SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016
VOLUME CLI, ISSUE 8
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
Internship search difficult for international students Visa complications, fewer opportunities abroad on BrownConnect limit summer opportunities By JULIA CHOI STAFF WRITER
ELI WHITE / HERALD
Dara Wais ’18, a late recruit to the women’s hockey team, skates up ice. Though Wais was not recruited at the same time as most of her teammates, she was warmly received by the other hockey players.
Athletes walk onto College Hill
While recruited players get more attention, walkons add perspective, depth to athletics department By MATT BROWNSWORD SPORTS EDITOR
Two days ago, high school athletes around the world fulfilled their dreams of signing to competitive colleges. It was National Signing Day. For athletes fortunate enough to be recruited, a whole high school may
gather while local TV crews wait to get the breaking news of a student’s choice between the local college and the outsider school looking to snap up a highly touted recruit. For Ivy Leaguers — who do not sign National Letters of Intent and receive no scholarship money due to an Ivywide policy — National Signing Day comes with exponentially less fanfare and certainty. For future walk-ons — those admitted to college for academics, but still looking to play varsity sports — finding a varsity spot can entail several months of
impending uncertainty about both their academic and athletic futures. Getting admitted “It was really stressful for me,” said Dara Wais ’18, who was a very late recruit to the women’s hockey team under former Head Coach Amy Bourbeau. “Honestly, I was nervous until I got the admission decision from Brown,” she said. “I knew there was a chance that I wouldn’t be playing hockey, which was really stressful to me because I love it.” Jimmy Grossman ’18 was only a » See WALK-ONS, page 2
With the spring semester well underway, many students have embarked on the summer internship hunt — an endeavor that some international students might find “tricky,” said Sujay Natson ’16. A large factor that hinders international students is that they often “can’t get paid in the U.S.,” Natson said. Due to visa regulations, limited funded opportunities in the United States exist for students from outside the country. Natson, who is from Singapore, has found unpaid volunteer experiences in the United States before but has yet to find a paid job, he said. Bia Bugane ’18, who is from Brazil and Italy, cited the Curricular Practical Training — a work license for international students — as a factor that also complicates the process. For internships under a CPT license, the student has to be at least a sophomore, Bugane said, adding that the internship has
to be related to one’s concentration. International first-year students often have an especially hard time landing internships, said Chantal Marauta ’19, who is from Italy and the Philippines. “Freshmen have it more difficult than juniors and seniors” because of their inexperience, but “international freshmen students have it even worse” because there are even fewer opportunities for them, she said. In addition, fewer opportunities usually exist abroad than in the United States, which may force international students to spend more time away from family, said Minoshka Narayan ’18, who hails from India. For some international students, BrownConnect — Brown’s alumni networking and internship posting site — has not eased the process. “I’ve never found BrownConnect helpful,” Marauta said. Interested in law and EU foreign service, Marauta said she hasn’t been able to find relevant internships, such as ones with the United Nations or the European Union, through the site. Narayan echoed similar sentiments, commenting that while she has looked up alums through » See INTERNSHIPS, page 2
Cianci leaves complicated legacy behind Kia McNeill brings fresh mayor perspective to women’s soccer Former remembered for checkered Former Northeastern assistant to lead women’s team, replace Phil Pincince after 39 years By BEN SHUMATE SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Looking back at Brown’s athletic department 40 years ago, it would be hard to find many similarities to today’s version. Brown’s athletes now enjoy modern, stateof-the-art facilities, and dozens of varsity teams have been added in recent decades. Around that time, first-year women’s soccer Head Coach Phil Pincince had just taken over the program in its third year in existence. At the start of the 2015 season, Pincince announced that he would step down from the head coaching position after 39 years. He transformed the program into a perennial contender, upping the number of regular season games and bringing 12 Ivy League titles to the University. Pincince led the Bears to a 7-7-2 record in his last season, ending his career with a 317-247-53 all-time mark. In addition to the Ivy League titles, the
INSIDE
team made six appearances in the NCAA Tournament, including a consecutive five-year stretch between 1982 and 1986. “We’ve had one way of leading a program for 39 years, and it was a very successful way,” said Athletics Director Jack Hayes. “But there’s more than one way to be successful.” Enter Kia McNeill: women’s soccer’s new leader. Hayes announced the hiring of McNeill, an assistant coach at Northeastern University, after an exhaustive search for head coaching candidates. Path to Brown McNeill grew up in Avon, Conn. She was a standout player from the start, named the 2004 Gatorade National Player of the Year and was a two-time All-American in high school. After a four-year career at Boston College, she was selected ninth overall by Saint Louis Athletica in the first-ever Women’s Professional Soccer draft in 2009. McNeill played three years for different teams in WPS, along with stints in Russia and the National Women’s Soccer League. She played for the U.S. Under-23 Women’s National Team during that period of her career. » See MCNEILL, page 3
past, service to city, over 20 years in public office By KYLE BOROWSKI SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Vincent “Buddy” Cianci Jr., lawyer, radio host and Providence’s longest-serving mayor died Jan. 28 at the age of 74, leaving behind a memorable legacy that has incalculably affected the city and its residents. Cianci was mayor of Providence first between 1975 and 1984 and then between 1991 and 2002: a total of 21 years. Before his mayoral career he served in the U.S. Army and Army Reserve between 1966 and 1972, eventually becoming a prosecutor and attorney. At the time of his passing, Cianci was engaged to his fiancee, Tara Marie Haywood, for just over a month. Mayor Jorge Elorza said in a Jan. 28 press release that flags at City Hall will be flown at half-staff while “we make arrangements to recognize his memory.” Gov. Gina Raimondo said the state flag would be similarly flown — a reversal of her previous decision not to honor the late mayor in this fashion, WPRI reported Jan. 29.
HERALD FILE PHOTO
Vincent “Buddy” Cianci died Jan. 28 at the age of 74. He was Providence’s longest-serving mayor, known for his larger-than-life personality. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-RI, of- alleged altercation with a Bristol confered his condolences to Cianci’s family tractor he accused of having an affair in an email to The Herald, writing, “my with his then wife. He was again ousted sympathies go out to the Cianci family, in 2002 following a conviction of rackand I wish them the best in this dif- eteering with a sentence of five years in ficult time.” federal prison. Elorza, who notably defeated Cianci The humor of his rise and fall was in his 2014 bid for mayor, also offered lost least on Cianci, who quipped in his his condolences in his Jan. 28 press re- memoir, “I spent almost three decades as lease, stating, “Cianci’s love for the city mayor of Providence … before leaving of Providence is undeniable, and his for an enforced vacation in a federally mark on the city will not be forgotten.” funded, gated community.” Though a mark he will certainly A fellow law school student also acleave, its nature and effect are debat- cused Cianci of raping her at gunpoint able, especially considering Cianci’s in 1966, and an investigator called it checkered history. Cianci was forced the “most clear-cut case of rape” he had to resign from office in 1984 after an » See CIANCI, page 4
WEATHER
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016
NEWS Senior Watson fellow examines factors contributing to U.S. stagnation in talk
SPORTS Athlete of the week: Distance runner Clare Peabody ’18 sets 1,000m school record
COMMENTARY Volpicello ’18: Instead of social stigma, we should respond to being alone with acceptance
COMMENTARY Esemplare ’18: Concussions in NFL cause financial — not just physical — problems for players
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