SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2015
VOLUME CL, ISSUE 77
Reports of sexual misconduct rise Annual Security Report details increase in drug use, while burglary, robbery rates drop
By CAMILLA BRANDFIELD-HARVEY STAFF WRITER
The number of forcible sex offenses reported on campus in 2014 doubled since 2013 and nearly tripled since 2012, according to the University’s Annual Security Report released Wednesday. Forty-three cases of forcible sex offenses were reported last year compared to 21 cases in 2013 and 16 in 2012. Disciplinary referrals for drug violations on campus jumped from 27 in 2013 to 76 last year, following a major rise in referrals for liquor law violations from 2012 to 2013. Burglary on campus decreased to 2012 levels after a spike in 2013, falling from 58 reported incidences to 20. Conversely, reports of burglary in District 9-2, where many students live off campus, rose markedly from 23 cases to 57. Mark Porter, chief of police for the Department of Public Safety, attributed the increase in sexual offenses reported
Incidence of criminal offenses over time
Though the number of reported robberies has decreased, the number of reported forcible sex offenses has doubled since last year, increasing from 21 to 44. 70 cases 60 50
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Endowment sees 5.7 percent return on investments
Endowment hits peak of $3.3 billion, but returns fall short of FY14’s amid global market fluctuations By ANDREW FLAX
FORCIBLE SEX OFFENSES
40 30 20
BURGLARY
10 0
ROBBERY
2012
‘13
‘14
Source: Department of Public Safety TRACY ZISHU GAO / HERALD
to improved education and greater student empowerment. The report’s attention to resources for reporting and preventing sexual assault echoes Porter’s reasoning. The report stresses the importance of bystander intervention and explicitly dissects consent, coercion and incapacitation. For instance, the report defines consent as “an affirmative and willing agreement” to engage in sexual conduct that requires “outward demonstration” via
words or actions. It also emphasizes that neither silence nor passivity constitutes consent, that consent can be revoked at any time and that prior consent does not indicate future consent. The report states that this understanding of consent or its absence will be seriously considered throughout the disciplinary process. Reports produced by the Task Force on Sexual Assault and campus » See SECURITY, page 2
SPORTS EDITOR
The University’s endowment reached a new high of $3.3 billion in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2015, earning a 5.7 percent return, according to a University press release. This year’s return falls far short of the 16.1 percent mark the endowment posted last year. But this year was a less profitable one for markets on the whole, as the S&P 500 gained just 7.4 percent over the fiscal year compared to 24.6 percent during the previous 12 months. The 5.7 percent return compares favorably to the returns of other institutions, ranking in the top 25 percent of schools with endowments of at least $1 billion, according to Cambridge Associates. “In the context of the global economic volatility, we are pleased with the
return,” wrote Jane Dietze, managing director of the Investment Office, in an email to The Herald. “At the same time, we believe we can optimize the portfolio to achieve higher returns with less risk in the future.” But the Investment Committee is not focused primarily on single-year returns, Dietze wrote. “To meet the goals of the University, a single year’s returns are not particularly relevant. It is more important to focus on five- or even 10year returns,” she wrote. Dietze added that the endowment’s returns this year are “relatively better” than those over the past three and five years, which exceeded the mean and median returns for schools with $1 billion endowments but did not make the top quartile. Despite these positive indicators, the University’s return still trailed those of the other three Ivy League schools to have reported theirs so far. Yale led the way with an 11.5 percent return, followed by Dartmouth at 8.3 percent. Harvard, which has fallen under scrutiny for low returns despite having » See ENDOWMENT, page 3
Men’s Story Project explores BASKETBALL Pizza, gelato and basketball: Bears take Italy facets of masculinity Group discussions to culminate in spring show on gender roles for maleidentifying students By ANICA GREEN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Across campus, programs like the Gender, Power and Sexuality workshop — formerly FemSex — and Sexual Assault Peer Education foster conversations to help students examine issues of identity and gendered violence. Amongst these discussions, the new Men’s Story Project takes a novel approach. Formed this fall, the Men’s Story Project brings together male-identifying students to create and share stories about their masculine identity. These conversations will culminate this spring in a performance that will showcase these narratives. “What does that mean in terms of asking for consent if you need to be viewed as tough and domineering and hypersexual?” asked Marc Peters, men’s health coordinator, referring to gender themes that the Men’s Story Project seeks to address. “We talk a lot in the meetings about how to frame the project,” said Ricardo Jaramillo ’18, one of the student coordinators. “It is a really delicate and
INSIDE
complicated thing because the idea of it is not that men are being oppressed or that there needs to be more affirmation of masculinity,” he said. The group instead aims to open a space for male-identified students to talk about the good and the bad that goes along with the “male” label. “I didn’t know how to kick a ball; I didn’t understand why that was important; I didn’t know how to do all these manly things; I didn’t know (anything) about cars,” said Andrew Vann ’17, one of the student leaders of the project. “Coming to college … I came to the realization of why I was like that and that it was okay to be like that.” The Men’s Story Project is not a uniquely Brown program. The program, created by Jocelyn Lehrer as part of her doctorate at Harvard, is now licensed to groups around the world who use the model to create their own variations of the project. The program is “a replicable storytelling and community dialogue project that brings exploration of social ideas about masculinity into public forums, through men’s own voices and stories,” according to the Men’s Story Project website. The initiative is one-of-a-kind not only because it offers participants their own space to address ideas surrounding male identity, but also because it » See MEN’S STORY, page 2
Preseason trip gives Bruno opportunity to face international competition, take in Italian culture By MATT BROWNSWORD AND TANEIL RUFFIN SENIOR STAFF WRITERS
Most Ivy League basketball teams start their seasons in late autumn before playing their first competitive games in November. For the men’s and women’s basketball teams, the return to the hardwood came much sooner: Both teams, accompanied by their coaching staffs and team managers, traveled to Italy for 10 days at the end of August for four games of competitive basketball, incredible sights and copious amounts of gelato. In preparation for the trip, the men’s team set several goals for its time abroad. “On the court, we wanted to compete hard and learn how to play with each other,” said Cedric Kuakumensah ’16. “Off the court, we wanted to just enjoy our coaches and enjoy spending time with each other.” But first, the men’s team boarded a bus for Newark, New Jersey. In Newark, the squad hopped on an eight-hour flight to Milan. While a few players managed to get some rest, others struggled to get comfortable on
COURTESY OF BROWN ATHLETICS
The men’s basketball team poses for a picture in front of the Duomo di Milano. Both basketball teams handily defeated the Italian competition. the plane. The latter group included the take on Valsesia Basket. 6-foot-9 Kuakumensah. The forward Though Bruno claimed a win in the said he found it frustrating as passengers first contest, the team was taken aback reclined back onto his legs, giving him by the Italian style of play. little space to get comfortable during “The Italian players were definitely the lengthy voyage. But the discomfort different,” Kuakumensah said. “They play proved to be a minor grievance when at a higher tempo and there is not much the team finally touched down in Italy. defense. They just try to score a lot.” According to the team’s blog, on Adding to the unique style of play, which several players chronicled the trip, the Bears were also initially thrown off the Bears’ first day in Italy was similar to by some differences in the game’s rules. many others during the 10-day trip — A stricter first step rule resulted in more filled with sightseeing and pizza. traveling violations than the team would After some much needed rest, the usually garner at home. While it is poputeam awoke on its second day to its first lar in the United States to allow players taste of international competition. Before a quick step into their shots, referees in the game, the squad first faced another Italy showed little tolerance for the move. lengthy bus ride. With the Alps framing After a day off from play to sightsee the background, the Bears rode further along the shores of Lake Como and travel north into Italy’s Piedmont region to » See ITALY, page 2
WEATHER
FRIDAY, OC TOBER 2, 2015
UNIVERSITY NEWS Summer renovations leave Wriston Quad in state of recarpeted reverie
ARTS & CULTURE “The Secret Birds and Other Works” celebrates marginalized identities in List Art
COMMENTARY Doyle ’18: Revoking Bill Cosby’s honorary degree is a symbolic move but an important one
SPORTS COMMENTARY Diehl ’18: An in-depth breakdown of the English Premier League teams’ relative merits
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