uar r us t ptmpt traspary rm th BCA. ButI thk t wud b ar t ask r a ttmr.
Sam Carter ’12 is a philosoph anHispanic stuies concentrator who
vote or Atlas Soun.
He can be reache [email protected].
Up on the stage
It’s a comment that’s been mae beore, but it’s one
worth making again: A little more transparenc wouln’t
hurt the BCA.
Wh is it that, in a rst worl countr where women
supposel have the same rights as men, our boies are
still consiere air game or public scrutin — to the
point where it’s consiere normal to be harasse on
the street when ou’re just tring to get rompoint A to point B?
By SAM CARTERopinions editor
By CAMILLESPENCER-SALMON
opinions Columnist
8/4/2019 September 22, 2011 issue
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/september-22-2011-issue 8/8
D aily H erald B
City & Statehursday, September 22, 2011
B Morgan Johnson
Senior Staff Writer
Rhode Island House and Senatenance committees met yesterday or the second o three joint hear-ings on xing the state’s escalat-
ing pension problems. Sen. DanielDapt, D-East Prd adPawtucket, and chair o the Senatecommittee on nance, announcedthat the General Assembly may hd mr jt hargs p-ss, addt t th tw thatha arady urrd.
Te problem — which the Gen-eral Assembly will likely convene aspecial session to address — is thegrowing gaps between the undsthat th stat ad ts mupa-ties have set aside to und theirpension plans and the amountspromised to public employees. Tediscrepancies between promised
and available unds threaten bothgrmt sy ad th r-
trmt surty thusads
wrkrs.T harg ystrday usd
entirely on municipal pensionplans, which are more challeng-
ing to reorm than the state-runpension plan, according to StateAuditor General Dennis Hoyle and
Gra Assmby sa adsrsPeter Marino and Sharon Ferland,wh d th harg.
One critical challenge to re-orm is the sheer number o unique plans that exist in the state.Municipal pension plans are di-
vided into two basic categories.he state-run pension systemincludes 110 municipal pensionplans covering public employees
in the state’s cities and towns, inaddition to the pension plan orstate employees. While the state
administers this group o munici-pal pension plans, known as the
Municipal Employees RetirementSystem, local governments are re-sponsible or ensuring their plans
stay udd.
But the outlook is most direor the 36 municipal plans notincluded in the state system. In2010, these plans were 40.3 percent
unded overall. wo-thirds o thesemunicipal plans — including those
o Cranston, Pawtucket, Provi-dence and Warwick, the state’slargest cities — are considered “atrisk” by the state’s auditor general.
Tese “at risk” plans are urtherdivided into our categories o se- verity, rom “I” indicating bank-
ruptcy to “IV” indicating that localgovernments are making contri-
buts rprstg ss tha 0percent o the amount required tomaintain the plans at an adequateudg . Wth a $2 m-lion ununded pension liability,Providence has been designated
a “III” ths systm.“Not all o the news is necessar-
y bad,” Mar sad, ptg tur a amps pas thatar ary uy udd.
As with state pensions, Marino
sad t s ry uky that grw-g stmt rturs wud a-w mupats t grw ut their pension liabilities. He addedthat bond rating agencies’ nega-
tive growth outlooks or RhodeIsland municipalities will prob-ably increase the municipalities’
brrwg sts.Reorming pension plans ad-
mstrd by th stat w b areasier than reorming indepen-dent municipal plans, Marino said.Te state can withhold undingr pas th stat-ru systm mupats a t mt 00percent o their annual required
trbut. La grmtscurrently cannot be penalizedr ag t mt thr rqurdcontribution and instead are only required to send documentation
to the state. “It’s sort o a paperhas,” Hy sad. H addd thatorecasting needs to be updatedt rt urrt gurs, suh as
increased longevity, which has
a adrs t uudd -abts.
Rep. Frank Ciccone, D-Prov-
idence and North Providence,ptd t th prtab busssnancial advisers have made o the state’s pension problems. He
said the $156 million paid to -
nancial advisers could be “creatinga prbm.”
Several members o the com-
mittee recommended reducingth umbr pas ad psconsultants as a way to rein in un-unded liabilities. “Tere’s tremen-dous opportunity or consolida-
tion,” Hoyle said. Absorbing localpas t th stat systm s asan enticing option, he said, thoughthe 100 percent required contribu-t madatd ths systm wmake transerring pension plansrom local to state control dicultor more nancially troubled lo-
cal plans. “Te distance seems in-surmountable in (the) near-term,”
Hy sad.
Hearing examines municipal pensions
B nicole graBel
contribUting Writer
NABsys, a Providence biotechnol-ogy company with Brown con-ts whs rsarh ud bused to treat cancer, recently raised$10 million in venture capital. Lo-cated in the Jewelry District, the
company sits in a biotechnology
research and lie sciences hub thatpolitical leaders say is key to the
state’s long-term economic vitality.T udg w u th -
tinued growth o the company,which ocuses on DNA sequenc-
ing and analysis. “Te company hasbeen doubling in size every year
or the past two years,” said Bar-
rtt Brady ’ MD’03 , prsdtad CEO NABsys ad adjutassistant proessor o physiology.Te company was started in 2005.
A signicant portion o the $10million will go toward hiring, saidEli Upal, consultant to NABsysand a Brown proessor o computerscience. Te company needs the“best people in chemistry, biology,hap dsg ad agrthms,” hsad, addg that attratg hgh-quaty tat rqurs a sdr-able amount o money. Te unding
w as b usd t purhas wmachinery and sofware, Upalsad.
But the money will not justacilitate urther company de-
velopment — it also serves as atestament to how much NABsyshas grown already, he said. “Ev-ery round o unding shows that
utsd rsarhrs ad strshave more and more condencein the direction o the company,”h addd.
Wh th my wgo to Brown directly, the University
has had ts t th mpay s
its inception. Te company was
started with technology licensedrom Brown and its original ound-er was Brown physics proessorSean Ling, now no longer involvedin managing the company. Many
Brown proessors — including No-b aurat ad physs prssrLeon Cooper and Franco Prepara-ta, prssr mputr s— serve as advisers to NABsys.John Oliver, the company’s vicepresident o research and develop-ment, is a ormer assistant proes-sr hmstry.
he unding will ultimately bt th Ursty, Upa sad.
Te company hires many Browngraduates, and its growth wouldmean more demand or Brown’sbmda rsarh, h addd.
Te timing o the unding coin-cides with the creation o a seven-member commission to oversee the
development o land in the Jewelry Dstrt mad aaab by th r-location o route I-195. Bready hasbeen nominated by Gov. LincolnChaee ’75 P’14 to serve on thecommission and was conrmedby the state Senate Corporations
Committee uesday. He aces aull Senate vote on his conrma-
tion today. Upal said development
th dstrt w mak t a mrattractive location or NABsys’tud pas.
hough Bready declined tocomment on specic plans or thedistrict until he is ocially con-rmed, he said he sees great po-
tential or the technological rebirtho the district and Providence as awhole. In the past, he said, “Provi-dence was arguably the wealthiestplace o its size in the entire world,”the “technology leader o the day.”As the biotechnology industry con-
tinues to expand, he said he seesa pprtuty r Prd t
aga.
Local biotech startupraises $10 millionB liz Kelley
contribUting Writer
he hassle o abandoning wetclothing to rell a vending stripe in
one o the University’s o-brokenCard Value Center machines may become a thing o the past nextsmstr. A systm udr rw,which would make the vending
stripes on Brown ID cards obsolete,
would be “a revision and update o the current system — moving the
vending inrastructure rom ofine
t ,” sad Stt Tahr, d-rtr rmat thgy
in the Oce o the Vice President Campus L ad Studt Sr- s.
Brown’s current vending stripesystem — which can be used to pay
or copies, laundry and vending
machine purchases — dependson old magnetic stripe writers,Tahr sad.
Currently, students must add
my t th strp rm d-ing balance accounts or withash thrugh th CVC mahslocated around campus, whichth sd th w amut t thstripes. In the proposed system,students would be able to allo-
cate money online or servicesthat used to require the vending
stripe, without the need to writew amuts t thr ards.
“Ts s a pprtuty t m-prove student services on campus,”sad Rhard Ba, sr ass-ate dean o residential and diningservices. Te change would create“a samss systm,” h sad.
he new system — whichwould not require students toget new ID cards — needs ap-proval rom the University’s IProject Review Committee nextmonth beore being implemented,
which could be as early as January.
Tacher said the rst services to beintegrated would likely be printingad pyg baus thy ar academic interest to both studentsad tahrs.
“It will be a one-card system
ad ams t rat a as usacross the board,” Bova said . “It isa trasrmat prjt drtresponse to students’ questions,rs ad mmts that w
as bt sta.”
Vending accounts may go online
Emil Gilbert / Heral
Becca Gevertz ‘14 loads money on her card using a CVC machine. The Universityis evaluating a proposal that woul make these machines obsolete.
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