Wednesday, September 17, 2014

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THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 69

since 1891

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

U. plans Associate Dean of Biology Marjorie Thompson dies dean known partnership ‘Beloved’ for commitment to advising, with Naval undergraduate curricular reform War College By MAXINE JOSELOW

By ALEKSANDRA LIFSHITS CONTRIBUTING WRITER

inside

Though the University and the U.S. Naval War College are only a 40-minute drive apart, the two institutions have had minimal interaction in the past. But on June 6, President Christina Paxson and former President of the Naval War College Walter Carter Jr. signed an agreement to collaborate on research and teaching. Following the agreement, the two schools will begin to partner by holding joint lectures and planning future research initiatives. Rick Menard, chief of staff to the provost of the Naval War College, said the partnership is in everyone’s best interest, since the institutions can benefit from each others’ facilities. Richard Locke, director of the Watson Institute for International Studies, expressed a similar sentiment. “Without spending any resources, we suddenly have available to us all this new expertise,” he said. Though Carter Jr. has left his post at the Naval War College since the agreement was signed, Locke said he does not anticipate that the administrative turnover or other issues will pose problems for the partnership. The partnership will focus on security-related topics, such as cybersecurity, nonproliferation — the prevention of arms buildup — and environmental change, according to a University press release. These issues will be explored in the forms of joint seminars, annual distinguished lecture series and research, according to the press release. This teamwork “will help shape policy and research as we search for solutions to evolving national security challenges,” said Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., who attended the agreement’s signing, in a statement provided to The Herald by his deputy press secretary Daniel Curran. The two institutions complement each other, Locke said. For example, faculty members at both the University and the Naval War College have significant knowledge about Eastern Europe and the Ukrainian conflict, though they approach similar research from different angles. A group of foreign policy and politics experts ­— including Assistant Professor of Political Science and » See NAVAL, page 3

Marjorie Thompson ’74 PhD’79 P’02 P’07 P’09 P’12 P’14 P’16, associate dean of biological sciences, died Monday afternoon while on leave from the University this semester, said Katherine Smith, who was appointed interim associate dean of biological sciences Sept. 1. “It’s going to be an extreme loss — a personal one for many students,” Smith told The Herald. “She was beloved by all.” Thompson died at Home and Hospice Care of Rhode Island “surrounded by family and close friends,” wrote Dean of Medicine and Biological Sciences Jack Elias and Associate Dean of Biology

HERALD FILE PHOTO

Marjorie Thompson, who died Monday, was known outside of the University for her musical talents as a songwriter, singer and guitarist.

Faculty travel to Liberia to aid in fight against Ebola Two U. profs help to treat Liberian patients while med student works to deliver supplies By JASON NADBOY SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The Ebola virus epidemic may be happening thousands of miles away, but that is not stopping University faculty and students from trying to help fight the deadly disease. Both Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine Adam Levine and Professor of Medicine Timothy Flanigan are working to combat the outbreak in Liberia, while Anshu Vaish ’11.5 MD’16 is working from the states to deliver medical supplies to the affected region. Levine helped found the Ebola

SCIENCE & RESEARCH

Treatment Center in Liberia and is currently working there, isolating, testing and treating patients with Ebola, Levine wrote in an email to The Herald. Flanigan’s work in the country has focused on its capital city, Monrovia, where he is training healthcare professionals to work with medical equipment, he said, noting that many of them lack adequate training in treating Ebola. Health care in Liberia Both Flanigan and Levine noted that Liberia is not well-poised to battle the Ebola epidemic. “The health care system was really struggling before Ebola, so (the Ebola epidemic) was a double whammy,”

Flanigan said. “There are very few local doctors in Liberia,” Levine wrote, adding that there are “maybe 50 in the whole country of four million people.” Nurses and physician assistants make up most of the local medical staff, Levine added, though most of the hospital and healthcare centers in which they were employed closed down at the beginning of the epidemic as large numbers of healthcare workers died from the disease. “I’m so impressed by the Liberian health care workers and the challenges they face,” Flanigan said. Patients mostly hear through the radio of the Ebola Treatment Center, which is funded through the Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance, Levine wrote. “Patients call the country Ebola hotline and then we send our

ambulance to pick them up,” he added. Since no vaccine currently exists for Ebola, treatment focuses on relieving symptoms. Ebola causes diarrhea, so patients often become very dehydrated, Levine wrote. Restoring fluids to their bodies orally or through an IV is key, Levine wrote. Doctors can also treat “pain, fever, nausea and delirium,” he added. The priority is to stem the epidemic, Flanigan said, noting that more research may lead to the development of vaccines and medication to prevent and treat Ebola. Shipping supplies One of the major struggles health care workers in West Africa face is the lack of proper equipment, Levine wrote. » See EBOLA, page 3

Fall MOOCs explore literature, neuroscience Online Coursera classes have each already enrolled more than 20,000 students this semester By ALEXANDER BLUM SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The University will offer two massive open online courses through Coursera this semester: “The Fiction of Relationship,” taught by Arnold Weinstein, professor comparative literature, and “Exploring Neural Data,” taught by Monica Linden and David Sheinberg, lecturer and professor of neuroscience, respectively. Weinstein’s course was previously offered on Coursera during the summer of 2013, while “Exploring Neural Data”

was taught for the first time at Brown in the spring and is making the transition to Coursera for the first time. As of Friday afternoon, enrollment in “Exploring Neural Data,” hovered around 22,800, Linden said, and enrollment in “The Fiction of Relationship” had surpassed 20,000, according to a University press release. “I was interested in the idea of reaching a lot of people,” Linden said, adding that she believes the class fits well into a contemporary trend in neuroscience, namely a “push for open access to data.” She said she believes that the material covered by the course is very valuable for undergraduate students, regardless of its status as a MOOC. “We didn’t think too much about numbers when we were designing the » See MOOC, page 2

Commentary

LILIAN CRUZ / HERALD

Professor of Comparative Literature Arnold Weinstein says he finds course learning to be “enormously enriched” by online forums.

Science & Research

Mills ’15: U.S. military cuts are dangerous while world security faces major threats

Makhlouf ’16: Middle Eastern Studies program does not need more pro-Israel teaching

Study indicates yoga may be beneficial for those suffering from bipolar disorder

HIV research and prevention evolved over the years to include multi-department collaboration

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weather

Agreement encourages increased collaboration on issues of cybersecurity, environmental change

UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR

Edward Hawrot in an email to the Division of Biology and Medicine Tuesday afternoon. “Throughout her time here she remained committed to advancing the University in numerous and enduring ways,” President Christina Paxson wrote in a community-wide email Tuesday night. In her post as associate dean, which she held since 1983, Thompson led the Biology Undergraduate Affairs Office, which oversees the undergraduate biology curriculum and advising system. Thompson completed her undergraduate and graduate studies at Brown, receiving a bachelor of science in biochemistry in 1974 and a Ph.D. in biology in 1979, according to the Biology Undergraduate Affairs Office website. She married husband Ian Thompson PhD’79 and had seven children, six of whom attended or currently attend the University. » See THOMPSON, page 4

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Wednesday, September 17, 2014 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu