SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2015
VOLUME CL, ISSUE 74
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
U. to launch children’s Doctoral health institute next year student Former Hasbro executive with cancer and University trustee Hassenfeld provides initial dies $12.5 million gift
By KATE TALERICO SENIOR STAFF WRITER
COURTESY OF PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY / FLICKR
Bill Cosby had his 1985 honorary degree rescinded by the Corporation’s Board of Fellows Monday.
University revokes Bill Cosby’s honorary degree
Revocation comes after sexual assault allegations against Cosby made by 35 women By EMMA HARRIS UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR
The University has revoked Bill Cosby’s honorary degree, President Christina Paxson P’19 wrote in a community-wide email Monday night. He was awarded the degree in 1985. The Corporation’s Board of Fellows decided to revoke the degree following sexual assault allegations against Cosby by 35 women. “To the best that we can determine from available records and documents,
this is the first honorary degree to be revoked by Brown,” wrote Vice President for Communications Cass Cliatt in an email to The Herald. Fordham University and Marquette University rescinded Cosby’s honorary degrees Thursday, which he received in 2001 and 2013, respectively. New York University removed Cosby’s name from its Future Filmmakers Workshop Sept. 1. “It has become clear, by his own admission in legal depositions that became public this summer, that Mr. Cosby has engaged in conduct with women that is contrary to the values of Brown and the qualities for which he was honored by the University in 1985,” Paxson wrote in the email. “The conduct that Mr. Cosby has » See COSBY, page 2
In a partnership with the Hasbro Children’s Hospital and the Women and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island, the University will establish a new institute to advance children’s health, President Christina Paxson P’19 announced Monday at a joint press conference with Gov. Gina Raimondo. The new Hassenfeld Child Health Innovation Institute, which will launch in early 2016, is funded by a $12.5 million gift to the University from the family of Alan Hassenfeld, former Hasbro Toys chairman and CEO and a former Brown trustee. The University will fundraise an additional $12.5 million over the next year in order to support a new location and faculty for the institute, Paxson told The Herald. Examining child health from pregnancy through young adulthood, the institute will focus on three initiatives at the outset: autism; childhood asthma research; and children’s weight, nutrition and fitness. In addition to University faculty members, other researchers, including those at Bradley and Butler hospitals,
will contribute to the institute’s work. Graduate students and undergraduates will also have opportunities to get involved in the institute’s research initiatives, Paxson told The Herald. “This is an unprecedented opportunity for cross-institutional collaboration to address critical health needs of a vulnerable population,” Paxson said, according to a University press release. Raimondo said the new partnership “will help spark our state’s comeback, providing opportunities for everyone to make it in Rhode Island.” While the University has not yet decided upon a specific location for the institute and is considering multiple options, it will likely be housed in the Jewelry District, Paxson told The Herald. Phyllis Dennery, professor and chair of the Department of Pediatrics and pediatrician-in-chief at Hasbro Children’s Hospital; Maureen Phipps, chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology; and Patrick Vivier, director of general pediatrics and community health at Hasbro Children’s Hospital, will sit on the institute’s executive committee. “We cannot make progress in education … or in building our economy or fostering the strongest society possibl without healthy children,” Hassenfeld said. “This work has the potential to move the dial on these growing epidemics, which do not discriminate,” he added. » See HEALTH, page 2
St. Laurent III GS dedicated life to cofounding chronic disease research institute By BAYLOR KNOBLOCH SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Georges St. Laurent III GS died Friday in Miami, Florida, announced Jack Elias, dean of medicine and biological sciences, and Peter Weber, dean of the Graduate School, in a campus-wide email Monday. A Ph.D. candidate in the molecular and cellular biology and biochemistry program, St. Laurent was preparing to defend his thesis when he was diagnosed with lymphoma in July, Elias and Weber wrote. Prior to coming to Brown, St. Laurent graduated from Yale in 1982 and co-founded the St. Laurent Institute — a medical research institute dedicated to studying the molecular mechanisms of chronic disease — in 2005. St. Laurent “put aside an already successful career to pursue his passion for science, and it’s tragic that his life was cut short before he was able to take the final step of defending his thesis,” » See STUDENT, page 2
R.I. Commission meets to address campus sexual assault Rep. Ackerman elected chairwoman, University not represented on 13-member commission By AGNES CHAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
A special House commission held its first meeting to discuss the issue of sexual assault on college campuses in Rhode Island Sept. 28. The 13-member commission elected Rep. Mia Ackerman, D-Cumberland and Lincoln, as its chairwoman and Rep. Christopher Blazejewski, DProvidence, as its vice chairman. Ackerman stated two main goals for the commission: to reduce the number of incidents of sexual assault on campuses across the state and to reduce or eliminate the barriers to reporting incidents of assault. Aside from the chairwoman and
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vice chairman, the commission also includes Rep. Doreen Marie Costa, RNorth Kingstown and Exeter; Rhode Island State Police Superintendent Col. Steven O’Donnell; Attorney General Peter Kilmartin; Cumberland Police Chief Col. John Desmarais, Rhode Island College Interim Vice President of Student Affairs and Dean of Students Scott Kane; Johnson and Wales University Director of Student Conduct Claire Hall; Day One Sexual Assault Treatment Provider Peg Langhammer; R.I. Coalition Against Domestic Violence Executive Director Deb DeBare; sexual assault survivor Jane Johnson; University of Rhode Island police officer Maj. Michael Jagoda and Title IX Coordinator at Providence College James Campbell. The University is not represented on the commission. “The commission has only 13 members. You can’t have everybody. But I definitely want to hear from Brown,” Ackerman told The Herald. The commission will hold its next
KEIICHIRO KINOSHITA / HERALD
During their first meeting, the 13 members of the commission stated their goals to reduce the number of incidents of sexual assault on college campuses and eliminate barriers to reporting such incidents. meeting on Oct. 26. During the meeting, members will hear from various survivors of campus sexual assaults. Ackerman said she hopes University administrators will attend future meetings
and present on the issue. The commission’s first meeting was held just a week after the University released results of one of the largestever sexual assault surveys. The report
revealed that 25 percent of undergraduate women at Brown indicated having experienced sexual assault, which includes attempted or completed » See ASSAULT, page 2
WEATHER
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2015
UNIVERSITY NEWS University Snapchat account launches first Snap Story, garnering hundreds of views
SCIENCE & RESEARCH Solar house Techstyle Haus selected as finalist in “Innovation by Design” contest
COMMENTARY Simon ’16: Students must learn to be less long-winded and pretentious in the classroom
COMMENTARY Al-Salem ’17: University of Edinburgh’s policies pale in comparison to Brown’s
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