SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2015
VOLUME CL, ISSUE 20
Alum group aims to aid sexual assault activism
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DON’ T BRUSH IT OFF
Brown Alumni to Stop Assault strives to support student activists, build on past accomplishments By SUSANNAH HOWE SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Brown Alumni to Stop Assault, an emerging alumni group, aims to keep alums engaged in sexual assault policy reform and to harness the power of the alumni community to hold the University accountable to lasting change, group leaders said. The group’s founding members have » See BASTA, page 3
ELIT WHITE / HERALD
Graduate students rallied on the Main Green Wednesday to demand dental coverage be included in their health insurance plans.
BUCC talks deficit, sexual assault policy, faculty diversity U. works to reduce budget deficit by expanding research revenue, master’s programs By BAYLOR KNOBLOCH SENIOR STAFF WRITER
ASHLEY SO / HERALD
President Christina Paxson P’19 addresses the council, outlining specific plans for decreasing the operating budget deficit.
The Brown University Community Council focused on financial concerns such as the budget deficit and revenue growth, as well as policy related to sexual assault and faculty diversity, as its meeting Wednesday. President Christina Paxson P’19 presented major fiscal decisions made
at the February Corporation meeting, noting that the body approved a 4.4 percent increase in tuition and fees and an 8 percent increase in financial aid for next academic year. She highlighted the budget deficit as the most pressing issue at hand. “A budget deficit of this size is something we really need to address,” Paxson said. In fiscal year 2014, the deficit amounted to $8.8 million, and it is expected to drop to $6.7 million in fiscal year 2015, she added. “One way out of this is to focus on revenue growth,” Paxson said. New “research revenue” and master’s programs as well as a jump in the undergraduate
student population will drive this growth, she added. Sexual assault reform and the Task Force on Sexual Assault’s interim report, which was released in December, also drove much discussion. The task force aims to finalize a comprehensive policy on gender violence and develop a hearing process for student complaints by the end of March, said Russell Carey ’91 MA’06, executive vice president for planning and policy and co-chair of the task force. Carey said student feedback on the report has been largely “positive” since its release. “My sense is that the » See BUCC, page 2
Researchers tackle gaps UCS reviews history of alcohol policy change discusses campusin hepatitis C treatment Council wide alcohol survey that “Do One Thing” seeks to provide screenings, treatment to underserved communities By CAROLYNN CONG STAFF WRITER
A program run by University researchers aims to quickly identify and provide comprehensive treatment for medically underserved patients who are chronically infected with the hepatitis C virus, according to a new study published in the Feb. 14 issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine. Hepatitis C — a blood-borne disease that inflames the liver — is an
INSIDE
“underfunded, understudied and seriously large health problem,” said Amy Nunn, assistant professor of behavioral and social sciences and medicine, who co-authored the study. “Its magnitude is not to be underestimated and there are at least five to seven times as many people living with hepatitis C than its more infamous counterpart, HIV,” Nunn said. Unlike for hepatitis A and B, there is no vaccination available for hepatitis C. The study, which was conducted in several medically underserved Philadelphia neighborhoods, was “to my knowledge the largest nonclinical hepatitis C screening that has ever been undertaken,” Nunn said. » See HEPATITIS, page 4
By NATALIE FONDRIEST SEIOR STAFF WRITER
Senior Director for Planning and Student Engagement MaryLou McMillan presented data from the 2011-2012 campuswide survey on alcohol habits to the Undergraduate Council of Students at its general body meeting Wednesday. At the council’s Feb. 4 general body meeting focused on the interim alcohol policy changes, administrators noted that results of the survey prompted concern and reevaluation of alcohol policy. Contrary to perceptions that “drinking at Brown is very much like any place
POST- MAGAZINE
McMillan said. According to social norm theory, particularly bad incidents stand out in one’s memory over the majority of scenarios, said Samuel Rubinstein ’17, member of the UCS Academic and Administrative Affairs committee. Social norms and alcohol culture create a larger problem than the current legal drinking age, McMillan said in response. The external review to assess campus alcohol use and policies that the University commissioned last May commended Brown’s multi-faceted alcohol policy approach, especially its medical amnesty and support for students recovering from alcohol-related issues, McMillan said. The review recommended improving Health Services and Counseling and Psychological Services screenings to » See UCS, page 2
WEATHER
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2015
SCIENCE & RESEARCH DNA nanopore “cages” can be used to study genetic mutations and enzyme reactions PAGE 4
indicated high rate of binge drinking at Brown
elsewhere,” the data does not “quite match elsewhere,” McMillan said. Fortyfive percent of Brown students had five or more drinks in a two-hour span during the two weeks prior to completing the survey, compared to 36 percent of college students across the country, according to the National College Health Assessment. The survey results indicated a higher drinking rate among seniors than expected, McMillan said. But several UCS general body members said they were not surprised by the results. Many members said they expected the 53 percent pregaming rate indicated by the study to be higher amongst the entire student body. College students, especially those living in a first-year dorm environment, have a tendency to “over-perceive what the frequency is” of drinking on campus,
COMMENTARY Corvese ’15: Female students should not feel pressured to live up to senior spring expectations
COMMENTARY Powers ’15: In certain cases, minors should not have right to reject life-saving treatment
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