Wednesday, February 13, 2013

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Daily

the Brown

vol. cxlviii, no. 16

INSIDE

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Traveling tech Students abroad capitalize on blogging, social media

Obama pushes broad liberal agenda in speech In his State of the Union address, the president discussed a goal to promote low tuition rates city & state Editor

Head hunting The University searches to fill key administrative posts Page 7

Dumb dollars

Enriquez ’16 takes issue with consumer ignorance today

41 / 27

tomorrow

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since 1891

wednesday, february 13, 2013

By sona mkrttchian

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Herald

President Obama stressed the importance of preparing students to meet the new demands of globalized markets to alleviate the nation’s persistent economic problems in his annual State of the Union address Tuesday night. The president also urged legislators to unite and reform policy on gun control, immigration and social services, calling for bipartisan compromise in the 113th Congress. “To grow our middle class, our citizens must have access to the education and training that today’s jobs require,” Obama said, proposing that Congress incentivize the nation’s institutions of higher education to keep tuition rates low by reforming the Higher Education

Act. Colleges with greater “affordability and value” should receive the most federal aid, he added. The U.S. education system needs to prepare students better to contribute to the engineering and technology industries, Obama said. To achieve this, Congress needs to incentivize these industries to bolster growth and interest across the country, he added. Outlining goals for his second term, Obama focused on elevating the American middle class in particular through economic policies aimed at strengthening the nation’s manufacturing, technology and research industries. “The agenda that he laid out was much more ambitious than I was hoping for,” said Taylor Daily ’13, former president of Brown Students for Obama. “This is the kind of agenda I was dreaming would happen.” “It’s not a bigger government we need, but a smarter government that sets priorities and invests in broadbased growth,” Obama said. Ju s t i n / / Obama page 3

Sydney Mondry/ Herald

The Brown Democrats held a viewing party in Metcalf Auditorium for President Obama’s State of the Union speech Tuesday night.

Protesters ‘work out’ to support factory workers Digital The Student Labor kindness Alliance demonstrated against the University’s boots up contract with Adidas the heart By elizabeth koh features editor

Approximately 20 students from the Student Labor Alliance protested the University’s current contract with Adidas Tuesday afternoon, staging a “workout for workers’ rights” on the Main Green and in the Stephen Robert ’62 Campus Center before delivering a letter to President Christina Paxson’s office. Six schools — Cornell, Oberlin College, Rutgers University, the University of Washington, the College of William and Mary and Georgetown University

— have already ended their contracts with Adidas, according to the website of United Students Against Sweatshops, a group with which SLA is affiliated. According to SLA’s letter to Paxson, Adidas refused to pay severance to workers at the PT Kizone garment factory in Indonesia when the factory closed in April 2011, allegedly withholding $1.8 million in wages from workers and thereby violating the University’s vendor code of conduct. Adidas currently supplies apparel for Brown varsity sports teams, The Herald previously reported. But the University has notified Adidas that it does not intend to renew their contract given concerns over “the adequacy of (Adidas’) response in support of the workers at PT Kizone,” wrote Marisa Quinn, vice president for public affairs and Universi/ / Protest page 2

Sites for anonymous compliments tap into tendencies toward spontaneous praise By Jessica Brodsky contributing writer

ELIZABETH KOH / HERALD

Student protesters marched through the Blue Room, chanting slogans that called for the University to break its contract with Adidas.

Pitch perfect: Exploring a cappella audition traditions At a midnight meeting, the 11 groups induct new members into their singing community By andrew jones Contributing writer

The “midnight meeting,” an a cappella tradition often thought to be shrouded in mystery and intrigue, will be held Thursday to determine which auditioners have earned a spot in one of Brown’s 11 a cappella groups. With every a cappella group member in attendance, this week’s meeting, the culmination of two weeks of auditions and callbacks, will kick off a cappella’s spring season. “Crazy,” “intense” and “stressful” are just a few of the adjectives a cappella “Czar” and Brown Derby Josh Linden

arts & culture

’14 used to describe the atmosphere of the late-night meeting. Though Linden said the meeting usually becomes hectic, he said its organizers use a wellordered system to place singers into the group with which they are most compatible. The Czar, who is elected annually, is responsible for maintaining order at the meeting and ensuring that all groups have an equal shot at securing their desired singers. Before the meeting, each auditioner lists his or her preferences of groups on a notecard. Once the groups have evaluated each auditioner and selected their top prospects, they are ready for the midnight meeting to begin. The “elves,” who are third-party participants in the meeting that do not belong to any a cappella group, assist the Czar in handling preference cards and assigning singers to groups. At the start of the meeting, the groups take turns announcing their most desired singers. Once a name

is on the table, any of the groups can verbally express interest in that particular auditioner. The Czar’s elves then check the auditioner’s preference card and match the singer with the highestranked group that expressed interest. A match requires consent from both the singer and the group — if only one of the two parties expresses interest in the other, the deal falls through. This process continues until the meeting attendees have come to a conclusion about every auditioner, Linden said. While group members deliberate over their prospective members, auditioners anxiously await the announcement of their musical fate. During the auditions, the singers were told to stay in their rooms on the night of the meeting, with their shoes on and their cellphones close by, Linden said. If a singer is chosen by a group, he or she will be swept away at midnight for celebration and socializing with his or her fellow singers. If no group selects a particular

singer, he or she will receive a conciliatory phone call, he added. “There’s a lot of waiting and anxiety,” said Rachel Ossip ’15, a member of the Alef Beats. “But sometimes that’s necessary.” Nerves are an inevitable part of performing, and the audition, callback and midnight meeting process serves as good practice for the stress of real performances, she added. While the groups’ audition styles vary, all aim to make a good match between singers and groups, Linden said. Most groups include both singing and socializing portions in their initial auditions and subsequent callbacks. “It’s like a really nerdy rush,” Linden said. Auditions generally involve the standard measures of vocal ability — participants sing verses, pitch matches and scales. Many also include icebreakers and ways for the auditioner to get a feel for the group and vice versa. The Jabberwocks ask each auditioner / / Auditions page 2 to tell a

“Thank you for being you.” Such a sentence may be found once a year inside a Valentine’s Day card — or every day, on Brown University Compliments, a Facebook page that was started by BlogDailyHerald just before Thanksgiving 2012. The page, which provides a forum for Brown students to submit anonymous compliments to each other, has over 2,100 likes and several hundred compliments just three months after its founding. “I really could never have imagined how big it got,” said William Janover ’15, one of the page’s founders and moderators and managing editor of BlogDailyHerald. Shortly after Brown University Compliments was founded, it was joined by Brown Admirers, another Facebook page for students to express their positive thoughts about each other, albeit with a more romantic twist and not necessarily anonymously. The page’s moderators declined to comment because they did not want to reveal their identities. Facebook pages like Brown Uni/ / Compliments page 2 versity

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu