Daily
THE BROWN
vol. cxlviii, no. 36
INSIDE
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Snap chat
Students meet each other via new website, Inperson
Smaller collaborative learning environments can be an option for overwhelmed students
Girl power ‘Sappington!’ features laughs and all-female cast Page 7
Team impact Student-athletes make a difference through service today
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tomorrow
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SCIENCE & RESEARCH STAFF WRITER AND SENIOR STAFF WRITER
When Liza Gibbs ’16 enrolled in CHEM 0330: “Equilibrium, Rate and Structure” last semester, she found herself victim to crippling test anxiety. Gibbs, who enrolled in the class to fill a concentration requirement, quickly found herself lost. After the first exam, she was in danger of failing. “I realized I had no idea what was going on,” she said. “My first and only (Chem) 33 midterm was a horrifying experience.” In large lecture classes, particularly introductory courses in science, tech-
since 1891
FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2013
Amidst test anxiety, some profs turn to alternatives
By ALEX CONSTANTINO AND SAM HEFT-LUTHY
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Herald
nology, engineering and math, professors often face a difficult conundrum: how to hold as many as 400 students accountable for the material. Many of these courses resort to giving a few high-stakes exams — for example, NEUR 0010: “The Brain: An Introduction to Neuroscience,” one of the largest classes at the University, bases its grades almost exclusively on exam performance. This emphasis on testing often makes it difficult to keep up, many students said. Peggy Chang ’91, director of the Curricular Resource Center, said testing is important because it holds students accountable for knowing a course’s material and being able to apply it independently. “It’s a way to gauge how well a student understands the material and (can) think critically and analytically,” Chang said. But with / / Testing page 2
A R I A G O I N ’ TO T H E O P E R A ?
EVAN THOMAS / HERALD
“Dido and Aeneas,” an hour-long English opera, will be performed by Brown Opera Productions this weekend in Alumnae Hall.
Festival celebrates creative voices from Arab world Lawsuit
Urgent Witness explores the role of Arabic poetry and art in social change in the Middle East By ABIGAIL SAVITCH-LEW CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Lost in a storm, a young professor stumbles into a trap. Mr. Shawqi, a man who loves nothing more than winning a game, holds the professor prisoner and changes the rules of his games so his opponent can never win or escape. Mr. Shawqi insists he is not crazy — this is the way of the universe. “Look at the world: It is divided into masters and slaves,” he says.
ARTS & CULTURE
As the play continues, these cynical words appear to possess a dark truth. The audience learns the professor played the role of master to his wife, just as Mr. Shawqi is now his master. In this nightmarish world, the motif of domination continually reappears. International Writers Project fellow Nihad Sirees said his play “House of Games,” performed in a staged reading as part of this week’s Urgent Witness festival, is a metaphor for political oppression in Syria. But when it was first published in Syria in 1997, Sirees said he claimed it was an indictment against western imperialism in order to prevent government censorship. Erik Ehn, director of the International Writers Project, said the play is a perfect example of “oppositional art underneath a dictatorship.” The Ur/ / Festival page 5
to seek details of alum death The investigation surrounding the death of Ryan Sims ‘11 on an NYC train track is ongoing By ALISON SILVER FEATURES EDITOR
BRITTANY COMUNALE / HERALD
World-renowned Syrian poet Adonis captivated Arabic and non-Arabic speakers alike with his eloquent poetry readings.
Watson project analyzes monetary, human costs of war Researchers from economics, anthropology and health care contributed to the Cost of Wars project By ANDREW JONES STAFF WRITER
A decade after the United States invaded Iraq, researchers estimate 190,000 lives will have been lost and the United States will spend $2.2 trillion by the war’s end, according to new research from the Watson Institute for International Studies. Though the United States officially finished pulling troops out of Iraq in 2011, insurgent forces remain in the country. The findings were released March 13 through the Costs of War project in advance of the tenth anniversary of the invasion March 19, 2003. The Costs of War project, which released its first findings in 2011, examines the national and international effects of the wars in Iraq, Afghani-
SCIENCE & RESEARCH
stan and Pakistan in terms of human, economic, social and political costs, according to its website. The 190,000 figure comes from aggregating data from a variety of sources, including government, media and morgue reports, according to one of the papers published Thursday. While the estimate refers to direct war casualties, the number of deaths is several times higher when accounting for indirect consequences, such as lack of drinking water, health care and adequate nutrition, according to the findings. Civilians represented about 134,000, or 70 percent, of the direct deaths, one study reported. The economic losses the study reported include not only those incurred during the war but also the projected costs for years to come. Health care for injured veterans of the Iraq War will cost the United States more than $500 billion through 2053,
the researchers estimated. Cumulative interest on borrowed Iraq War funds could cost the United States an additional $3.9 trillion through 2053, totaling nearly $6 trillion from the war’s beginning. The study found that other lasting effects of the war include increased terrorism in postwar Iraq and the devastation of Iraq’s health care system, according to a University press release. These results signify a shocking problem of a “society disintegrating through violence,” said Catherine Lutz, professor of anthropology and international studies and a co-director of the Costs of War project. “The most important story is the one that basically a whole lot of people died. This is not a pretty picture.” The findings’ origins can be traced to the beginning of the war, said Neta Crawford, a professor of political science at Boston University and the project’s other co-director. “There was an inadequate dis-
cussion of the costs in lives and dollars,” Crawford said.“It’s a story of not thinking through the consequences of actions.” Analyzing the costs of the conflict in terms of the war’s many dimensions presented a difficulty for the researchers, Crawford said. “The challenge is to convey the complex consequences of war with the inadequate tool of numbers,” she said. The research was conducted by 30 academics from a wide array of disciplines, including economics, health care and anthropology. This variety allowed the findings to be presented through multiple lenses that are often interconnected, Crawford said. Though the report presents a stark picture of the effects of war, Crawford said society must learn from it. “Every war begins with an overestimation of the utility of war and an underestimation of the costs,” Crawford said. “We should learn from this characteristic pattern of optimism.”
The parents of Ryan Sims ’11 have filed a lawsuit against the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, seeking surveillance footage that could reveal further details about the 23 year old’s death last December, according to a March 14 article in the New York Daily News. Sims’ parents hope to use the surveillance footage to learn more about the remains of their son’s body, which they think could have been run over or moved by track cleaners, according to the article. Sims’ parents submitted video footage and photographs to the MTA to aid the investigation of his movement through the stations leading up to his death. The Daily News reported Dec. 11, 2012 that a body was found around 7:15 a.m. on the tracks under a tunnel between New York’s First Avenue and East 14th Street subway stations. The body was later identified as Sims’. Police suspected he was fatally struck by a Manhattan-bound L train, the Daily News reported. The investigation remains open, and police said they do not yet have sufficient evidence to determine whether the cause of death was an accident, foul play or suicide, according to the March 14 article. The Daily News reported that court papers stated a medical examiner con/ / Lawsuit page 9