Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Page 1

THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 11

since 1891

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2014

Faculty talk With recent growth, Harambee House poised for new era skyrockets renovations, Membership just a year after low threatened internship numbers program house status funding By MARGARET NICKENS

By WING SZE HO SENIOR STAFF WRITER

inside

Three floors of the Sciences Library will likely undergo a renovation in the next few months, said Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 at a faculty meeting Tuesday. Faculty members and administrators announced the composition of the upcoming provost search committee and discussed the dean of the College search as well as research funding and grants, new undergraduate internship funding and an expansion of the University’s postdoctoral programs. They also talked about agenda items to be presented to the Corporation, the University’s highest governing body, this weekend. The SciLi renovation is expected to begin in the coming months, and the renovated floors will house the Laboratory for Educational Innovation, the Language Resource Center, a Computing and Information Services instructional classroom, offices for Instructional Technological Group staff and a social science research laboratory. The repurposing will also “free up” additional space, Schlissel added. Due to the digitization of academic journals, it is no longer necessary to “fill a 14-floor building with books,” Schlissel said. The language center is a “technologically aided way to reinforce the study of foreign languages,” he said, adding that the center will house CIS and ITG staff as well as two hired language specialists. The Laboratory for Educational Innovation will be “home for online content for Brown courses,” including those taught online and in traditional formats, Schlissel said. The center will track the progress of the University’s online course content, he added. The social science research laboratory will invest in advanced computers for experiments in subjects such as behavioral economics and political science, Schlissel said. President Christina Paxson said the provost search committee will include Iris Bahar, professor of engineering and chair of the Faculty Executive Committee, and Peter Friedmann, professor of medicine and health services, policy and practice and chair of the Medical Faculty » See FACULTY, page 3

SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Just one year after the University almost revoked the program house status for Harambee House — a living space for those interested in African culture — the group is hosting its greatest number of residents in recent history this semester. With this growth, Harambee has become a focal point for many black students at Brown that offers a safe space on campus, said Elaina Boutte ’15, co-head of Harambee House. Through the years Harambee was founded in 1993 after a series of racially charged incidents plagued the University, The Herald reported in 2004. “Harambee House carried a certain

ASHLEY SO / HERALD

The leaders of Harambee House hope to grow membership to over 50 residents during the spring 2014 recruiting season. Members praised the house’s community but said it lacks aesthetic appeal. symbolism. It’s like a black family moving into a white neighborhood and people having to deal with your presence there,” Kevin Webb ’92 told The

Herald in 2004. “The bastion of white male-dom was being integrated.” But by the mid-2000s, Harambee began to face difficulties in recruiting

the necessary number of members. The house’s status was previously threatened in 2009, when only 11 students » See HARAMBEE, page 3

Study explores campus alcohol interventions Individualized check-ups and moderation strategies found most effective interventions in first-years By KIAN IVEY CONTRIBUTING WRITER

ALAN SHAN / HERALD

Nirupama Rao, former Indian ambassador to the United States, talked about gender bias and economic conflict in a conversation Tuesday.

Former ambassador speaks on China-India relations Nirupama Rao says China and India must ‘enmesh economies’ to foster cooperation By HANNAH KERMAN STAFF WRITER

“India has the promise, has the potential,” said Nirupama Rao, the former Indian ambassador to the United States, in a conversation Tuesday on the foreign relations of China and India. Rao discussed foreign affairs with Richard Locke, director of the Watson Institute for International Studies and professor of political science. The

panel was the first event in the BrownIndia Initiative lecture series. Professor of Political Science Ashutosh Varshney introduced the speakers to a full room of around 60 students and community members, as well as a group watching on a screen upstairs. “It is well known that the world of diplomacy is rather male-centric,” and India is no exception, Varshney said. But Rao has broken gender barriers and paved the way for female colleagues, serving as India’s foreign secretary, the high commissioner for India in Sri Lanka and her country’s ambassador to the United States, he said. » See CHINA-INDIA, page 2

Personalized feedback about how students’ drinking habits stack up against those of their peers could be more effective at reducing firstyears’ alcohol intake than bolstering alcohol education programs, according to a scientific literature review written by a team led by University researchers. The review was published Jan. 20 in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. The researchers compiled all of the primary scientific papers “related to alcohol interventions for first-year college students,” said co-author Kate Carey, professor of behavioral and social sciences. Using a categorization of interventions and statistical analysis, the team compared components of the various studies and examined which intervention elements produced the greatest success, said lead author Lori Scott-Sheldon, assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior.

SCIENCE & RESEARCH

Feedback over education The researchers first addressed whether any sort of intervention dealing with first-year college students’ alcohol consumption was useful, Carey

Commentary

Science & Research Professor J. Timmons Roberts recognized for research on climate change in developing countries

Doctor communication with HIV/AIDS patients differs by race and ethnicity

Feldman ’15: Nonprofit needed to protect interests of student-athletes

Johnson ’14: All humans are created equal even if all humans are not the same

SCIENCE & RESEARCH, 4

SCIENCE & RESEARCH, 8

COMMENTARY, 7

COMMENTARY, 7

weather

Faculty meeting also covers search committees, U.’s international reputation

said. The findings suggested any intervention yielded better outcomes than having no intervention. The researchers found that certain intervention features — including personalized feedback and moderation strategies — were more effective than others, Scott-Sheldon said. She added that challenging students’ perceptions about drinking was also often effective. “I think personalized feedback is effective in a lot of ways because you may not be fully aware of what you’re doing,” Scott-Sheldon said. She compared personalized checkups to keeping a diary, noting that people may not remember everything they do unless it is written down. “Writing the information down and being told you’re drinking more than you think you are and more than your peers is useful in general for giving people a sense of how you’re behaving similarly or differently from other people,” she said. Carey said she has ample experience working with alcohol-related interventions, and this study’s findings are consistent with interventions that have been shown to be effective in primary care or community settings. The review found that the education component of interventions “not so surprisingly” had little effect on firstyear drinking habits, Carey said, adding that the one part of education that proved somewhat effective involved teaching students about moderation techniques and identification of highrisk situations. » See DRINKING, page 4 t o d ay

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