SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2016
VOLUME CLI, ISSUE 9
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
M. BASKETBALL
Bruno impresses in split with Empire State Ivies Win over red-hot Cornell, close loss to second-place Columbia have Bears building momentum By CALEB MILLER STAFF WRITER
It is amazing what a weekend can do. For the men’s basketball team, a split in two home contests against Cornell and Columbia showed the Ivy League what Head Coach Mike Martin ’04 said prior to the start of conference play: “We can contend in this league.” But an 0-3 start including two blowouts roused critics, and a narrow home win over last-place Penn — which was missing its leading scorer — did little to quiet the doubters. There was little to critique about the Bears’ 86-80 win Friday over Cornell (911, 2-4 Ivy), a red-hot team welcoming back its top scorer after a road sweep of Harvard and Dartmouth. Then, to prove the win was no fluke, Bruno went toe-totoe Saturday with the league’s second-best team, Columbia (16-7, 5-1), leading in the final two minutes before falling 77-73. While Columbia’s late push prevented
Bruno from climbing to fourth place in the conference, the Bears are tied for fifth just one week after languishing in last place. They have yet to face the league’s worst teams, Harvard and Dartmouth, which appear next on the schedule. Brown 86, Cornell 80 The Bears managed to carry the offensive momentum from an 89-point outburst against Penn through the week to hang 86 on the surging Big Red. An 8-1 Bruno run with seven minutes to play erased Cornell’s final, one-point lead. Three-pointers from Travis Fuller ’19 and JR Hobbie ’17 sandwiched two Steven Spieth ’17 free throws to open up a lead that would not dip below six for the rest of the game. “That’s a good win against a good team,” Martin said. Bruno’s four veteran starters showed why they are the core of the team on the offensive end. Each upperclassman starter poured in 14 or more points, led by 16-point outings from Spieth and Cedric Kuakumensah ’16. Point guard Tavon Blackmon ’17 supplemented his 14 points with five assists and four rebounds, while Hobbie’s 15 points came » See M. BBALL, page 2
COURTESY OF BROWN UNIVERSITY
Samuel Mencoff ‘78, chancellor-elect, Theresia Gouw ’90, treasurer-elect, and Alison Ressler ’80, vice chancellorelect, were elected to new leadership positions on the Corporation Saturday.
Corp. authorizes 4.1 percent tuition hike
Corp. also approves 7.1 percent undergrad financial aid increase, diversity, inclusion plan By KATE TALERICO NEWS EDITOR
The University has raised over $1 billion of the $3 billion it hopes to secure in the BrownTogether capital campaign, announced President Christina Paxson P’19 in a community-wide email Saturday following a meeting of the Corporation, the University’s highest governing body. This milestone “provides exciting
‘Blackballed’ talk confronts campus racism Ross points to campus symbolism, Greek life as sources of racism in higher education By GWEN EVERETT
INSIDE
Bruno ends conference skid with win over Columbia
By JAMES SCHAPIRO STAFF WRITER
ELI WHITE / HERALD
Author Lawrence Ross discussed the mobilizing influence that the Black Lives Matter movement has had on campus activists across the country. aggressive, threatening racist figures on the early 20th century, he said. “How would you feel if you had to go into these buildings named after people who denigrate you?” Ross asked. Taking down racially problematic homages is easy, Ross said, adding “Americans take down statues all the time, just not in our country.” Ross also addressed the histories of Greek organizations. While Ross said he has long been an advocate for
fraternities and Panhellenic sororities, many of their members do not understand the history behind their organizations. As late as 1947, the interfraternity conference openly condoned discriminatory policies, Ross said. Once Greek organizations began desegregation, some groups adopted more implicit policies in order to maintain predominantly white pledge classes. Ross » See ROSS, page 4
past years: 4.4 percent for the current academic year and 3.8 percent the previous year. The budget for undergraduate financial aid will jump 7.1 percent. In the coming year, the University hopes to increase the competitiveness of the scholarships it offers middle-income families, a demographic for which it lacks coverage relative to its peer institutions, Paxson wrote in the community-wide email. Total financial support for graduate students will receive a $1.8 million bump. Graduate student stipends will increase by 3 percent, now totaling $24,400. » See CORP, page 2
W. BASKETBALL
Two contrasting third quarters prove decisive in upset win over Lions, tight loss to Big Red
SENIOR STAFF WRITER
“Racism equals a societal cancer,” said author Lawrence Ross as he opened his lecture, “Blackballed: The Politics of Race on America’s Campuses,” Saturday evening. Ross discussed the presence of black students on university campuses and student activism with regard to social justice across the country. “Most (pre-college) kids are not thinking about campus racism. … We almost think about college like Disneyland,” but racism continues to be a reality at American universities, he said. Campus symbolism — specifically, buildings or statues that pay homage to historically problematic or offensive figures — furthers this message, Ross said. For example, the University of Virginia Medical Center is named after Harvey Jackson, a eugenicist known for “forcibly steriliz(ing) thousands of African-Americans,” and Tillman Hall at Clemson University honors Benjamin Tillman, one of the most
momentum as we continue seeking investment for the BrownTogether campaign,” Paxson wrote in an email to The Herald. The Corporation also formally and unanimously endorsed an action plan released Monday that allocates $165 million — or 5.5 percent of the funds to be raised in BrownTogether — to boost the diversity and inclusiveness of the Brown community. With guidance from a report on deficit reduction issued by the University Resources Committee, the Corporation approved a 4.1 percent tuition hike, bringing total undergraduate charges to an estimated $64,566. The increase is consistent with those of
The women’s basketball team is in trouble — after a 1-5 start to its Ivy League season, that is undeniable. But now, for the first time since conference play started, the team may be finding its stride. The Bears (13-7, 1-5 Ivy) traveled to Cornell (13-7, 5-1) Friday night with a 0-4 Ivy League record and immediately looked like a different team. In the first half, they outscored Cornell 41-37, powered by doubledigit scoring from three players. But once again, the Bears could not hold their slim lead. Down four, Cornell started the second half on a 10-1 run and led 64-52 by the end of the third quarter, scoring 27 points while holding the Bears to 11. If the 12-2 preseason
Bears had played the first half, the third quarter exposed the winless Ivy League Bears. “We’ve been having a little trouble coming out in that third quarter,” said co-captain Jordin Alexander ’16. “We’ve been trying to improve on that a little bit. … A lot of it has to do with having a lot of young players; it’s a learning experience.” Cornell held steady in the fourth quarter: They never led by fewer than eight, ultimately securing an 85-70 victory, handing the Bears their fifth straight loss of the Ivy League season. “That first half was one of the best halves that we’d had in a while,” Alexander said. “There were a lot of positives in it, so we’re really excited about that. It was a tough loss, because they were ready to lose that game, and we could have taken advantage of it.” Traveling to New York City for their fourth consecutive Ivy road game and facing the prospect of an 0-6 start to the season, the Bears faced off against a Columbia team (12-9, » See W. BBALL, page 3
WEATHER
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2016
NEWS Over 450 students from around world participate in third annual Hack@Brown
SPORTS Bruno falls to Harvard, Dartmouth, moving winless streak to 10 as season nears close
COMMENTARY Malik ’18: Academy Award nominations fail to recognize narratives of people of color
COMMENTARY Savello ’18: Support Providence Student Union’s campaign for new ethnic studies courses in schools
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