Friday, September 12, 2014

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THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 66

since 1891

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2014

Local artists MEN’S SOCCER Skilled non-conference offenses visit Stevenson Field celebrate Bruno’s backline will have hands full, taking on ‘Month of two prolific offenses this weekend Peace’ By ALEX WAINGER

Exploring interpretations of peace, exhibit showcases community art from varied perspectives

SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Following its upset win over No. 23 Boston University (2-2-0), the men’s soccer team will return home to Stevenson Field this weekend for a pair of contests against Providence College and Lehigh University. Both PC and Lehigh boast high-octane offenses that will thoroughly test the Bears’ (1-1-0) backline. The Friars’ (3-1-0) strength lies in their stellar trio of strikers up top. Fabio Machado, Markus Naglestad and Mac Steeves have collectively produced seven goals and four assists in just four games so far this season. Naglestad has contributed four of the seven tallies, while Steeves has scored the other three. The two goal-scorers will likely push higher up the field and work the ball into dangerous areas. Machado has generated three of the trio’s four assists, suggesting he will tuck in behind

By DREW WILLIAMS SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Walking through the Peace Art Exhibit is a Twilight Zone-esque venture. At first, it is easy to stare with academic detachment at the results of this experiment, which gave blank wall space to various members of the Providence community and asked them to represent on it the abstract idea of peace. But viewers should not just be spectators of this communal exercise, rather they should be participants in it, becoming an integral part of the brush strokes and marker trajectories. The exhibit is part of Rhode Island’s officially sanctioned Month of Peace, a month-long extension of the United Nations’ International Day of Peace Sept. 21. The Month of Peace, whose activities also include music festivals and a walk across the state, sowed its seeds in 2004 when Ginny Fox was sitting in a doctor’s office near the end of a successful battle with cancer. Looking for spiritual rejuvenation after her long treatments, Fox noticed a Tibetan prayer flag on the wall — an adornment used “to send out good wishes to the world,” she said. She formed the Peace Flag Project, a nonprofit devoted to promoting positivity and well-being, as an embodiment of that compassion and » See PEACE, page 4

REVIEW

DAVID DECKEY / HERALD

Co-captain Daniel Taylor ’15 gears up for a throw-in. Taylor anchors a midfield that will need to produce on both ends of the field this weekend.

Naglestad and Steeves and look to play dangerous passes in Bruno’s defensive third. Lehigh (2-1-0) also plays a threestriker formation, but its most dangerous player is Jaime Luchini, a central midfielder. Luchini will drop below the strikers and wreak havoc in the center of the field. He has scored two of the Mountain Hawks’ four goals this season. He also leads the team in shots with 13 and in shots on goal with nine. Both offenses have vastly outpaced their opponents in a number of categories. Lehigh outshot its early competition 50-29 and created 17 more corner kicks than its rivals over the course of just three games. PC has a goal differential of plussix and has fired off 24 more shots than its opposition. Despite the plethora of offensive talent that PC and Lehigh possess, the Bears will not employ any special defensive strategies to handle the likes of Machado or Luchini. “We’re just going to keep doing what we’ve been doing,” said Tariq Akeel ’16. “We think we are just the better team. Our game plan is going to be the same » See M. SOCCER, page 4

Lecturer highlights social aspects of sexual violence In civil war-torn countries, makeshift armies form social bonds through gang rape, Cohen ’01 says By KIKI BARNES UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR

“There are still tons of questions” regarding sexual violence in the context of civil war, said Dara Kay Cohen ’01, assistant professor of public policy at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, during a lecture at the Watson Institute for International Studies Thursday evening. The event, “Explaining Rape During Civil War,” was the first talk this semester in the Watson Institute’s Security Seminar Series, which aims to bring academia and modern policy discussions together. Cohen spoke extensively about her

Though the reasons are uncertain, many have speculated that opportunism, ethnic hatred and gender inequality are the main factors behind this type of sexual violence, Cohen said. But there are very few studies supporting these theories. “My argument: combatant socialization,” she said. Groups — such as the Civil Defense Forces and the Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone — that arbitrarily recruit their fighters by force, particularly through abduction, “face a central dilemma, which is then how to create a coherent armed group out of virtual strangers.” One way to create a cohesive armed force is gang rape. It’s “not about military effectiveness,” but about allowing “the group to function on the most basic

research regarding the use of rape during contemporary civil conflicts, particularly in Sierra Leone, El Salvador and East Timor. “Recently there has been an explosion of policy interest in rape during wartime,” Cohen said, adding that most of the previous research in the field has focused on fatal violence. “The number of bodies is easier to count than nonlethal forms of violence.” Rape, particularly gang rape, is more difficult to study, Cohen added. “Seemingly ordinary people, when forced into armed groups, can go on to commit group crimes, people who are not necessarily prone to violence.”

level,” Cohen said. “Violence increases cohesion.” Between 2006 and 2008, Cohen conducted 210 interviews with former combatants in Sierra Leone, which underwent a civil war from 1991 to 2002. “People were surprisingly open about this topic,” she said. Many of the men she interviewed made statements such as, “‘After (gang rape), we would feel good and talk about it a lot, discuss it among ourselves and laugh about it,’” she said. Cohen added that there was a significant need to be perceived as virile and strong. “Twenty-five percent of the RUF is female, and there is mounting evidence” of women participating in gang rapes, both of men and of other women, Cohen » See LECTURE, page 2

WOMEN’S RUGBY

In varsity debut, Bears square off against former Ivy champs By LAINIE ROWLAND SPORTS STAFF WRITER

inside

The women’s rugby team looks to defeat a strong Harvard squad in Cambridge in its season opener Saturday afternoon — the first varsity rugby game in Ivy League history. Coming into its first year as a varsity squad, Bruno steps onto the pitch a year after the Crimson, which acquired varsity status in 2013. “They’ve probably had more practice time than we’ve had,” said co-captain

Oksana Goretaya ’17. “But skill-wise, we’re definitely going to put up a good fight.” Last fall, Harvard defeated Bruno twice, once by a margin of 50 points and once by 26 points. But the Bears worked hard over the summer, running two-adays during preseason and adapting to a more demanding practice schedule. In addition, the team has the advantage of having healthier players, which was not true throughout last year’s season when it lacked access to athletic trainers.

Harvard captured the Ivy title last year and was the only Ivy to qualify for the Division I National Championships. Goretaya reported that the Crimson’s flankers are rumored to be very strong this year, so the Bears’ flyhalf will have to be up to that challenge. “They have an entire year of varsity playing on us, so they’ve had the trainers, they’ve had the staff, they’ve had the practice time and the lift time, so they’re obviously going to be a strong team,” Goretaya said. With the loss of a 10-woman strong senior class, including their leading scorer, the Crimson has weak spots, upon

Arts & Culture

which the Bears will look to capitalize. The Bears will rely on athleticism Saturday, fielding a roster of 24, which is relatively small for a varsity squad. But what it lacks in numbers, the team makes up for in depth and competitive drive. “Harvard should definitely worry about everyone on our team,” Goretaya said. This includes a newcomer to the sport in Kebbeh Darpolor ’16, a former member of Brown’s track and field team. “She’s an amazing runner,” Goretaya said. “She’s our powerhouse, essentially.” In addition, the Bears have been working on their coordination and ability to work as one relentless unit.

Sports

Installation explores sound as a medium to create physical space

Student-curated Guantanamo Public Memory Project launches discussion over naval base

New skipper Bryan Koniecko takes over men’s tennis and already has plans to right the ship

Waldman ’18 earns the Athlete of the Week honor for her gamewinning goal versus St. John’s

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weather

Two-a-days, professional trainers aim to place women’s rugby on the path to success

“Sometimes in rugby there can be a separation between the forwards and the backs, so they work as two separate groups,” Goretaya said. “What we’ve been working on as a team is putting those two pieces together and making us an unstoppable 15-person team.” And players have no doubt that they are ready for the challenge. “There are a few kinks we still need to work out,” Goretaya said. “But I think if we go in with confidence, go in with the thought of winning and knowing that we’re going to win, it’s going to help us push through those 80 minutes. We’re definitely ready.” t o d ay

tomorrow

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