Thursday, January 31, 2013

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Daily

the Brown

vol. cxlviii, no. 7

INSIDE

POST

post-

taro, django, and networking lingo

Vice President for Research to step down Clyde Briant will leave the administration to return to the engineering faculty starting next year Senior Staff Writer

Unpopu-law Applications to law school decline this year Page 5

Sandy spending The Senate passes a bill to increase storm relief funds today

54 / 26

tomorrow

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since 1891

thursday, january 31, 2013

By Sam Heft-Luthy

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Herald

Vice President for Research Clyde Briant will be stepping down from his administrative position at the end of the academic year, Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 wrote Wednesday in an email to faculty. Briant, who served as dean of engineering between 2003 and 2006 before joining the administration, will rejoin the engineering faculty at Brown. A search for his successor is expected to begin sometime next week, Schlissel said, with a goal of naming a new vice president for research by July, which marks the beginning of the next fiscal year. While serving as vice president, Briant presided over a 35 percent growth in

sponsored research, headed an effort to acquire a supercomputer for the Center for Computation and Visualization and helped reorganize the structure for protecting faculty-developed patents, among other initiatives, Schlissel wrote. “Clyde is terrific,” said Beppie Huidekoper, executive vice president for finance and administration. “He’s been a terrific vice president for research, and he’s been a great partner. I think it’s just that time in his life where he wants to go back to teaching. It’s a good time with all the transitions going on, and it’s certainly not anything but the most positive.” Briant said seven years in administration is “a pretty long time” and that he’s ready to pass the torch on to a successor. “I had always felt I would want to end my career back in engineering,” he said. “I’m very frank about my age. I’m 64 and will turn 65 soon and so it’s a good moment to think about the final years of my career here at Brown. This / / VP page 2 seemed like a

Courtesy of Brown University

The internal search for a new vice president for research will begin in the coming week as a committee evaluates current senior faculty members.

U.S. signs off on R.I. health care marketplace UCS The federally-mandated exchange will serve as a responds comparison tool for health insurance options to interim reports By alexander blum staff writer

Rhode Island’s Health Benefits Exchange — the health care marketplace mandated by the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act — received federal approval Dec. 20, placing it on track to meet the law’s October deadline for being available to the public. “The exchange will be a tool for Rhode Islanders, small businesses and their employees to easily compare health insurance options, learn if they qualify for discounts and eventually sign up for other programs,” according to a website set up by the office of Gov. Lincoln Chafee ’75 P ’14. Though President Obama’s 2010 health care law required the exchange be set up, its implementation was delayed until the Supreme Court upheld the law’s

city & state

constitutionality in June 2012. Under the new legislation, every state must either develop its own health care exchange or join a federal exchange. “Rhode Island has been (at the) cutting edge when it comes to the Health Exchange,” said Christine Hunsinger, Chafee’s press secretary. “Federal funds are supporting the planning, establishment and initial operations of the exchange,” according to his website. An article in Monday’s Boston Globe noted that Rhode Island “has received $74 million in federal exchange funding.” The state awarded a three-year, $105 million contract to Deloitte Consulting to build the exchange and update other aspects of its health care system. Rhode Island is one of 18 states to build its own health care exchange instead of joining the federal government’s. “This governor believes that Rhode

Island should determine its own destiny,” Hunsinger said. Chafee “believes that he understands his own population better than the federal government does,” she added. But before the health care markets are fully developed, “there is no way to determine the difference between the federal exchange and the Rhode Island Exchange,” Hunsinger said. After operating for one year with federal support, “the exchange must find a way to raise its own money for staff, supplies and rent,” according to Chafee’s website. The transition to self-sufficiency will present a formidable challenge for the exchange, according to a study by the Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council. “The long-term sustainability of (the exchange) depends on a number of factors, including how many individuals access insurance through the exchange,” according to the study. The number of people who will use the exchange is “the big unknown right now,” said Ashley Denault, RIPEC’s direc-

tor of research. But Chafee is confident the exchange will support itself, and “the early projections say that’s doable and achievable,” Hunsinger said. Denault said “there are so many questions right now” that it is difficult to predict the costs and revenues. The exchange will be accessible via phone, in person or online, but Denault said people who are not familiar with health information and technology may be discouraged from using it. An important factor in the exchange’s success will be whether it is “easily understandable for people at varying levels of health literacy,” she said. Though she understands this concern, Hunsinger said she is confident the exchange will accomplish its goal and “bring in as many people as possible.” Residents can expect that by October, “the exchange for Rhode Island will be up and running (and) will meet all the federal guidelines,” Hunsinger said.

Center for Disease Control and several other universities. Beginning with a video montage of different speakers reading from Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” the introduction also included a performance by the Shades of Brown a cappella group. In opening remarks, Associate Provost for Academic Development and Diversity Liza Cariaga-Lo, President Christina Paxson and Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 addressed the idea that despite progress in reducing racial inequality, much work remains to be done. When King took the podium, she began with a eulogy for her mother, who passed away seven years ago yesterday. “(My mother) is often lost in the equation when we talk about Martin Luther King,” she said. “When my father died in 1968, he was one of the most hated men in America, and today, he is one of the most loved men in the world.” King cred/ / King page 3 ited the shift in

Bernice King addressed a large crowd that included students from Harvard, Yale, Penn, Johns Hopkins University and Tougaloo College.

MLK’s daughter speaks on health equality Bernice King discussed her family history, as well as her personal and poltical views By Alex Constantino Contributing Writer

Bernice King, CEO of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change, delivered a rousing speech to a packed De Ciccio Family Auditorium in the Salomon Center for the 16th annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Lecture yesterday afternoon. The talk, titled “Advancing the ‘Dream’: Addressing Social Equity Issues to Eliminate Health Disparities in the 21st Century,” focused extensively on the legacies of her parents, Coretta Scott King and Martin Luther King, Jr. In addition to members of the Brown community, representatives from the

Ruba Aleryani/ Herald

The council discussed new curricular programs and 3- and 5-year undergrad programs By Maxine Joselow Senior Staff Writer

Members of the Undergraduate Council of Students raised concerns about potential changes to the Diversity Perspectives course category and a proposed three-year undergraduate program while showing support for possible sophomore seminars and a five-year undergraduate program. The council discussed the changes at its meeting Wednesday night in one of the first formal student reactions to interim recommendations released Jan. 25 from the strategic planning committees. The six committees will seek community input before submitting their final reports, the contents of which are expected to influence President Christina Paxson’s agenda for the next several years. “How (UCS) reacts to these reports will really make a difference,” said Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services Margaret Klawunn, who presented the strategic planning report’s key initiatives to UCS along with Dean of the College Katherine Bergeron. The strategic planning report contains dozens of potential initiatives, and council members’ feedback will help determine which half dozen or so will become reality, Klawunn said. Bergeron pinpointed renaming and / / UCS page 5 reevaluating


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