THE
BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 101
since 1891
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014
Obama Undefeated Bears win Ivy championship At 8-0, Bruno wins title drums up in first varsity season, looks forward to national support for tournament in two weeks Raimondo RUGBY
By EMILE BAUTISTA
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
The Brown women’s rugby team (8-0) stood tall and emerged victorious at Ivy Championships hosted by Dartmouth (3-4, 3-2 Ivy) in Hanover, New Hampshire this weekend. The Bears began their campaign with a comfortable victory over Harvard (4-4, 3-3) and confirmed their champion status with a triumph against host Dartmouth. Brown 27, Harvard 5 Saskia Morgan ’16 led the way for Bruno, recording three scores, with Jasmine McAdams ’16 and Natalie Klotz ’15 each adding one. The Bears raced out to a resounding 27-0 lead and never
looked back. Harvard managed to obtain one try, but it was too little, too late for the Crimson as the game was all but over. The victory was the team’s second over Harvard this season after eking out a narrow 24-15 victory in the first game of the season. But this time, Harvard was never really in the game as the Bears took and maintained an early lead.
Brown 42, Dartmouth 5 It was more of the same on day two of the Ivy Championships. Bruno began the game with 37 unanswered points, which proved to be an insurmountable total for the opposition. The agile Morgan, a key figure for this relentless squad, led the way for the team once again, recording four scores. Amber Reano ’16 and Daisy Alvarado-Munoz ’17 also scored in this dominant team performance by the Bears. “Our scrums were incredibly » See RUGBY, page S2
Stumping for Democratic gubernatorial nominee, president highlights women’s rights issues By ELAINA WANG STAFF WRITER
METRO
ORLANDO LUIS PARDO LAZO / HERALD
The Bears prepare for action in a recent match. The team has dominated the Ivy League this season, outscoring opponents 414-68 in eight games.
Infectious disease outbreaks rising, study shows U. researchers compile online database of outbreaks since 1980 to help predict future epidemics By RILEY DAVIS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Though Ebola has dominated mainstream media attention recently, the total number of infectious disease outbreaks worldwide has been climbing since 1980, according to a new study published by Brown researchers in the current issue of the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. Though the rate of infectious disease outbreaks is increasing,
SCIENCE & RESEARCH
infectious diseases are affecting fewer people during each outbreak than in the past, the researchers wrote in the study. As part of the study, the team of University researchers created a database of over 12,000 outbreaks of infectious diseases that have occurred since 1980, cataloguing occurrences of 288 out of the approximately 1,400 infectious diseases known to man, said author Katherine Smith, interim associate dean of biology and assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology. The database
provided the information and analytics necessary to examine the trends in outbreaks the researchers presented in the recently published study. The online database is accessible to the public through the Ramachandran Lab website, Smith said. Sohini Ramachandran, a biostatistician and assistant professor of biology, helped design the program for the database, she added. Before the creation of this database, the Global Infectious Diseases and Epidemiology Network provided the most comprehensive source of outbreak information, but the information was buried in paragraphs of prose, making it difficult
to statistically analyze, Smith said. The researchers hope people use the database “to help do a better job of predicting and preventing outbreaks in the future,” Smith said. “The hope is that this data set can be used to try to really dig into the drivers of these big outbreaks,” said Samantha Rosenthal GS, a co-author of the paper who studies at the School of Public Health. “Understanding those drivers can help us build robust prediction models, so that we can be more prepared for outbreaks like Ebola in the future,” she said. The majority of the catalogued » See OUTBREAKS, page 4
Trujillo ’12 makes first bid for political office in Kansas
By CAROLINE KELLY SENIOR STAFF WRITER
inside
Caitlin Trujillo ’12 is running as the Democratic nominee in Tuesday’s election for the 43rd district of the Kansas House of Representatives.
When Caitlin Trujillo ’12 disagreed with the way Kansas legislators were handling issues of concern to constituents, she knew she wanted to take matters into her own hands. Lawmakers “were advancing legislation that I felt was detrimental to the state of Kansas and overlooking issues that we really needed to address more closely,” she recalled. The recent Brown alum is running as the Democratic candidate for the 43rd district seat in the Kansas House of Representatives in an election that will take place Tuesday. She faces incumbent Republican Bill Sutton,
Science & Research
R-Kan., in the primarily Republican district. Kansas is a historically conservative state, with ties to the Republican Party in both national and local politics dating back several decades. The 43rd district, which includes the city of Edgerton and the towns of Gardner and McCamish in Johnson County, has leaned conservative for the past several years, according to Ballotpedia. Sutton defeated Kevin King, D-Kan., in 2012 and is now up for reelection, as representatives serve two-year terms. Both Trujillo and Sutton ran unopposed in their parties’ respective primaries in August, according to Ballotpedia. Trujillo, who concentrated in political science and served as a Herald senior staff writer at Brown, is running on a platform that emphasizes education, tax reform, anti-discrimination policy and improved healthcare and welfare access. » See TRUJILLO, page 3
Sports
New study by U. researchers ties mindfulness to cardiovascular health
Prof. Jennifer Johnson lectures about improving health care in women’s prisons
With a win over Penn, the football team has won four of its past five games
Two first-years scored in debuts for the men’s hockey team, which beat Army in its season opener
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Former political science concentrator focuses on education, tax reform in race for Kansas legislature
COURTESY OF CAITLIN TRUJILLO
President Obama emphasized the need for an economy that encourages more women to be active in the workforce during a speech Friday at Rhode Island College. More than 1,000 attendees turned out to hear his pitch on behalf of Democratic gubernatorial nominee and General Treasurer Gina Raimondo. Obama is the third national Democratic leader to visit Rhode Island in the past week, as Election Day approaches and recent polls show a tight race for governor. His speech came a day after First Lady Michelle Obama made an appearance at a “Get Out the Vote” campaign event hosted by Raimondo. Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton headlined a similar campaign event for Raimondo at RIC Oct. 24. If women were encouraged to work and were paid equally for their labor, everyone in the economy would benefit, Obama said. Prior to becoming president, Obama said there was a time when First Lady Michelle Obama was earning a higher income than he was. Working parents face a “catch-22,” Obama said. They want to provide the best opportunities for their children by working but also feel guilty about not spending enough time with them as a result, he added. The United States needs to encourage flexible work plans that allow employees to work from home, he added. “I agree with a lot of what he said,” Ellen Sukharevsky ’17 said. “But I feel like he can’t accomplish everything that he promised in the short period of time he has left in office.” Ann-Marie Harrington, president and founder of Embolden, a Pawtucket-based website-building company, allows her 21 employees to work from home, which has actually increased the company’s efficiency, Obama said. In 2013, an estimated 57 percent of mothers of infants participated in the work force, according to 2013 annual averages from the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. But women often have to leave the » See OBAMA, page 2 t o d ay
tomorrow
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