Monday, March 17, 2014

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THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 37

since 1891

MONDAY, MARCH 17, 2014

Foreign students to have annual aid reviews

SKIING

Bears take third place at national competition

By CALEB MILLER SPORTS EDITOR

inside

Riding an undefeated regular season, the skiing team captured third overall at the United States Collegiate Skiing Association National Championships over the weekend. Powered by first-years at the Wilmington, N.Y., tournament, the Bears raced to the best national finish of any Brown varsity team this year. Rocky Mountain College in Billings, Mont., edged Sierra Nevada College from Incline Village, Nev., for the tournament crown, but Bruno was the toast of the East. Cornell’s eighth-place finish marked the only other Ivy League team to finish in the top 10. Bruno improved on the sixth-place finish it garnered at Nationals last year, but team members were not entirely satisfied with the performance. “We had mixed feelings,” said Ali Gunesch ’17. “We were obviously happy to come out third, but we know there were times we could have done better.” In each of the championship’s two events — slalom and giant slalom — all skiers were given two runs that combined for one total individual time. Each team’s fastest three skiers combined individual times to form a total team time for an event. Rocky Mountain and Sierra Nevada claimed the top two spots in both events. The Bears finished third in the giant slalom with a team time of 6 minutes, 31.65 seconds — 10 seconds faster than fourth-place University of British Columbia. St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minn., ousted Bruno for third place in the slalom event, but the Bears’ team time of 5:20.60 barely held on to fourth place, edging British Columbia by 0.22 seconds. First-years Gunesch and Natalie Pearl ’17 emerged as Brown’s tournament stars. Pearl sparkled in the giant slalom with runs of 1:04.21 and 1:03.25 to notch third overall. The rookie coupled that performance with a 15th-place finish in the slalom, earning sixth in the individual competition at her first crack at Nationals. “Skiing is the type of sport where you can be competitive right away,” Pearl said, adding that she wasn’t surprised by the first-years’ impact. Gunesch finished on her classmate’s » See SKIING, page S3

EMILY GILBERT / HERALD

Director of the Third World Center and Assistant Dean of the College Mary Grace Almandrez moderates a Brown Lecture Board discussion with actors Aasif Mandvi, Laverne Cox and RJ Mitte discussing diversity in the media.

‘Real people’ crucial for TV, speakers say Characters of different races, gender identities and abilities promote understanding, panel says By DREW WILLIAMS SENIOR STAFF WRITER

“People don’t go to movies to see you, they go to movies to see themselves,” said “Orange is the New Black” star Laverne Cox. This truism suggests the need for more relatable TV characters, representing a wide range of human experiences, she said. Cox, along with television stars Aasif Mandvi and RJ Mitte, questioned social norms in media in front of an enthusiastic Salomon 101 audience Sunday night, discussing their own transcendence of stereotypes and the work that still remains to be done. Mandvi plays a foreign correspondent on “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” providing satirical insight into the experiences of Muslims and South Asians

in America. Cox plays Sophia Burset, a transgender woman in a female prison, on the Netflix series. Mitte, who has mild cerebral palsy, portrays Walter White Jr., son of the meth-making protagonist, on “Breaking Bad,” which won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series in 2013. When questioned by the panelists, audience members confirmed with raucous applause that they had seen the three series. Director of the Third World Center and Assistant Dean of the College Mary Grace Almandrez moderated the panel ­— hosted by Brown Lecture Board — directing student-submitted questions to the actors for 45 minutes before moving on to an audience question-and-answer portion. Almandrez’s first question immediately shifted the focus from the speakers’ roles as television stars to their work as activists — work the three have taken on by raising awareness about marginalized groups through their TV characters. “I was a transgender person who was

very interested in talking about transgender in the media … and ‘Orange is the New Black’ has given me a bigger platform,” Cox said. “People don’t think about wheelchairs and those kinds of things,” Mitte said, noting that viewers do not often consider the daily lives of people different from themselves. Mandvi, in his typical comedic fashion, initially deflected the question. “I got into acting to sleep with girls,” he said, before adding that being portrayed as the “Senior Brown Correspondent” or “Muslim Correspondent” on the political satire program thrust activism upon him. “I hate to use the term activism because there are people who are out there risking their lives as activists, and I’m just making goofy faces in front of a green screen,” Mandvi said. But ultimately the widespread publicity of the show allows it to promote understanding and tolerance, he added. Cox told a story about a woman she met in Canada. The woman told her » See PANEL, page 2

By JILLIAN LANNEY SENIOR STAFF WRITER

International students’ financial aid packages will be reevaluated annually beginning with the class of 2018 as part of President Christina Paxson’s strategic plan. This policy will apply to international students who received University aid upon their admission, but transfer, Resumed Undergraduate Education and international students who do not apply for aid their first year at Brown will still not be able to reapply in subsequent years. Currently, international students receive the same amount of University aid year to year, regardless of changes in financial circumstances. The University realized this policy was “really problematic for international students” because financial situations can change drastically from year to year, said Director of Financial Aid Jim Tilton. But he added that extreme changes in need occur infrequently, with only “a few (cases) every year.” Altered financial circumstances could result from changes in family members’ employment, natural disasters, sudden medical expenses or currency value swings, among other » See AID POLICY, page 3

Social psych prof. to leave as course popularity surges CLPS assistant professor Fiery Cushman will leave Brown to join Harvard’s faculty in the fall By MOLLY SCHULSON SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Three hundred sixty-six students pack into Salomon 101 two days a week to hear who Marcy Huang ’16 calls “the most engaging lecturer” she’s ever had. But that lecturer — Fiery Cushman, assistant professor of cognitive, linguistic and psychological sciences, who has taught CLPS0700: “Social Psychology” for the past three springs — will be leaving Brown at the end of the semester for a position at Harvard. Over the past three years, enrollment in the course has nearly doubled, from 178 in the fall of 2010 — the year before

SCIENCE & RESEARCH

Cushman began teaching the course — to 366 this semester. “He was a fantastic addition to our department,” said Bertram Malle, professor of cognitive, linguistic and psychological sciences, said of Cushman. “That’s usually a problem because fantastic people all around get offers from other places.” A social decision After Cushman gave a talk at Harvard in September, faculty members there expressed interest in interviewing him to fill one of two open positions for social psychologists, Cushman said. “Brown is … a perfect home for my research, but there’s a lot of opportunities at Harvard,” Cushman said. Cushman attended Harvard as an undergraduate and graduate student, also conducting research there as a postdoctoral fellow. Harvard “knows him intimately, » See CUSHMAN, page 4

Commentary

Recent increase in Social Psychology enrollment Since Professor Fiery Cushman took the helm of Social Psychology, the course has boasted at least 300 students each year. On average 101 students enrolled each time the course was offered between 1995 and 2010. 300-student cap lifted

350 students enrolled 300 250 200 150 100 50 0

Fall '08 Fall '09 Fall '10 Spring '12 Spring '13 Spring '14 Source: The Critical Review; Professor Bertram Malle JACQUELINE FEILER / HERALD

Science and Research

Isman ’15: The decline of the printed page changes the experience of reading

Mills ’15: The requirement to live on campus for six semesters stifles student choice and freedom

Study investigates the desirability of enhancing population’s health through text messages

Cardiologists’ research shows cancer drug could lower risk of death after heart attack in mice

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weather

Squad uses key rookie performances to overcome minor setbacks at Nationals

International, transfer and RUE students who do not initiallly seek aid still cannot apply later on

t o d ay

tomorrow

29 / 14

40 / 27


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