Daily
THE BROWN
vol. cxlviii, no. 29
INSIDE
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Snow go
U. spends $368,000 on snow removal this year
Paxson responds to child-care recommendations The University must balance child-care needs with ‘the cost of those needs,’ the provost said SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Work camps Asher ’15 argues U.S. must pay attention to North Korea Page 8
Sweet party Science Center celebrates third birthday with ‘miracle’ today
tomorrow
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since 1891
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 2013
By KATHERINE LAMB
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Herald
President Christina Paxson announced her support for the general findings of the report published Friday by the Advisory Committee on Childcare, and recommended subsidizing child care for employees instead of bringing a daycare company to campus due to University budget constraints, in an email to the community Tuesday. The committee, formed after the Taft Avenue Daycare Center closed Aug. 31, wrote in its report that “Brown currently under-supports the working parents among its students, staff and faculty and is not competitive with our peers.” The University arranged for a temporary subsidy to compensate for the center’s closure, but it will end Aug. 31, lending some urgency to the issue, Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 told The Herald.
Paxson promised to devote $250,000 to subsidize University employees for child care costs based on their financial needs, targeting those who need it most, Schlissel said. He added that this was especially significant given the University will be running on a tight budget next year, with a projected deficit of slightly more than $4 million. The University will commit to setting aside $100,000 for child care subsidies to go toward graduate students, Paxson wrote in the email to the community. Schlissel said subsidizing child care for graduate students is particularly complex because government tax laws do not allow students to tap into pre-tax dollars the way employees can. The committee will explore the best way to subsidize child care for graduate students, Schlissel said, but one option might be increasing the stipend or scholarship graduate students receive while working on their doctorate. For the current fiscal year, the committee advised a $250,000 yearly budget for subsidizing child care, the formation of a Childcare Planning Group to assess / / Childcare page 4 the possibil-
The Taft Avenue Daycare Center, which exclusively served University employees, closed in August. Herald file photo.
sel said he was “surprised” at the “remarkably and gratifyingly long list of incredibly qualified candidates” who expressed interest in the position. He did not say when a new dean will be named. President Christina Paxson presented the results of the Advisory Committee on Childcare’s report, which was released Feb. 26, and gave her response. The report’s most immediate recommendations included setting aside $250,000 “to assist community members with child-care costs” and dedicating another $100,000 to child-care subsidies for graduate students. The committee also proposed that Brown either continue to affiliate itself with local child-care centers or build one on-site. Paxson expressed her support for the former.
“If I thought we could afford to do everything in this report, I would do everything in this report,” she said, adding that she considered adequate child care fundamental to the productivity of faculty and staff members. Memorial minutes were read for Dwight Sweigart, professor of chemistry, and Leon Goldstein, professor emeritus of medical science. In keeping with the Advisory Committee on Childcare’s recommendation that faculty meetings extend no later than 5:30 p.m., the meeting was concluded half an hour earlier than past meetings. The change left no time for a report from Dean of the Faculty Kevin McLaughlin P’12, who was scheduled to speak about the recent forum on the strategic planning interim report by the Committee for Faculty Recruitment, Career Development and Retention.
ELIZABETH KOH / HERALD
Tuition hikes could harm diversity, provost says Adjunct The faculty meeting also addressed University child care and the search for a Med School dean By RACHEL MARGOLIS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
The current rate of tuition increase is unsustainable and, if unchecked, could limit the demographics of students who could attend Brown, Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 told faculty members Tuesday at this month’s faculty meeting. The budget for fiscal year 2014, approved by the Corporation, sets undergraduate tuition at $44,608 — 4.2 percent higher than the previous year. This increase, which will accompany an equivalent hike in tuition for graduate students, follows a 3.5 percent rise in tuition and fees for fiscal year 2012 and a 3.6 percent increase for fiscal year 2013. Tuition and fees are the University’s
most significant source of income, making up 38 percent of total revenue for the current year. But Schlissel said an increase as high as 4.2 percent “compounds more quickly than society will eventually be able to pay for” and cannot continue in the long run. Schlissel also reported on the progress of the search committees seeking replacements for Dean of Medicine and Biological Sciences Ed Wing, Vice President for Research Clyde Briant and Vice President for Computing and Information Services Michael Pickett. The committee to select a new dean of medicine and biological sciences has chosen 15 finalists for the position after reviewing more than 60 candidates. As chair of the committee, Schlis-
Wireless option developed for brain-powered device The tool, made in collaboration with BrainGate 2, tracks activity in patients’ brains By ANDREW JONES STAFF WRITER
University neuroengineers have created a new device that may allow people with paralysis to use their thoughts to control robotic limbs wirelessly. The implantable cerebral mechanism can wirelessly transmit brain signals to a receiver, which can then be interpreted by a computer. The device was described in a study published in the Journal for Neural Engineering last week. The mechanism has been successfully functioning in animal subjects for over a year, the authors reported in the study. This is longer than any previous similar
SCIENCE & RESEARCH
device has been tested, making it “a milestone for eventual clinical translation,” said David Borton PhD’12, the study’s lead author. Borton is currently completing his postdoctorate fellowship at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. In this brain-computer interface, a pill-sized chip of electrodes implanted in the cortex can track the activity of up to 100 neurons, according to a University press release. These signals are then passed on to a hermetically sealed titanium “can,” according to the press release. This receiver contains all the parts of a “brain radio,” according to the release — a lithium ion battery, integrated circuits, wireless radio, infrared transmitters and a copper coil used to recharge the battery wirelessly. The ultra-efficient packing of its components is one of the device’s most distinctive features, Borton said. “What makes the achievement discussed in this paper so unique is how it integrated many individual innovations into a complete system with potential for neuroscientific / / Device page 2
COURTESY OF FRED FIELD
The device, which may be ready for human use in 10 years, was developed by neuroscientists, computer scientists and engineers.
professor named State Poet Rick Benjamin will work to expand the public face of poetry through artsrelated activism By BRUNO ZUCCULO SPORTS STAFF WRITER
Everyone deserves to experience poetry, “whether those people are 6 years old, or 90 years old, or incarcerated or getting their GED at the community center,” said Rick Benjamin, the newly appointed State Poet of Rhode Island and adjunct assistant professor in the Center for Environmental Studies. Governor Lincoln Chafee ’75 P’14 announced Benjamin’s appointment as the fifth State Poet of Rhode Island in a January press release. Benjamin will serve a five-year term, replacing previous State Poet Lisa Starr.
FEATURE
A poetic post The position, created in 1989, does not entail any specific duties by law. But according to a publication by the Office of the Governor, it “is traditionally held by an artist who represents the highest achievement in poetry” in the state and who “serves as the principal advocate for poetry in Rhode Island.” “For many years already I have been involved in poetry and community engagement,” said Benjamin, who is the author of “Passing Love: Poems” and a forthcoming collection entitled “Floating World: Poems.” Even so, his selection came as “a big surprise,” and it / / Poet page 2 was an honor