Monday, November 24, 2014

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THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 116

since 1891

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014

U. names first vice provost for the arts

Unsealed documents shed light on assault case Contradictory witness testimonies, differing accounts of victim’s route to Brown dorm emerge

COURTESY OF BROWN UNIVERSITY, ABI KULSHRESHTHA AND KATE NUSSENBAUM

David Adler ’14, Abi Kulshreshtha ’15 and Kate Nussenbaum ’15 were announced this weekend as Rhodes Scholarship recipients. All three displayed strong commitments to research and extracurricular involvement.

By EMMA JERZYK SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Documents unsealed by a R.I. Superior Court judge last week reveal new details about a case between a Providence College student and the two Brown undergraduates that she alleges sexually assaulted her last fall. Judge Alice Gibney allowed the Rhode Island Attorney General’s office to release dozens of pages of police and court records Thursday after news organizations requested that they be unsealed. Gibney denied the motion to keep sealed the court documents by John Grasso, a lawyer representing one of the Brown undergraduates. The Providence Police launched a criminal investigation in the spring, and the Brown students — then first-years — were asked by the University to leave campus around finals time. But a grand jury decided in late August not to indict the two students. One of the two Brown students, both of whom played for the football team, is no longer a student at Brown, while the other is still at Brown but no longer appears on the roster. A third student who was implicated in some documents but not investigated by the police also remains a student at Brown. According to a Feb. 13 incident report that is among the newly released documents, the PC student told police that her body fell limp after one shot of vodka when she was out with her friends » See ASSAULT, page 2

Three from Brown win Rhodes Scholarships Scholarship tally marks second time since 1970 that Brown has boasted multiple winners By KIKI BARNES AND MICHAEL DUBIN UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITORS

Two undergraduates and one recent alum were awarded the prestigious

Rhodes Scholarships Saturday, marking only the second year since 1970 that more than one Brown applicant was chosen and the second year ever with more than two. David Adler ’14, Abi Kulshreshtha ’15 and Kate Nussenbaum ’15 are among this year’s 32 Rhodes Scholarship recipients who will begin their studies at the University of Oxford next fall. “I think we had a really deep pool,” said Linda Dunleavy, associate dean of

the College for fellowships. “We had an extraordinary group of students who went forward.” There were 12 finalists from Brown, representing 10 of the 16 districts in the United States recognized by the Rhodes Trust, Dunleavy said. “I think the strength of the pool overall this year was what made it possible for us to be successful in this way.” The Rhodes Trust implemented a » See RHODES, page 3

Cogut Center Director Michael Steinberg will lead initiative to expand, internationalize the arts By JOSEPH ZAPPA SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Michael Steinberg, director of the Cogut Center for the Humanities and professor of history, will become the University’s first vice provost for the arts starting Jan. 1, Provost Vicki Colvin announced in a community-wide email late Friday afternoon. The mid-year appointment comes as the University launches efforts to expand the arts — efforts that will include pursuing several goals for the » See ARTS, page 4

Dean T. remembered for 40 years of commitment to Brown Students, colleagues reminisce about late Dean Marjorie Thompson’s vivacity at memorial service By JOSEPH ZAPPA SENIOR STAFF WRITER

About 100 Brown community members gathered Friday to commemorate the life of Marjorie Thompson ’74 PhD’79 P’02 P’07 P’09 P’12 P’14 P’16, late associate dean of biological sciences, at a public memorial service in the First Unitarian Church of Providence. The service drew a crowd of diverse age groups, a testament to the mark Thompson — who died Sept. 15 while on leave — left on the lives of both students and fellow faculty members during her

more than 40 years at Brown. University Chaplain Janet Cooper Nelson commenced the ceremony, recalling the countless “number of times in the 25 years I’ve been at Brown that Marjorie’s name has come into my office as an invocation of all the things we do best at Brown.” Speeches from Thompson’s colleagues, mentees and students echoed Nelson’s sentiments. When Jack Elias, dean of medicine and biological sciences, told his colleagues at Yale Medical School that he was leaving for College Hill, Brown alums

then studying at Yale rushed to his office to ensure “that I understood the legend of Marjorie Thompson,” Elias recalled. “I’ve never met — in my time at Penn, Yale or Brown — anybody with a more profound legacy than Marge Thompson.” That legacy includes a deep influence on the Division of Biology and Medicine, which houses six of the University’s concentrations, including one of its largest. “She guided, she shaped and she drove our biology department,” said Ken Miller ’70 P’02, professor of biology. Miller added that Thompson’s influence on advising was particularly notable. Her commitment to students was a resounding theme of the speakers’ anecdotes.

“No person on this campus touched as many students, shaped as many lives,” Miller said. Jennifer Bauer ’06 recalled walking into Thompson’s office early in her undergraduate career to ask about a single course. She walked out “with a full academic map” for the remainder of her Brown experience, she said. Thompson’s attentiveness to her students often manifested in the form of laser-quick email responses — a quality that a majority of the afternoon’s 11 speakers mentioned. Hadley Witt ’14 said she once paused in the middle of writing an email to Thompson to talk to a friend. While » See THOMPSON, page 4

M. WATER POLO

Bears win first CWPA title since 1985, gain NCAA tournament bid 7-6 triumph over No. 8 Princeton hands Bruno conference title, shot at national championship By CALEB MILLER SPORTS EDITOR

inside

University News

Sports

Tara Torabi ’15 becomes third Brown winner of Mitchell Scholarship

David Greer, former dean of medicine and 1985 Nobel Peace Prize winner, dies

With a win over Columbia, the football team finishes fifth in the Ivy League

Women’s basketball team misses a buzzer-beater to lose its game at UNH

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weather

DAVID DECKEY / HERALD

Henry Fox ’15 fires a shot. He scored three crucial goals against the Tigers, growing his team-leading goals total to 76 on the season. His contributions helped Bruno exact revenge on Princeton for an Ivy title game loss.

The men’s water polo team took the pool against a familiar foe at the Naval Academy Sunday, squaring off with Ivy League rival Princeton in the teams’ second meeting of the year. But when the final whistle blew with the scoreboard showing a 7-6 Bruno win, the Bears had achieved something far from ordinary. The squad conquered the No. 8 Tigers in the Collegiate Water

Polo Association Eastern Championship game for its first league title in 29 years and earned a birth in the NCAA national tournament. No. 11 Bruno (27-6, 11-1 CWPA) moves on to face the best teams of the west coast as one of the top six squads in the NCAA tournament. Two wins, first in a play-in game and then in the NCAA semifinals, would earn Bruno a shot at the national title, where the Bears would be the first non-California team ever to compete in the championship match. Princeton (23-4, 7-1) overcame an early deficit to tie the title match at five entering the fourth quarter. Henry Fox ’15, Bruno’s leading scorer and » See WATER POLO, page 7 t o d ay

tomorrow

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