THE
BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 77
New hires expand, diversify CAPS staff With greater resources and new support group, CAPS aims to address student concerns By EMMA HARRIS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
After student pressure last semester to diversify its staff, Counseling and Psychological Services has made several new targeted hires and will offer a support group for students of color, Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services Margaret Klawunn announced in an email Friday. Klawunn also announced Unab Khan as the new medical director of Health Services. Psychotherapist Jamall Pollock, who has “specific expertise in multicultural issues,” will join the CAPS staff Oct. 14, Klawunn wrote. Pollock identifies as a person of color. And Joshua Kane will begin Oct. 6 as a part-time psychiatrist. Coordinator for Sexual Assault Prevention and Advocacy Bita Shooshani, who also identifies as a person of color, will move to assume a full-time psychotherapist position at CAPS in January. Though Shooshani found her work in the coordinator position
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“incredibly rewarding and inspiring,” she is a trained therapist, she wrote in an email to The Herald. “When I saw that a position became available on campus that offered the opportunity to work in a therapeutic capacity with students, I applied for it primarily because I would be able to continue working with Brown students and to practice psychotherapy with a specialization in sexual assault.” Shooshani — a central figure in the University’s work to prevent and respond to sexual assault — will continue in her current position while a national search for a new coordinator takes place and then will begin working at CAPS five days a week, said Sherri Nelson, director of CAPS. The search for Shooshani’s replacement will be led by Health Services, Klawunn wrote. “The search committee hasn’t been established yet, and my job duties will stay the same until my transition,” Shooshani wrote. “We are very excited to have her and expand CAPS resources in our department for dealing with issues surrounding sexual assault,” Nelson said. Both Shooshani and Kane will work more hours than the people they are replacing, Nelson said. Nelson said Pollock’s new position » See CAPS, page 3
FOOTBALL
ELI WHITE / HERALD
Bruno prepares for a play on its own goal line. Despite giving up over 400 yards of offense, Brown gave up six fewer points in the whole game than it did in the second quarter of last year’s Harvard match.
Crimson edge Bears with late drive Bears carry eight-point margin into third quarter, crumble in fourth in front of homecoming crowd By ANDREW FLAX SENIOR STAFF WRITER
It was the same old song and dance for the Bears against the Crimson this weekend, but despite a disappointing outcome, Bruno’s performance had
players and coaches singing a different tune. The football team slipped to 0-2 with a 22-14 home loss to Harvard, but the Bears looked miles better in every area of the game than they did in a listless season-opening loss to Georgetown. Bruno made a statement Saturday night, asserting that it can hang with anyone after leading the defending Ivy champions into the fourth quarter. But there are improvements to be made for
the Bears, who fell victim to the same mistakes in the fourth as they watched a lead evaporate. In a rare moment of lightness, Head Coach Phil Estes P’18 summarized his squad’s performance succinctly: “I’m happy to a point,” he said. “We didn’t win, so my joyous feelings will not come out right now.” Before the game, Estes hammered home the point that the Bears had to execute their plays and avoid mental » See FOOTBALL, page 6
Art festival showcases diverse crafts New slavery memorial Pedestrians, vendors flood aims to spark reflection Thayer for celebration showcasing local art, food and performances
Paxson dedicates sculpture as part of 250th anniversary celebration before large audience
By EMILY PASSARELLI SENIOR STAFF WRITER
By ZACK BU CONTRIBUTING WRITER
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FEATURE
HUNTER LEEMING / HERALD
Students and community members alike flock to Thayer Street Sunday to admire an array of arts and crafts sold by over 100 vendors. Prospective vendors had to submit applications, and then “three of us go through all of the applications and decide what would be a good fit,” said Pilar Brenner, head of Festival Fete. “You have to take into consideration what’s good for the area,” as in curating a show, she added.
Festival Fete was originally started in 2010 by Jennifer Neuguth, with the aim to create “profitable platforms that celebrate locally grown art, food and merriment,” according to the Festival Fete website. Under Neuguth, the company organized annual fairs » See FESTIVAL, page 2
Sports
Visitors to the Quiet Green can now view a new sculpture remembering and engaging with the University’s ties to the slave trade. President Christina Paxson dedicated the sculpture, entitled the Slavery Memorial, at a ceremony Saturday afternoon that drew more than 100 students, alums and community members. The sculpture was a long time in the planning: It was installed this summer following a 2006 report by the Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice, which called for the University to recognize the contemporary implications of its past links to slavery and the slave trade and build a memorial that would “create a living site of memory, inviting reflection and fresh discovery without provoking paralysis or shame.” The Public Art Committee selected Martin Puryear, a sculptor who won a MacArthur Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, to
Commentary
Men’s water polo plows through Harvard and MIT, maintaining its perfect conference record
Rugby continues its tour de force, demolishing another Ivy League opponent
Isman ’15: Consumers need to be aware of the moral significance of purchases
Blake ’17: Professional sports leagues ignore, and thereby condone, players’ bad behavior
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For 10 a.m. on a Sunday, Thayer Street was unusually busy. Under the heat of an unseasonably bright September sun, vendors at the Thayer Street Art Festival pitched their signs and perfected their displays to prepare for incoming crowds. Before noon, anyone heading north on Thayer who looked into the distance would have seen a multicolored blur of activity framed by the white tents of vendors and sidewalks full of passersby. Undergrads walking back from the gym paused to look at handmade handbags and jewelry. Children tugged on their parents’ pant legs, pointing at stands offering face painting and handmade seashell necklaces. Older couples held hands as they examined clay and glass creations, woodwork and paintings. The more than 100 vendors were handpicked by Festival Fete, the organization curating the art festival.
create the piece. In her remarks, Paxson applauded Puryear’s endeavors and thanked former President Ruth Simmons for calling for the formation of the steering committee and for taking on such an important issue. She praised the steering committee’s report, referring to the document as “a model of responsible scholarship” and “a very high standard for rigorous and unflinching analysis.” “One of the most important parts of the slavery and justice report is its call to fight modern legacies of slavery,” Paxson said. “The memorial would be doing good work if it encourages passersby to reflect on the injustices of today as well as yesterday.” The sculpture comprises a colossal iron ball that appears to be partly buried underground, with a broken chain attached to its top. A plaque beside the sculpture bears an inscription that reads in part, “This memorial recognizes Brown University’s connection to the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the work of Africans and African-Americans, enslaved and free, who helped build our university, Rhode Island and the nation.” Anthony Bogues, director of the Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, » See SCULPTURE, page 3 t o d ay
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