Friday, December 5, 2014

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THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 29

since 1891

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2014

Structural bias poses obstacles to faculty of color U. plans for From hiring to promotion, upcoming structural racism limits opportunities, stretches capital responsibilities campaign By JOSEPH ZAPPA

SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Impending campaign, set to launch next fall, will look to grow endowment and fund other priorities

The third in a three-part series exploring race and racism at Brown.

PERVASIVE PREJUDICE At a faculty meeting last month, President Christina Paxson announced her plans to double the percentage of underrepresented minority faculty members within the next decade — a goal Paxson calls “very ambitious.” In order to double in a decade a proportion that has remained in the single digits for the entirety of the University’s 250-year history, administrators and faculty members say the University must grapple with elements ingrained in its culture. These structural factors have limited underrepresented minorities to 8.1 percent of the faculty, secondhighest in the Ivy League but still a far cry from the 18.6 percent of undergraduates. The second part of this series examined the way a largely white faculty affects the experiences of students. This story explores the structural factors that have long shaped the faculty’s racial demography, stemming in part from a culture of racial

By LINDSAY GANTZ SENIOR STAFF WRITER

SAM KASE / HERALD FILE PHOTO

President Christina Paxson has set a goal of doubling the percentage of underrepresented minority faculty members in the next decade. But professors say there are structural barriers to opening the pipeline. bias and inequality ubiquitous in the United States. Hiring shaped by bias A constant factor in conversations about diversifying the faculty is the pipeline: the pool of current and future applicants for faculty and administrative positions. Because fewer people of color — particularly

underrepresented minorities — complete doctoral studies than whites, there are fewer candidates of color for assistant professorships and even fewer for more advanced academic positions. Faculty members and administrators often invoke the predominantly white pipeline to explain why the vast majority of Brown professors are

white. On the surface, it makes sense that more white candidates would be chosen from a largely white applicant pool. But often ignored in a discussion of the pipeline problem are the reasons for its continued existence — structural racism and the conscious and unconscious biases that play a » See BIAS, page 3

BMP to premiere four student-made shorts By JOSEPH FRANKEL AND GABRIELLA REYES CONTRIBUTING WRITER & STAFF WRITER

In the culmination of a semester’s casting, filming and producing, Brown Motion Pictures will host its biannual short film premiere Friday evening in Salomon 101. Toward the end of each semester, BMP screens a series of student-written films, which are produced by BMP staff, directors and writers throughout the semester. Slated to premiere this fall are “[BALLOTS],” “The Five Stages,” “I Will Go Mad” and “Superfood.” “The Five Stages” follows a man who “learns the five stages of grief while driving to his father’s wedding,” according to the Facebook event page. “My film is a road trip film, so we filmed in a lot of places away from campus — 45-minute drives out to

inside

ARTS & CULTURE

Cranston and Beavertail,” said Lauren Cheung ’15, the film’s director, adding that filming occurred primarily during the weekend because of scheduling conflicts during the week. “[BALLOTS],” another film premiering Friday, recounts the story of a local election in which the ballot box containing all the votes goes missing. The characters must search for it in a plot that director Marcus Sudac ’17, a former Herald staff writer, called “an allegory for the inefficiencies and greater flaws in the American political process.” Sudac said he applied to be a director shortly before the start of the semester. Filming for “[BALLOTS]” began in October and ended Nov. 16. Cheung, who has worked as a head of production, director of photography, assistant cameraperson and executive producer, said BMP tries to “pair people up with who they’ll learn from the best because it is also a teaching organization.” “Not everyone has the same background or level of experience, but I think that’s also what makes it so great,” she said. “It brings together people who have never done filmmaking before with people who have,

Man behind the mustache: Offerman visits campus ‘Parks and Recreation’ star brings love advice, stages impromptu ukelele performance By TONYA RILEY UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR

COURTESY OF BROWN MOTION PICTURES

Brown Motion Pictures productions unite people with different levels of experience and promote “bonding as a crew,” said Lauren Cheung ’15. and you guys both end up learning from each other and bonding as a crew.” She said gathering members can be difficult for the organization. “It’s very hard to coordinate a group of volunteers to do something like film because it’s such a time-intensive art.” She also said differing levels of experience among crew members can occasionally lead to difficulties, but the

Sports

benefits outweigh the disadvantages. Sudac, a BMP veteran who started producing films in the fall of 2013, said the organization is great for “getting you the team you need.” But he noted what he perceived to be a disparity in funding between BMP and other student organizations, adding that he believes the University should provide BMP with more adequate » See BMP, page 7

Arts & Culture

Fuller ’15.5, Strachan ’15.5 announce plans to return to football team for 2015

Men’s basketball cannot overcome American’s methodical offense in a midweek loss

Review: “Heist Play” benefits from talented cast and crew as characters pull off perfect crime

Feng Ai Ding dishes on traditional Chinese cooking methods from Yan’s Cuisine

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weather

With expanded outreach, BMP hopes variety of films will bring increased attendance

Over the past year, the administration has touted Brown’s 250th anniversary celebrations as opportunities to rally school spirit and reflect on the institution’s history. But the festivities also serve another purpose: an impetus for the whirlwind of fundraising and alum outreach currently underway for the University’s impending capital campaign, which will go public October 2015 in support of President Christina Paxson’s new strategic plan. “We’re not finished in any way,” said Patricia Watson, senior vice president for advancement. “All the things we’ve done around the 250th — it has helped us reach people that have been disengaged for some reason.” The celebrations, which began in the spring and last through May 2015, have been a “springboard” for introducing Paxson and her new strategic plan, » See ENDOWMENT, page 5

Riffing on facial hair, bread and his penis, Nick Offerman — known for his role as meat-eating, libertarian woodsman Ron Swanson on the NBC comedy “Parks and Recreation” — didn’t stray too far from his well-known character in his Lecture Board talk Thursday night. Offerman spoke to a full Salomon 101 to frequent outbursts of applause and laughter. “You people are all younger and smarter and generally better-looking (than me),” Offerman told the crowd when discussing the bleak outlook many people hold about the world. » See OFFERMAN, page 7 t o d ay

tomorrow

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