Friday, September 26, 2014

Page 1

THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 76

since 1891

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2014

Ivy rank does not faze admins, students ‘Sweeney Lowest University’s endowment, Comparing Ivy ratings to which lags behind those Todd’ endowments and enrollments of its peers, hurts its occupies rankings in national lists Wall Street

REVIEW

By JOSEPH ZAPPA

SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Sock and Buskin’s take on the classic play evokes frustrations of living in poverty amidst wealth By EBEN BLAKE STAFF WRITER

Students

(IN BILLIONS)

(IN THOUSANDS)

40

40

30

30

20

20

10

10

2

3

4

8

11

15

Penn

Dartmouth

Cornell

16 Brown

1

Columbia

RANK:

Yale

Money talks Financial weaknesses encumber the University. In the financial

Endowment

Harvard

ARTS & CULTURE

Princeton, which ranked first in the U.S. News and World Report’s 2015 National Universities Rankings, has the highest endowment-to-student ratio in the Ivy League. Brown ranked last at 16, with a ratio of $280,000 per student.

Princeton

Modern-day reinventions frequently come across as gimmicky in theater and film. Too often, they serve as better marketing than art — or, perhaps more dangerously, they can come from the monomaniacal will of a rogue director, so concerned with his or her creative impulses that the reinvention ends up a gutted version of the original work. But in the rare circumstances that it does work — and Sock and Buskin’s rendition of “Sweeney Todd” is one of the few — it manages to introduce a dimension ignored in the first reading or » See SWEENEY, page 4

University rankings hit the Internet every September, commanding the attention of administrators, prospective students and their parents. Though rankings often inspire confusion and frustration, they have left an indelible mark on the college search process, setting the framework in which many applicants imagine their place among the United States’ thousands of higher education institutions. The U.S. News and World Report, which produces the list widely considered the benchmark for American institutions, released its 30th annual national universities rankings Sept. 9. Brown fell to 16th place, last in the Ivy League, prompting questions about what factors into the rankings, how much weight they should be assigned and who is taking them into consideration.

resources category, which accounts for 10 percent of the overall U.S. News ranking, the University places 24th, significantly trailing this year’s second-lowest Ivy, Cornell, which comes in at 17th. The category includes per-student spending on instruction, research and student services, but the ramifications of a less-than-robust portfolio reach beyond this measure, most notably impacting faculty resources, the second area in which the University’s comparative disadvantage is most pronounced. Faculty resources make up onefifth of a university’s total ranking and are determined by salary, class size, the proportion of faculty members with the highest degree in their field, the student-faculty ratio and the percentage of full-time faculty members. By this standard, the University is 17th in the nation and seventh in the Ivy League, far behind Harvard, Princeton, Columbia and Yale, all of which are ranked in the top eight. Neither low salaries nor a lack of funds to hire more professors accounts for this discrepancy between the University and its Ivy peers, administrators said. “I’ve never been in a position where we weren’t able to offer the salary to recruit somebody,” said Dean of the Faculty Kevin McLaughlin P’12.

Source: U.S. News and World Report AVERY CRITS-CHRISTOPH / HERALD

Rather, the University suffers from an “infrastructure deficit,” McLaughlin said, adding that this makes expanding the faculty in the physical and life sciences particularly hard. Not only does Brown lack the physical

space — offices and laboratories — to accommodate more physical and life science scholars, but its equipment also may not meet the technological standards set by wealthier schools, » See RANKINGS, page 3

In need of wins, Bears return home Hispanic studies sees

M. SOCCER

By ALEX WAINGER SENIOR STAFF WRITER

It will be a true homecoming weekend for men’s soccer, as the team returns from a Florida road trip for two non-

conference challengers at Stevenson Field. A high-scoring offense from the University of Vermont and a defense-minded squad from Fairfield University will test the Bears in their last tune-up before Ivy League play begins next week. The Florida trip, which saw the team fall to the University of South Florida 3-1 before battling to a scoreless draw against Florida Gulf Coast University, was a ruthless one for

Bruno. But competing against highcaliber teams in the heat and humidity taught the team a lot, said defender Alex Markes ’15. “We only tied (FCGU), but the team learned how hard we need to work to get a shutout, which is really important for us,” said defender Tim Whalen ’16. No small credit for the defense’s stout performance goes to the return » See M. SOCCER, page 7

DAVID DECKEY / HERALD

inside

Midfielder Tariq Akeel ’16 takes the ball up the field. As the team’s leading goal-scorer, Akeel’s offensive presence will be key if Bruno is to have a successful home weekend against the Catamounts and Stags.

Sports

declining enrollments University aims to boost interest with study abroad programs, more flexible requirements By FRANCES CHEN CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Undergraduate enrollment in Hispanic studies courses has declined almost every year for the last decade, dropping from 1,024 students in the 2003-04 academic year to 682 students in the 2012-13 academic year, the most recent year for which official data is available, according to the Office of Institutional Research. Enrollments in Hispanic studies saw the most severe drop in the 2009-10 school year, when enrollments declined to 819 from 934 the previous year. Over the same 10-year period, most other language departments saw declines in course enrollments as well, though few as sharp as Hispanic studies. Only the East Asian studies and Portuguese and Brazilian studies departments had course enrollments rise from 2003-04 to 2012-13. News of the decline in Hispanic studies course enrollments came as

Commentary

After a disappointing showing at Georgetown, football needs to execute against Harvard

Undefeated after two convincing wins, rugby takes on 2013 Ivy runner-up Dartmouth

Paxson: In celebrating Brown’s 250th, we must learn from U.’s past

Rotenberg ’17: Constructed “safe spaces” challenge the integrity of open discourse in the classroom

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weather

Florida trip yields no success for Bruno, returning to R.I. for final weekend before Ivy play

a surprise to some. “Spanish is a very useful language, and I thought the number of students learning Spanish would be growing,” said Nikko Pasanen ’17, a student in HISP 0600: “Advanced Spanish II,” Brown’s most advanced Spanish language class. Department administrators and professors said they generally knew about the drop, though they did not know the details. “I was aware that there was a decline, but I hadn’t seen the numbers” going back the full decade, said Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies Laura Bass, the department’s chair. Assistant Professor of Hispanic Studies Julia Chang also said she was vaguely aware of the trend. Several professor and administrators cited the recession of 2008-09 as one possible reason for the decline: The worsening economy pushed students to choose subjects they thought would increase their chances of landing a job. “From 2008 on, there was a lot of pressure on students to choose practical courses,” said Deputy Dean of the College Chris Dennis. “Sometimes the pressure is more from the families » See HISPANIC, page 5 t o d ay

tomorrow

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Friday, September 26, 2014 by The Brown Daily Herald - Issuu