Daily
Herald
THE BROWN
vol. cxlviii, no. 38
INSIDE
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Test trials Standardized test requirement sparks debate Page 5
Veteran bill Legislation would let veterans gain school credit for service Page 8
Stick it
Gymnastics team shines at Senior Night, ends season
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TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 2013
PLME to offer alternative to traditional pre-med courses The optional two-course sequence will emphasize biology while integrating physics and chemistry By MICHAEL DUBIN STAFF WRITER
The Program in Liberal Medical Education will introduce two new interdisciplinary courses for undergraduates in fall 2014, said Associate Dean of Medicine Julianne Ip ’75 MD’78. The courses — which aim to approach medical education from an integrative, case-based angle — could put the University at the forefront of innovations in pre-medical education, administrators said. The courses will likely be designed primarily for PLME students, who would take them consecutively as firstyears or sophomores, she said. The new courses will not be required but can serve as alternatives to the traditional pre-med requirements
in the natural sciences and math for PLME students, Ip said. Ip said the two new courses will be open to all students. But she said she does not expect many standard pre-med students to enroll, since the courses would not fulfill their pre-med requirements. Ip said the alternative course track will entail a series of three courses: the two currently being developed and the PLME senior seminar, which she taught for the first time last fall. The senior seminar will be highly encouraged but not required, Ip said. The PLME senior seminar is a casebased, interdisciplinary course that mostly requires knowledge of biology but also some physics and chemistry, Ip said. The two introductory courses being developed will provide the foundational knowledge for the seminar, she said. The courses will integrate biology, chemistry, physics and math by blending the aspects of those disciplines applicable to / / PLME page 3
HERALD FILE PHOTO
The integrative courses would likely be taken during students’ first two years, emphasizing medical applications of introductory science courses.
Search for missing undergrad continues Same-sex marriage bills face Senate Sunil Tripathi’s parents and siblings have been working with local police in an effort to locate him By ELIZABETH KOH FEATURES EDITOR
The Department of Public Safety and the Providence Police Department are continuing to search for a former undergraduate student who disappeared Saturday morning. Sunil Tripathi, former member of the class of 2012, was discovered missing Sunday morning when a friend of Tripathi’s found a note suggestive of suicidal intent with his belongings in his apartment, said Tripathi’s sister Sangeeta Tripathi ’04. The friend immediately called Tripathi’s family and the police, she added. Tripathi was last seen in his 204
Angell St. residence Saturday morning around 11 a.m., Sangeeta Tripathi said. Earlier reports said Tripathi had last been seen Friday night. Tripathi has brown eyes and short brown hair. He weighs 130 pounds and is 6 feet 2 inches tall, and he was wearing blue jeans, a Philadelphia Eagles beanie and a black sweatshirt. DPS and Providence Police officers arrived at the residence early Sunday afternoon to launch an investigation, notifying hospitals in the area and police departments in nearby municipalities of the disappearance, said Detective Sergeant Bernard Gannon of the Providence Police Department. Providence police officers have begun conducting a “pretty extensive” search spanning “mostly the East Side area,” Gannon said. Officers are searching by boat and “with manned teams on the waterfront areas,” Sangeeta Tripathi said. / / Missing page 2
Both bills could legalize same-sex marriage, though one would be through a referendum By MARIYA BASHKATOVA SENIOR STAFF WRITER
COURTESY OF SANGEETA TRIPATHI
Sunil Tripathi, a former member of the class of 2012, was last seen Saturday morning.
M. HOCKEY
Bruno headed to ECAC semis in Atlantic City Lorito’s ’15 three goals catapulted Brown over No. 16 RPI and into the ECAC semifinals Friday By DANTE O’CONNELL SPORTS STAFF WRITER
EMILY GILBERT / HERALD
Matt Lorito ’15 scored his 20th goal of the season during Brown’s defeat of RPI in the ECAC tournament, becoming the first player to do so since 1998.
The men’s hockey team will be moving on to the ECAC semifinals in Atlantic City for the first time since 2010 — and Head Coach Brendan Whittet ’94 and his team have their sights set on the championship. “We’re not just going there to be happy to be in the Final Four,” Whittet said. “We’re going there to win an ECAC championship. If we don’t, it will be a big disappointment.” Bruno (15-13-6, ECAC 7-9-6) survived an RPI (18-14-5, 12-7-3)
comeback Sunday night to oust the Engineers 2-1 in the three-game series, taking games one and three. The Bears will face No. 1 Quinnipiac Friday, who beat Cornell 3-2 in double-overtime Sunday evening to advance to the semifinals. Bruno tied the Bobcats twice during the season. “I think we’re all pretty excited about that one,” said Michael Juola ’14. “They’ve knocked us out of the playoffs two years in a row, so we’ve got some payback coming.” Game One: Brown 3, RPI 1 Brown came out firing and nearly took a 1-0 lead five minutes into the series when Chris Zaires ’13 shot the puck at goalie Jason Kasdorf. The puck slid past Kasdorf, but the net was knocked off its moorings before the puck / / M. Hockey page 2
The Senate Judiciary committee will meet Thursday to hear two same-sex marriage bills, including one that would legalize same-sex marriage — the Senate version of the bill that passed the House in January. The committee is not planning to vote on the legislation at this meeting, said Greg Pare, director of communications for the President of the Senate. But the hearing could be the first step toward a vote in the coming weeks or months. The bill, introduced by Sen. Donna Nesselbush ’84, D-Pawtucket, would legalize same-sex marriage and replace the same-sex civil union law passed by the General Assembly in 2011. The legislation would also include measures that aim to safeguard freedom of religion, including a clause that would exempt religious leaders that do not approve of same-sex marriage from having to perform or endorse same-sex marriages. The bill is supposed to come to a vote in the Judiciary committee, but its fate remains uncertain due to split support among the 10 committee members. If the committee supports the legislation, it would go / / Marriage page 5
CITY & STATE