Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Page 1

THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 28

since 1891

TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

Royalties from research patents on the rise U. gross licensing income increases 44 percent, but lags behind Ivy peers as of 2012 By SANDRA YAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The University’s gross licensing income — total royalties from research patents — rose approximately 44 percent to $2.3 million in fiscal year 2013, an increase from $1.6 million in 2012. The number of patents filed decreased slightly from 98 in 2012 to 90 in 2013, and the number of patents issued fell from 15 to nine, said Katherine Gordon, managing director of the Technology Ventures Office. The 2013 increase, though, was not as high as the previous year’s change

— total royalties spiked 65 percent from fiscal year 2011 to fiscal year 2012. The office works with “researchers (to) identify novel innovative technologies that (it thinks) can be patented and then form the basis for commercialized ventures that can be partnered with industry,” Gordon said. She added that the office has limited control over the number of patents issued on a yearly basis because the process can take a number of years after the initial filing. “I kind of view the process as the planting seeds for the future,” Gordon said. Among its Ivy League peers, the University received the lowest amount of gross licensing income in 2012. Princeton led the way with $129,617,625 in adjusted gross income in fiscal year 2012, according to the » See PATENTS, page 2

JILLIAN LANNEY / HERALD

Task force Director of health gives R.I. B-minus health score state director of health discusses initiatives to proposes Inlowerspeech, incidence of smoking, AIDS, drug overdose gun reform legislation By LINDSAY GANTZ

CONTRIBUTING WRITER

By VI MAI CONTRIBUTING WRITER

The Joint Behavioral Health and Firearms Safety Task Force of Rhode Island proposed recommendations to the General Assembly last week that would prevent individuals with serious mental health issues from purchasing firearms. If the legislation is passed by the General Assembly, it would enable the state to submit mental health records of individuals deemed to be a danger to themselves or others to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, a division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, according to the department’s website. The task force consists of 20 members from different professions in public safety, policy and public health, including Assistant Attorney General Joee Lindbeck and several state representatives. NICS is a branch within the FBI that manages the national background check system, screening potential firearm buyers for criminal, mental health and substance abuse records. » See GUN REFORM, page 3

METRO

inside

Brown a smoke-free campus,” he said. The federally funded Prescription Monitoring Program, which was implemented to help providers monitor the number of prescriptions, will help reduce the rates of drug overdose in the state, Fine said. The program was introduced last year to prevent fraud associated with the overprescription of controlled substances, The Herald previously reported. Overdoses from opiates are a major part of the state’s drug problem, with over 20 fatalities from opiate overdoses reported in 2014, The Herald previously reported. “If someone comes to see me as a doctor, saying they have a bad back » See HEALTH, page 3

Exhibit to revitalize natural history collection

METRO

Jenks Society for Lost Museums to present pre-Darwinist artifacts forgotten by University By DREW WILLIAMS SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Sharks, a giraffe and Queen Victoria’s Shetland pony were a few of the inhabitants of the Jenks Museum of Natural History, if existing records are to be believed about the anthropology and natural history collection originally located in what is now Rhode Island Hall from 1871 to 1915. One-hundred years later, students and faculty members have

ARTS & CULTURE

COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES

The Jenks Museum of Natural History existed in Rhode Island Hall from 1871 to 1915, exhibiting anthropological objects and artifacts.

Arts & Culture

Commentary

American Dance Legacy Initiative’s Mini-Fest connects dance and American heritage

Okey Ndibe, visiting assistant professor of Africana studies, discusses writing and memory

Asher ’15: What does it mean to be strong at Brown?

Upadhyay ’15: Policies should be judged by their results, not their intentions

PAGE 4

PAGE 8

PAGE 7

PAGE 7

weather

Bill would seek to block people with severe mental illness from access to firearms

Michael Fine, director of the R.I. Department of Health, gave the Ocean State a B-minus rating in the State of the State’s Health address Wednesday. The score was determined by compiling rankings from national health organizations. The rating is “a little bit subjective,” Fine said. “At the same time it gives us a chance to see where we are.”

Rhode Island ranks 19th nationally, according to a report from the United Health Foundation. While Rhode Island ranks well for its relatively low prevalence of obesity and its access to primary care providers, the state’s health scores are negatively affected by high rates of drug overdose and unequal health outcomes based on socioeconomic status, according to the United Health report. There remains room for improvement to Rhode Island’s health score, Fine said. Fine said he would like to see 20 fewer cases of HIV and lower rates of

smoking by next year. He also said he wants two or three additional neighborhood primary health centers built by the end of 2014. Fine said implementing widespread HIV testing and treating patients who test positive will result in a decrease of HIV cases. Smoking remains an important health issue in Rhode Island, Fine said. Rates of smoking fell from 20 percent to 17.4 percent of adults in 2013, but Fine said he would like smokng rates to drop an additional two percentage points by next year. And Fine said he wants colleges and universities in the state to enact smoking bans on their campuses. “I’d love to see students agitating to make

banded together to form the Jenks Society for Lost Museums to direct attention to the collection and to John Whipple Potter Jenks 1838, its namesake, founder and curator. The Jenks Society for Lost Museums was founded in spring 2013 after Public Humanities Director Steven Lubar mentioned to students that Brown previously had its own natural history museum, said Jessica Palinksi GS, a member of the society. Further research unearthed “a very dramatic paper” by a graduate student on the demolition of Van Winkle Hall, an administrative office building bulldozed to make room for the Rockefeller Library in the 1960s. The paper detailed a surprised construction worker’s discovery of cases » See MUSEUM, page 4 t o d ay

tomorrow

30 / 19

35 / 25


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.