Daily
Herald
THE BROWN
vol. cxlviii, no. 78
since 1891
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2013
U. raised $195.4 million in last fiscal year Study The donations, the largest amount raised in five years, will fund a variety of key University priorities By KATE KIERNAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
The University reported its highest fundraising results in five years, raising just over $195.4 million as of June 30, according to a press release from the Alumni Association. The money will be distributed across the University’s key fundraising priorities, as well as initiatives for the Brown Annual Fund, the Brown Sports Foundation and the Division of Biology and Medicine. Key fundraising priorities include
athletics, the Brown Institute for Brain Science, environmental sciences, financial aid, the School of Engineering, the humanities, the School of Public Health and residential life. Out of the total $195.4 million, the Annual Fund raised $36.7 million to be spent by the end of the fiscal year, said Senior Vice President for University Advancement Patricia Watson. The endowment, which supports areas such as scholarships and financial aid, will receive $57.9 million of the total funds, Watson said. Despite the economic downturn, the University has been bringing in more funds every year since 2008 and is “on track with where we wanted to be,” Watson said. The University is in “a period of transition” with a new president and
several new administrators, Watson said, adding that this year’s increase in donations demonstrates support for President Christina Paxson during her first year. The University identified its key fundraising priorities in early 2011 at the conclusion of the former president Ruth Simmons’ Campaign for Academic Enrichment, Watson said, adding that it has seen positive results in each of the eight areas. The School of Engineering was selected to be a key funding priority under Simmons in 2010 as part of the University’s efforts to bolster the sciences, said Dean of the School of Engineering Larry Larson. This commitment to engineering has continued under Paxson and will be “a great long-term investment” for the
University, he said. The school has raised about onethird of its $160 million goal since the start of its fundraising campaign in 2010, Larson said, adding that the school is comfortable with the progress of its campaign. Donations this year came from “a burst of excitement among alums” after more details were laid out about plans for the school’s development, he said. Plans for the school are “a work in progress,” Larson said. Currently, the school is raising money to renovate buildings, bring in more faculty and continue enhancing both graduate and undergraduate programs. The school also intends to use funds to launch the Center for Entrepreneurial Innovation, which would » See FISCAL, page 2
Cixous explores Class of 2018 to apply with shorter supplement the metaphysical One essay and two shorter response questions were removed from the 20132014 supplement By MAGGIE LIVINGSTONE SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Applicants to the class of 2018 will complete a significantly revised Brown supplement to the Common Application during the 2013-2014 admission cycle, submitting two fewer short answer responses and one fewer essay question. One previous question giving applicants the option of writing one of three essays will be replaced with a new “Why Brown?” essay prompt. Also eliminated
were a 25-word fill-in-the-blank question and a short response prompt. The changes to Brown’s supplement come on the heels of a recent restructuring of the Common Application, which saw the removal of the “topic of your choice” essay option, The Herald previously reported. The Common Application also eliminated the short essay question about applicants’ activities. A balanced supplement This year’s changes to Brown’s supplement were made because last year’s “had grown a bit too long,” said Dean of Admission Jim Miller ’73. “We wanted to make sure we were asking all the questions we wanted to » See APPLICATION, page 2
with one of world literature’s most Algerian-born writer and insistent voices. argues writing is a way to original Cixous lends her extraordinary confront the inevitability mind to three events this week as part of “All That Rises,” a performance of death By ANDREW SMYTH SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Algerian-born French intellectual Helene Cixous sat down last night and shouted. “First one cries,” she declared to a crowded Friedman Auditorium. “Then one writes.” So began an evening of poetic meditation, literary discourse and personal introspection
ARTS & CULTURE
series featuring art for social change presented by the Department of Theater Arts and Performance Studies. The centerpiece of her visit is “The Shout of Literature,” a lecture on writing and mortality that engaged interlocutors as various and farreaching as Sophocles and Derrida, Shakespeare and Joyce, Faulkner and Kafka. Cixous’ contributions to the series also included a screening of a filmed version of her play “The » See CIXOUS, page 4
advances autism research
Researchers discovered more acidic endosomes disrupt neuronal branching By ALEX CONSTANTINO STAFF WRITER
A study led by University researchers has pinpointed a mechanism behind some forms of autism, a finding that could guide the development of drugs targeting its underlying cause, said Eric Morrow, assistant professor of biology and psychiatry and human behavior and senior author on the paper. The research, which was motivated by past human studies and conducted on mice, was published earlier this month in the journal Neuron. The study was a four-year effort inspired by previous research to identify genes involved in autism and related developmental disorders, Morrow said. Defects in the genethat produces the protein NHE6 were previously known to cause a rare, autism-like disorder called Christianson syndrome. Morrow and collaborators found similar genetic abnormalities in some patients with autism. In January, his team published a paper showing that NHE6 levels are lower in the brains of autistic patients, while levels of a protein related to NHE6 are elevated. “That shows that this genetic pathway is very important” because it is a » See AUTISM, page 5
SCIENCE & RESEARCH
‘Water’ explores ‘interconnected but isolating modern age’ By ELI OKUN UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR
Early in Quiara Alegria Hudes’ MFA’04 provocative play “Water by the Spoonful,” Yazmin Ortiz — an underpaid adjunct professor trying to infuse her Swarthmore College classroom with free jazz and “muzak” — instructs her students to go home and remember the first time they noticed musical dissonance. The idea is to appreciate the beauty of unlikely pairings. “This is your creation myth,” she tells them.
inside
ARTS & CULTURE
It’s difficult not to sense the start of a new world in Sock and Buskin’s staging of “Water,” a work brimming with so many ideas about 21st-century lives that it’s hard to know where to look. In the production, directed by Associate Professor of Theater Arts and Performance Studies Patricia Ybarra, characters address one another from literally all corners of Leeds Theater, present in their individual worlds as they simultaneously attempt to communicate with each other. The play is largely concerned with these moments of contact and the ways people struggle to find family and friends in an interconnected but isolating modern age. For most of its first half, “Water” comprises two separate narratives. In Philadelphia, Elliot Ortiz, played by Zach Rufa ’14, dreams of Hollywood » See WATER, page 4
COURTESY OF MARK TUREK
Zach Rufa ’14, Ivy Alphose-Leja ’14 and Shadura Lee ’16 are featured in “Water by the Spoonful,” an ensemble piece directed by Patricia Ybarra, associate professor of theater arts and performance studies.
In focus
Lead on
Making a splash
Photographer Stephen Shore captures his audience with a talk on his career highlights
University researchers dig deeper to correct methods of measuring lead in soil
Water Polo team wins two of its three weekend games, looks forward to Harvard
ARTS & CULTURE, 3
SCIENCE & RESEARCH, 4
SPORTS, 5
weather
Quiara Hudes’ play won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and examines 21st century themes
t o d ay
tomorrow
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