THE
BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 16
Open Graduate Programs enable interdisciplinary, master’s-level research in secondary field By EMILY WOOLDRIDGE SENIOR STAFF WRITER
“When people ask me what I study, I love saying Egyptology and applied math,” said Christian Casey GS. “Their face turns a little pale.” Expanding the spirit of the undergraduate open curriculum, the Open Graduate Programs, launched last school year, allow doctoral students in the Graduate School to pursue a master’s degree in a secondary field of their choice. Students participating in the project may combine two degrees that appear to be unrelated, but have been conceptualized by the student to enhance knowledge, said Peter Weber, dean of the Grad School. “This program doesn’t exist anywhere else,” Weber added. “At other universities, students are only able to pursue a master’s degree in a discipline closely related to their field.” With the application deadline for next year’s program approaching Friday, Weber expects to receive about 20 to 30 applications and hopes to fund 10 to 15 students in the new cohort, he wrote in an email to The Herald. The numbers have grown from the past two groups, in which around 20 students applied and nine were funded each year. The new cohort, selected by a committee of deans and senior administrators, will be announced before spring break, Weber said. Once they are accepted to the Grad School, students are eligible to apply to the program. The Open Graduate Programs do not provide students with a compass — the nature of the program requires them to navigate their academic plans partially on their own, but gives them “a lot of different tools to grab” when approaching questions and solving problems, Casey said.
FEATURE
Prof. vies for Congressional seat U. faces drop in research funding Mark Alliegro seeks to limit federal influence, faces crowded Republican primary field in campaign By EMMA HARRIS STAFF WRITER
Mark Alliegro, professor of molecular biology, cell biology and biochemistry, announced his candidacy for Massachusetts’ 9th congressional district last month, one of four declared Republican challengers to incumbent Rep. William Keating, D-Mass. Alliegro must win the Sept. 9 closed primary, in which only independents and registered Republicans may vote, to run against Keating in the Nov. 4 general election. If he wins the primary, he will likely face an uphill battle against Keating, who was elected to his first term in 2012 by a margin of 25 percentage points. Denouncing the “huge, bloated and intrusive reach that the federal government has on our daily lives,” Alliegro said he believes in downsizing inefficient bureaucracy. The United States has strayed from its “constitutional form of government,” Alliegro said, adding that restoring the government’s constitutional basis ranks atop his list of priorities and would solve many issues facing the American public. A history buff, Alliegro said he consistently refers back to the Founding Fathers and others who had a profound impact on shaping the country. “Abraham Lincoln once said, ‘We are the rightful masters of our Congress and courts,’ but that doesn’t seem to be the case these days,” he said. “People tend to forget that the United States is not just a land mass — it’s an idea, a destination and a land of laws created by some genius founding
By ANDREW JONES SENIOR STAFF WRITER
External research funding to the University declined by about 17 percent in fiscal year 2013, Provost Mark Schlissel P’15 said in a faculty meeting last week. Though total grant volume has fallen by 20 percent since 2011, Schlissel said it has increased by almost 7 percent so far in fiscal year 2014, The Herald reported last week. Scientific research in areas such as biology, medicine and public health has been hit especially hard, Schlissel told The Herald. Investigators in these disciplines are primarily funded by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation, he added. The drop in funding is a “significant decrease,” Schlissel said. For academics, the dearth of funding translates to a slowing in research, decreased acceptances for graduate students and fewer published papers, Schlissel said. There is a “need to take seriously the decline and develop strategies for » See FUNDING, page 3
SCIENCE & RESEARCH
COURTESY OF MARK ALLIEGRO
Mark Alliegro, professor of molecular biology, cell biology and biochemistry, hopes to win a seat in Massachusetts’ 9th congressional district. doctrines,” Alliegro added. By significantly altering the country’s guiding ideology, as he said the federal government has done recently, “you’ve erased the United States. What you have is just any other country in the world.” Touting himself as a proponent of small businesses, Alliegro said he believes the federal government has gone “way overboard and created a sea of red tape” that is a “prohibitive damper of growth.” Excessive
regulation imposes overly burdensome costs on small businesses, he said. Alliegro said he strongly opposes the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, arguing that the law has failed to insure the estimated 30-50 million uninsured people in the United States and to reduce medical costs. The Affordable Care Act’s reliance on youth participation is a key weakness of the law, Alliegro said, adding that » See ALLIEGRO, page 2
U. clarifies financial aid policies to reflect federal guidelines In wake of criticism, U. updates site to say only FAFSA required for federal aid applications By JILLIAN LANNEY SENIOR STAFF WRITER
The University has revised its financial aid website in response to a letOh, the humanities ter released Feb. 3 by the Democratic Ioana Jucan GS wrote her first play members of the U.S. House Committee when she was in primary school, casting on Oversight and Government Reform the most eligible actress — her sister that identified Brown as one of 111 — for the comedy. Jucan was awarded a higher education institutions violating “distinction for arts” at a school assembly the Higher Education Act. for the production. The complaints in the letter, which Jucan grew up attending theatre fes- was addressed to U.S. Secretary of tivals and reading philosophy in Roma- Education Arne Duncan from ranknia. Now she is studying performance ing committee member Rep. Elijah » See OPEN GRAD, page 2 Cummings, D-Md., revolve around
inside
Life sciences hit especially hard by lack of external funding as national economy struggles
the use of forms other than the Free Application for Federal Student Aid to determine applicants’ eligibility for federal assistance. The 1992 version of the Higher Education Act made completing the FAFSA the sole requirement for students seeking federal financial aid in order to simplify the process and reduce costs for applicants, Cummings wrote in his publicly released letter. The use of additional forms remains compliant with federal law as long as institutions state explicitly that only completing the FAFSA is necessary to receive federal financial aid. The allegations against Brown surround use of the CSS PROFILE, a more in-depth financial aid application run by the College Board, which enables students to apply for aid directly from » See FINANCIAL AID, page 3
Science & Research
ISABELLA OLEA / HERALD
The University amended its financial aid website following public allegations of misinformation at 111 higher education institutions.
Commentary
Professor’s analysis suggests babies were killed in ancient Phoenician sacrifical rituals
Lecture on race and blindness calls into question concept of ‘colorblindness’
Dorris ’15: Socioeconomic class divisions too often go unaddressed at Brown
Sindhu MD’17: Budget cuts to food stamp programs will exacerbate economic instability
SCIENCE, 4
SCIENCE, 8
COMMENTARY, 7
COMMENTARY, 7
weather
Open curriculum influences grad program
since 1891
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
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