Monday, February 3, 2014

Page 1

THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 9

since 1891

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2014

Dining Services reaches new contract agreement

Initiative expands undergrad mentorship

Employees receive retroactive pay increase, additional bereavement time and day care benefits

Students pleased with number of options, but face difficulties navigating multiple programs

By BRITTANY NIEVES SENIOR STAFF WRITER

By MOLLY SCHULSON SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The New Scientist Program is training 25 mentors for the GraduateUndergraduate Mentoring Initiative this semester, giving undergraduates another outlet through which to seek mentorship and advice. While students and administrators lauded the University’s multitude of existing advising options, they also expressed concern over how difficult it may be for students to navigate them. A ‘program for everything’ Under GUMI, junior and senior science concentrators will be paired with graduate students who will help them build networking skills and prepare for graduate school. GUMI joins several other peer advising programs targeted at specific groups, including ALANA — the African American, Latino, Asian/Asian American and Native American mentoring program — which was founded in 1994, and the Women in Science and Engineering mentoring program, which began in 1991. “Programs like WiSE, ALANA and GUMI are … extremely helpful, as they target certain groups of students who might gain from additional advising,” Kira Bromwich ’15, a Meiklejohn leader, wrote in an email to The Herald. When Katherine Bergeron was appointed dean of the College in 2006, » See MENTORING, page 2

TOM SULLIVAN / HERALD FILE PHOTO

Under a new contract, Brown Dining Services workers will receive an improved pension plan and wage increases, among other benefits.

Brown Dining Services workers and their union, United Service and Allied Workers of Rhode Island, reached an agreement on a new contract with the University in late December. The major financial issues under consideration in the contract negotiations — which began in October 2013 — included wage, pension and health insurance changes. The University was “ready and willing to offer workers a retroactive wage increase up to October 2012,” said Karen McAninch, business agent for USAW-RI. Dining Services workers will receive 2.5 percent retroactive pay and an additional 2.25 percent this year and in 2015. The union sought a contract

expiration date of Oct. 12, whereas the University preferred mid-January. The two groups compromised, setting a November 2015 expiration date. “The University was more than pleased to be able to reach a fair and equitable agreement with our Dining Service employees,” wrote Paul Mancini, director of labor and employee relations, in an email to The Herald. “I think the employees shared this belief, since the vote to ratify the contract was an overwhelming 122 to two.” A controversial issue that emerged during negotiations was whether Dining Services workers should pay less than other union employees for health insurance, since they earn less income, McAninch said. The workers’ percentage pay is less than that of the higher-paid library and Department of Facilities Management employees, who will be paying 12 percent, and of the custodians, who will be paying 10 percent, she added. It was decided that Dining » See BDS, page 3

Alzheimer’s drug trial yields ‘disappointing’ results Researchers find no improvement of patients’ memories or daily functioning despite reduced protein buildup By ANDREW JONES SENIOR STAFF WRITER

A recent study co-led by Professor of Neurology Stephen Salloway found that bapineuzumab, a drug previously thought to slow the effects of Alzheimer’s disease, causes no improvement in patients’ memories or daily functioning. The primary clinical results were “disappointing” because positive results from the drug “would have propelled the field forward at a much greater rate and given

SCIENCE & RESEARCH

much more optimism for Alzheimer’s as a treatable disease,” Salloway said. Alzheimer’s disease currently affects over five million people in the United States, but it remains without a cure or method of permanently delaying its effects. The results of the trial were published in the New England Journal of Medicine Jan. 23. The study, which tested patients aged 50 to 88, showed no significant differences in clinical outcomes between patients given bapineuzumab and those given a placebo. Despite the negative clinical result, the researchers determined patients

given the drug had reduced beta-amyloid protein buildup, Salloway said. Alzheimer’s is distinguished by a buildup of beta-amyloid and tau proteins in the nervous system, which causes nerve cell breakdown, Salloway said. Bapineuzumab functions as an antibody that breaks down the buildup of amyloid protein in plaques, he added. The study indicated that bapineuzumab is associated with lower amyloid buildup in patients carrying the APOE ε4 gene, which is associated with increased likelihood of developing the disease. Craig Atwood, research director of the Wisconsin Alzheimer’s Institute at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, said the study’s focus on an immunological vaccination

as a strategy for treatment was misguided. Past research has documented the negative side effects of destroying amyloid plaques, he said. “I hope that this paper will lead researchers to start looking at other avenues to identify the underlying disease mechanisms,” Atwood added. The researchers also discovered that PET scans, a type of brain imaging, can detect a patient’s amyloid plaque buildup, which is beneficial for early detection of Alzheimer’s, Salloway said. Alzheimer’s has a “long, silent preclinical phase,” during which the disease is hard to detect, Salloway said. Scientists are looking to detect and arrest amyloid buildup early in the process, he added. » See ALZHEIMER’S, page 3

M. BASKETBALL

Bruno takes down Cornell and Columbia at home By SAM RUBINROIT SPORTS STAFF WRITER

DAVID BRAUN / HERALD

inside

Rafael Maia ’15 lines up for a free throw Saturday night. The forward led the Bears with 18 points and 12 rebounds against Columbia.

The men’s basketball team went unbeaten at home over the weekend, defeating Cornell 78-66 before topping Columbia 64-56. The Bears are now in position to claim first place in the Ivy League with a win Friday against Harvard. Brown 78, Cornell 66 The Bears (11-7, 3-1 Ivy) exploded

Science & Research

out of the gate against the Big Red (117, 0-4), jumping ahead to a 19-4 lead in the first nine minutes of play. Undeterred, Cornell responded with an 11-0 run and managed to wrangle a 33-30 advantage by halftime. Yet the Bears regained momentum in the second half with a three-point shooting assault — the squad shot 6-of-11 from long distance in the period — to reclaim the lead and earn a 78-66 victory. “The first five minutes of the game we came out playing really hard,” said guard Steven Spieth ’17. “We got up 19-4 and we maybe let up when we shouldn’t have, which is something we can’t do in league play. … We just need to put the pedal to the metal and put it away as

Commentary

Visions during meditation may be a product of spontaneous neural activity

Former prisoners face difficulties acquiring health care, according to recent symposium

Rattner ’15: Student dependence on anonymity depreciates relationships

Powers ’15: Not everyone is created equal, as genes endow people with different abilities

SCIENCE & RESEARCH, 3

SCIENCE & RESEARCH, 3

COMMENTARY, 7

COMMENTARY, 7

weather

Bears move into second place in the Ivy League with wins, will play for first place Friday

soon as we can.” Bruno saw stellar performances from Spieth and fellow first-year Norman Hobbie ’17, each of whom finished with 18 points. Hobbie’s points came exclusively from beyond the arc, where he shot 6-of-9 on the night. “They were so consumed with our size inside that that opened up some perimeter shots,” said Head Coach Mike Martin ’04. Spieth’s 18 points, a career best, came on a near-perfect shooting display. The young forward connected on 5-of-5 from the field and 8-of-9 from the charity stripe. » See BASKETBALL, page 3 t o d ay

tomorrow

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