SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
VOLUME CL, ISSUE 88
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
Mental health rises in UCS poll among student priorities Financial aid stays top priority with focus on burden on domestic, middle-income families By MATTHEW JARRELL STAFF WRITER
Mental health emerged as a larger priority than last year in the Undergraduate Council of Students Fall Poll, with nearly 40 percent of respondents citing expanding mental health services as their top concern. This marks a 10.8 percent rise from last year and moves mental health into second place among concerns, behind financial aid and trailed by sexual assault policy reform. Approximately 46 percent of the undergraduate student body — 2,888 students — took part in the poll, marking the largest ever turnout. “This representativeness is really important and speaks to the engagement of our student body,” said UCS President Sazzy Gourley ’16. “There’s been increased dialogue about the need for expansion (of mental health resources) as a result of the events on campus last year,” Gourley said, citing several publicized and private suicides in the Brown community. When considering mental health initiatives, students most frequently cited increasing staffing at Counseling
and Psychological Services, with 29.9 percent of respondents ranking it as their top priority in this realm. Sexual assault policy reform may have fallen behind mental health because of perceived progress in this area, as the Title IX Office has adopted several recommendations in the Task Force on Sexual Assault’s final report, Gourley said. “We’ve begun reforming sexual assault policies stemming from the report, so it’s natural to see a slight decrease in the prioritization of sexual assault policy reform,” he said. Improving undergraduate financial aid remained steady as the mostselected option. Approximately 54.3 percent of respondents selected that issue as their top priority, a decline of just 1.7 percent from last year. Within the topic, a vast majority of respondents chose lowering the financial burden for domestic, middle-income families over expanding need-blind admission to international, transfer and resumed undergraduate education students as a focal point for the allocation of funds. The gap between the two focal areas has increased by more than 18 percent over the last two years. The section of the poll addressing President Christina Paxson’s P’19 operational plan asked respondents to select their top four priorities from the initiatives in the plan. In keeping with » See UCS, page 3
RYAN WALSH / HERALD
Jane Goodall dreamed of working with chimpanzees from the age of 10 and spent over 50 years studying them in the wild. She addressed a packed crowd in Salomon 101 during a talk sponsored by Brown Lecture Board.
Goodall spreads chimpanzee love to Brown
From childhood obsession to global activism, Jane Goodall recounts her journey into the wild By ELENA WEISSMANN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Jane Goodall took the stage Monday night wearing a bright purple shawl and a necklace bearing a symbol of the African continent. “I would like to start off by bringing into this space the voice of the being that
I spent so many years learning about,” Goodall said. “Oooh oooh eeeh eeh ahhh. That’s ‘this is me’ in monkey language.” Goodall spoke in a packed Salomon 101 during a lecture sponsored by Brown Lecture Board. Over 750 people attended the event, which had the most lottery entries of any lecture in University history, said Viet Nguyen ’17, co-president of Lecture Board. A world-renowned chimpanzee expert and outspoken environmental activist, Goodall spent the hour-long talk describing her journey, which began with a childhood obsession with animals, a
healthy dose of curiosity and a compassionate and supportive mother. “There was a special second-hand bookshop where I lived as a child. And when I was 10, I found a wonderful book — “Tarzan of the Apes” — and I had saved up just enough pocket money to buy it,” Goodall said, adding that the book stirred up her dream of traveling to Africa to live with wild animals. “There I am, in love with Tarzan, and what did he do? He married the wrong Jane.” Goodall said she received a secretary degree because a college degree was too » See GOODALL, page 2
Police violence challenges political narrative Q&A: Goodall reflects on Recent incidents, memories from 55-year study research, policies point to different conclusion than politicians By AGNES CHAN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
In light of the national growth of the #BlackLivesMatter movement, the Washington Post published a database June 30 of every police shooting that has occurred this year. Currently, Rhode Island and Vermont are the only two states with no fatal police shootings. “I’m really proud we haven’t had the outbursts and the violence that we’ve seen in other communities,” said Mayor Jorge Elorza in a video by Bob Plain, editor of R.I. Future. “It’s not a coincidence. We’ve spent a lot of time building relationships between the police department and the community,” Elorza said. “We have a lot to be proud of.” But recent events in the state
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illuminate contrasting views between police officers and other members of the Providence community.
‘America runs on racism’ A 14-year-old student at Tolman High School in Pawtucket was slammed onto the ground by the school resource officer Oct. 14 because the “suspect” was “walking down the hallway screaming obscenities about what he was going to do to another student,” according to a statement released by the Pawtucket Police Department. In response to the event, which was captured on video, protesters gathered outside City Hall Oct. 15, where police arrested eight juveniles and two adults. The event came less than two weeks after a Providence Dunkin’ Donuts employee wrote “#blacklivesmatter” on a police officer’s coffee cup Oct. 2. The Providence Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge No. 3 emailed a statement to Boston.com shortly after the incident condemning the “unacceptable and discouraging” behavior of the Providence franchise employee. “Our officers, like all other law
enforcement agencies, work tirelessly to protect and serve all members of the communities,” the statement reads. “The negativity displayed by the #BlackLivesMatter organization towards police across the nation is creating a hostile environment that is not resolving any problem or issues, but making it worse for our communities.” The statement ends by stating that “ALL LIVES MATTER.” Dunkin’ Donuts wrote in a statement that the franchise owner of the Providence branch “counseled the employee about her behavior” and apologized to the officer involved. The fact that the police officer felt offended by the words on his coffee cup is “insulting to America,” said Gary Dantzler, a local Black Lives Matter activist. “There is no compassion … for the black and brown people that have been killed,” he said, adding that the employee made “excellent” use of a “perfect opportunity” to spread the important message that black lives matter. Protesters gathered Oct. 12 outside » See POLICE, page 2
Leading chimpanzee expert discusses relationship between chimpanzees, humans By ELENA WEISSMANN SENIOR STAFF WRITER
In July 1960, Jane Goodall packed her bags and traveled from England to Gombe National Park in Tanzania, where she began what would become her lifelong project and passion: a 55year study of social and family interactions of wild chimpanzees. Her observations redefined what we know about animal intelligence. Now 81 years old, Goodall spends most of her time speaking about conservation and humanitarian issues as a United Nations Messenger of Peace. Goodall came to College Hill Monday night to give a talk sponsored by the Brown Lecture Board. Before the lecture, Goodall spoke to The Herald
about her role as a conservationist and leading chimpanzee expert. The Herald: How have your observations of chimpanzees influenced the way you view human behavior? Goodall: The main thing they teach us is that there isn’t a sharp line between us and them — so much of the behavior of human and chimp is the same. Biologically, they’re more like us than any other living creature. What it actually helps you do is ask the question: what is it that makes us human? That’s the main thing that comes out of this study of chimps. When you initially traveled to Africa as a young woman, how did you find the courage and confidence to pursue your dreams? It had nothing to do with courage or confidence — it was the dream I had when I was 10. So eventually I saved » See Q&A, page 3
WEATHER
TUESDAY, OC TOBER 20, 2015
METRO Opportunity fair offers support to construction businesses owned by women, minorities
SCIENCE & RESEARCH Professor utilizes cell phone data to plot trends in Rwandan, Caribbean economies
COMMENTARY Irving ’16: Brown students should have treated Malia Obama like any other prospective student
COMMENTARY Kenyon GS: Brown trails other Ivies in failing to graduate successful presidential candidate
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