Friday, March 8, 2013

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Daily

THE BROWN

vol. cxlviii, no. 31

INSIDE

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Flying colors

Alpert Medical School is reaccredited with no citations Page 5

Lab rats

Student ‘super-subjects’ help fuel research in U. labs

The team of researchers, which includes a Brown professor, appealed to the White House By KATE NUSSENBAUM

Just a ‘quickie’

Students explore new subjects in RISD workshops today

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tomorrow

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A team of scientists, including Director of the Brown Institute for Brain Science and Professor of Neuroscience John Donoghue ’79, released a proposal Thursday that clarifies the goals and methods of the Brain Activity Map in the journal Science. The project has generated media buzz since February, when the New York Times broke the news of the “decade-long scientific effort to examine the workings of the human brain.” “This is really a bunch of scientists

SCIENCE & RESEARCH

since 1891

FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 2013

Researchers seek funds to map human brain

SCIENCE & RESEARCH EDITOR

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Herald

making a proposal to the government that we should take on an activity like this, of focusing on understanding how the brain works,” Donoghue said. “We know a lot about how neurons work as individual cells, we know a lot about how it works as a group … but the actual way it works, we don’t understand.” The paper proposes three goals: the development of new tools to record activity from large groups of individual neurons, the development of tools to control individual neurons and the creation of systems to store and analyze the data collected that will enable scientists to “understand circuit functions.” “Within five years, it should be possible to monitor and/or to control tens of thousands of neurons, and by year 10 that number will increase at least tenfold. By year 15, observing one million neurons with markedly reduced invasiveness should be possible,” the researchers wrote in their proposal. “The goal / / Brain page 5

DIVE IN

DAVID DECKEY / HERALD

Brown is hosting the 2013 Men’s Ivy League Championships in the Aquatics Center, which started Thursday and will continue until Saturday.

Tisch signs on to third term as chancellor Emphasizing ‘continuity over coasting,’ Tisch has worked since 2007 to guide U. initiatives By SABRINA IMBLER SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Chancellor Thomas Tisch ’76 will serve a third and final three-year term in his position, continuing to steward the University’s strategic planning in the aftermath of the “financial convulsions of 2008,” Tisch said. “It’s no surprise to anyone,” said Professor of Anthropology and Italian Studies David Kertzer ’69, who served as provost during the end of former chancellor Stephen Robert’s ’62 P’91 final term and the first part of Tisch’s tenure. “He’s been a very vigorous and

effective chancellor. People would have been stunned and disappointed if he hadn’t been willing to do a third term.” Maintaining a commitment to academic excellence, finding the right balance between teaching and research and keeping the community strong given current economic challenges will guide his final term, Tisch said. He also identified attaining needblind admission for international students as an important objective for the Corporation.

The role of the chancellor The University charter charges the chancellor with serving “as a moderator of the Trustees,” who make up the body of the Corporation. “I don’t feel like I spend my time promoting my points of view,” Tisch said. Rather, / / Tisch page 3

Awareness of the causes and effects of head injuries has increased in the athletic community By ALEXANDRA CONWAY SENIOR STAFF WRITER

EMIILY GILBERT / HERALD

Chancellor Tisch has agreed to a third term as the “moderator of the trustees” for the Corporation, the University’s highest governing body.

Alum tests luck as contestant on ‘Millionaire’ Drew Kunas ’12 sparked laughs and pursued game show glory on the hit television show By ELIZABETH KOH FEATURES EDITOR

Drew Kunas ’12 didn’t necessarily want to be a millionaire. But last October, he got his chance — stepping onto the “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” television set to try his hand at scoring seven figures opposite award-winning host Meredith Vieira. Kunas passed through two competitive selection processes to earn the contestant role in an episode that aired Thursday afternoon.

FEATURE

Taking a bet Kunas initially had no plans to audition for the show when he moved to New

York City after graduation to take a job with hedgefund Two Sigma Investments. But Kunas, a former member of campus improv troupe Karin and the Improvs, kept up with improvisation in the city and was invited by an improv friend to attend an open audition together for the show. The decision to try out was “totally random,” Kunas said. “I just thought it’d be fun to do it.” Kunas and his friend traveled to the audition but were two minutes late for the first test: a 30-question trivia quiz with a 10-minute time limit. “It’s in this giant really quiet room with proctors running around and a bunch of geeky people furiously scribbling,” he said. After prospective contestants completed the test, they turned in their Scantron forms and were assigned a number to wait for their results. As Kunas and his friend waited outside the testing room, an employee of the show emerged, Kunas said. The man

Concussions impact academics and athletics

proceeded to give all the test-takers a “suicide prevention speech,” preemptively consoling people who would not make the cut. “‘Look, if you don’t make it on ‘Millionaire,’ it doesn’t mean you’re a bad person,’” Kunas recalled him saying. “‘This is not the end of the world.’” “I’m sure (the speech) was made through trial and error,” he added. Kunas passed the trivia exam, moving on to the second stage of the selection process, which asks for a questionnaire and sits potential contestants down for an interview with one of the show’s producers. During Kunas’ interview, the producer took notes on his personality, but “seemed really bored,” Kunas said. “Then he wrote B+ on my paper.” “I went, ‘Ah, hell no,’” Kunas said. “I amped up the charm, amped up the energy. ‘You are going to like me by the end of this,’” Kunas recalled thinking to himself. Kunas also underwent a camera test,

during which people behind the camera alternated “rapid-fire” positive and negative reactions to “see how you would react under pressure,” he said. The next day, a representative from the show called and asked Kunas to appear at the New York City ABC studio a week later for a taping. Cashing in “After I found out I was going to be on ‘Millionaire,’ I was walking around my office, and I was really excited,’” Kunas said. “And whenever I’d tell anyone, they’d be like, ‘Oh my God, that’s so cool! ... Have you talked to Todd? He was on that before you.’” “I was like, ‘Who the (expletive) is this Todd stealing my thunder?’” Kunas joked. But Todd proved useful in the week before Kunas went on the air. “We had like a Haymitch and Katniss ‘Hunger Games’ thing going on, where he was like, / / Millions page 4

In the fall of 2010, Vince Tumbleson ’13.5 suffered a concussion in a football game. “I took a hit in the first half, got kind of dizzy but didn’t think anything of it because I had never had a concussion before,” Tumbleson said. Tumbleson continued to play through the second half when he started to realize something was not quite right. He was not remembering plays, and then the next day, during a class presentation, he did not remember anything, he said. After going to Health Services, he was told to recover for two weeks, but ultimately required a total of eight weeks to recuperate. At that point, he had missed so much class that he decided to take a medical leave of absence for the semester. Tumbleson’s story — and the consequences he endured — is not unique. About 70 Brown athletes suffered concussions this past year, according to Dr. Edward Wheeler, medical director at Health Services. An additional 15 to 25 individuals also dealt with concussions from participating in non-varsity athletics or due to accidents involving alcohol. As a student-athlete at the collegiate level, dealing with a concussion becomes a juggling act between the pressures / / Injury page 9

SPORTS


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Friday, March 8, 2013 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu