Monday, October 26, 2015

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SINCE 1891

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2015

VOLUME CL, ISSUE 92

WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM

‘Walk of No Shame’ celebrates sex positivity U. launches $3 billion comprehensive campaign ‘BrownTogether’ more than doubles goal of previous campaign, Ruth Simmons’ ‘Boldly Brown’ By BAYLOR KNOBLOCH SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The University officially launched the “BrownTogether” campaign Friday evening with a goal of $3 billion — its largest fundraising campaign to date. The campaign launch followed a Corporation vote earlier in the day approving the details of the campaign proposed by President Christina Paxson P’19. The campaign’s name reflects the University’s desire to “bring the community together,” Paxson said. Arriving at the value for BrownTogether’s monetary goal involved “a little bit of science” and “a lot of art,” Paxson said, adding that there is no set end date for the campaign. Over the last two years, the University has raised just under $950 million “in what we are calling the nucleus fund,” said Patricia Watson, senior vice president for advancement. Ten donors have already given at least $25 million each. Following a “rule of thumb that you want the nucleus fund to be about 30 percent of the campaign,” $3 billion was identified as a goal that is not only “aspirational but also achievable,” Paxson said. “I’m delighted to see that the president and the Corporation have committed themselves to this much money,” said John Savage P’88 P’95 P’03 P’05 GP’17, professor of computer science. “Brown

has to reach higher than it’s reached before.” The new campaign goal more than doubles that of Brown’s previous comprehensive fundraising effort. At the January 2011 close of the University’s most recent campaign, “Boldly Brown,” former President Ruth Simmons had raised $1.6 billion over the course of six years, surpassing the campaign’s original goal of $1.4 billion. Sixty percent of the funds raised in this campaign came from alums, Paxson said. In June 2011, Yale concluded its most recent campaign with funds totaling $3.9 billion. Princeton closed a campaign at $1.9 billion in June 2012. And in September 2013, Harvard launched its current campaign with the goal of raising $6.5 billion. The targeted $3 billion in funds for BrownTogether will “set in motion plans designed to take Brown to a significantly new level of excellence” and “make a significant impact on global issues beyond Brown,” Paxson said. The objectives of the campaign are grounded in initiatives laid out in Paxson’s 10-year strategic plan, “Building on Distinction,” most notably revolving around the plan’s seven themes of integrative scholarship. Ranging from sustainability to the human experience, these seven interdisciplinary themes use “cross-disciplinary inquiry” to address “real-world challenges,” said Provost Richard Locke P’17. “To do this kind of work and to do it at the level and the scale that we want requires resources, and that’s why this campaign » See CAMPAIGN, page 2

COURTESY OF CATHY LI

Emmaline Franklin and Lucy Crelli, co-presidents of RISD’s Sexual Health and Relationship Education, lead the “Walk of No Shame” Saturday.

RISD students take College Hill for SlutWalk, protesting victim-blaming, slut-shaming By NATALIE FONDRIEST STAFF WRITER

In attire ranging from winter coats to completely topless, about 20 Rhode Island School of Design students marched through 40-degree weather at 11 a.m. Saturday carrying picket signs as part of the RISD Sexual Health and Relationship Educators’ “Walk of No Shame.” “Consensual sex is fun!” said Emmeline Franklin, co-president of SHARE, in her welcome to the event with Co-President Lucy Crelli. They led participants who carried signs bearing statements like “I have sex for fun, and I have no shame,” “Not an invitation” and “My pussy, my rules.” The international SlutWalk

METRO

Reporter discusses ethics of drone strike Scott Shane shares insights on impact of Anwar al-Awlaki’s death by drone strike SENIOR STAFF WRITER

INSIDE

FOOTBALL

Pena ’17 scores four touchdowns in win Victory over Cornell puts Bears on four-game win streak, tying Bruno for third place in Ivy League

By AGNES CHAN

Scott Shane, a national security reporter for the New York Times, spoke Friday on the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki, the ethics behind drone strikes and the war on terrorism in the United States. The talk was followed by a signing of Shane’s recent book “Objective Troy: A Terrorist, A President, and the Rise of the Drone.” Shane highlighted the influence and Internet following of Awlaki, the first American citizen killed without trial by the U.S. government since the Civil War. Awlaki spent much of

movement, which protests victimblaming in cases of sexual assault and slut-shaming — condemning women for sexual activity — inspired Franklin and Crelli to stage SHARE’s first public event “with a bang,” Franklin said. The co-presidents founded SHARE in spring 2015 to cultivate a more sexpositive campus environment, Crelli said. Participants walked, danced and swayed to songs like Salt-N-Pepa’s “Let’s Talk About Sex” and The Lonely Island’s “I Just Had Sex” blasting from a rolling speaker trailing the group. Demonstrators cheered at each new city block. The group passed staring men, a full college tour on the Main Green and a few applauding students on the Ruth Simmons Quadrangle. Franklin said honks from multiple cars on Thayer Street left her unsure whether drivers intended solidarity or were thinking “Hey, it’s girls with boobs!” Either way, demonstrators cheered back. Spectator support was a highlight of the day, said Nicole Guggino, a Rhode

By CALEB MILLER STAFF WRITER

JULIANA LEE MARINO / HERALD

New York Times reporter Scott Shane talked with students about the ramifications of American citizen Anwar al-Awlaki’s 2011 death. his time making videos about Islam, in September 2011. one of which called for jihad against But Awlaki’s influence seems to the United States. He was placed on have spread even further since the President Barack Obama’s kill list in United States killed him, Shane said. April 2010 and killed by a drone strike » See DRONES, page 2

Island College student and Planned Parenthood intern. One Thayer Street pedestrian shouted after the group, “Sex matters! Sex matters!” A young man popped out of the door of Nice Slice to dance along as the group passed. Several restaurant-goers waved behind windows. “I was a little nervous … that there might be some people who would yell some offensive things, but they didn’t, and I was really happy about that,” Guggino said. The walk was “a moment of revelation for myself,” Alexa Ko, a member of RISD’s Queer Student Association, told The Herald. “It hit me (that) I shouldn’t feel ashamed because it’s not unusual for male-bodied people to reveal their top.” Feeling safe in the group inspired her to “slowly start stripping off,” she said. “I’m going to be way more comfortable after this with my body.” The demonstrators gathered for a follow-up discussion in the living room of Thompson House, home to RISD’s Counseling and Psychological Services. With RISD Title IX support staff present, the students critiqued their “Walk of No Shame” and addressed a host of feminist issues. Students shared personal experiences handling catcalls, which started for some at 12 years old. “Do you respond or not?” asked Claire Richey, a member of SHARE. “My mom (says) ‘Don’t antagonize them — I want you to be safe,’ but am I just supposed to let them talk to me like that?” In addition to critiquing the common conflation of feminism with misandry, the group discussed the need to create intersectional feminism in the » See WALK, page 2

The football team finally found an answer to its red zone scoring woes, and his name is Johnny Pena ’17. After watching numerous scoring opportunities slip through their fingers the first five weeks of the season, the Bears (4-2, 2-1 Ivy) turned to their junior running back to finish drives Saturday. The former third-stringer pounded in four 1-yard rushing touchdowns to

lift the squad to a 44-24 victory Saturday at Cornell (0-6, 0-3). “He’s just another guy that epitomizes the next man up mentality,” said co-captain Marcus Fuller ’15.5. “He’s gotten a lot more carries because of some injuries, and he’s really stepped up in a big way.” Bruno controlled the game from start to finish en route to its fourth consecutive win. Nine minutes into the game, the Bears already enjoyed a 21-0 lead and continued the torrid pace to a comfortable 34-10 halftime edge. “We had a gameplan that we had coming into the game and we stuck to it,” Fuller said. “We did a good job of executing — taking what the defense » See FOOTBALL, page 3

WEATHER

MONDAY, OC TOBER 26, 2015

ARTS & CULTURE Production Workshop’s 3C2C showcased five student-run short plays from diverse genres

SPORTS Women’s rugby dominated Princeton 29-0 in last game of the regular season

COMMENTARY Doyle ’18: Showing courtesy to others can go a long way toward destigmatizing outward emotion

COMMENTARY Asker ’17: Brown should spend its money on places and people that matter, not on extravagances

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