Friday, March 22, 2019

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SINCE 1891

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 2019

VOLUME CLIII, ISSUE 39

Zhou ’20 elected UCS president

Stars, film industry leaders to grace campus during IFF

Student body votes De Georgia ’20 as UFB chair, passes Brown Divest referendum

Olivia Wilde, Logan Lerman, André Leon Talley will speak during week of events, screenings

By KAYLA GUO SENIOR STAFF WRITER

William Zhou ’20 was elected president of the Undergraduate Council of Students and Julian De Georgia ’20 was chosen as chair of the Undergraduate Finance Board in this year’s elections, announced Elections Board Co-Chairs Katie Barry ’19 and Kathryn Stack ’19 Thursday night on the steps of the Stephen Robert ’62 Campus Center. Jason Carroll ’21 will serve as the next UCS vice president and Fatoumata Kabba ’22 will serve as the next UFB vice chair. All elected candidates will begin their terms in the fall. Student coalition Brown Divest’s referendum passed with around 69 percent of the vote. The referendum asked whether the University should “divest all stocks, funds, endowment and other monetary instruments from companies complicit in human rights abuses in Palestine” and also “establish a means of implementing financial

By ELISE RYAN ARTS AND CULTURE EDITOR

By EMILIJA SAGAITYTE SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Members of the Brown community gathered on the Main Green together under the night sky Thursday, candles lit in their hands, to mourn the Muslims who were killed during the New Zealand shooting last week. The vigil was organized by the Brown Muslim Students Association, Brown-RISD Muslim Chaplaincy and the Office of the Chaplains and Religious Life. Following the attacks in Christchurch, New Zealand — which took place at Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Mosque — members of the Brown community provided students and staff with opportunities and places to process the tragedy. Spaces to honor the victims over the past week have included organized attendance at Rhode Island’s statewide vigil at the Masjid

INSIDE

As Hollywood embraces social change through movements like Time’s Up, those same shifting tides will bring young, diverse and empowering stars to the University’s campus as part of the annual Ivy Film Festival Apr. 8-14. André Leon Talley GS ’72, the former editor-at-large of Vogue, will open the festival with a keynote address Apr. 8, accompanied by a screening of “The Gospel According to André.” The documentary chronicles Talley’s life and career, from his childhood in the segregated South to his unparalleled career at fashion giants W and Vogue. The address marks Talley’s first return to the University since he graduated with his master’s degree in French Literature in 1972, according to an IFF press release. “He’s bringing his life story in film

VICTORIA YIN / HERALD

William Zhou ’20 (right) was elected UCS president Thursday night with 50.1 percent of the vote. Zhou currently serves as UCS vice president. transparency and student oversight of the University’s investments.” Around 44 percent of the undergraduate student body voted in this year’s elections — 3,076 out of 7,043 students. This represents the highest voter turnout in three years. Turnout stood at approximately 36 percent in 2018, 20 percent in 2017 and 29 percent in 2016, according to numbers

Community mourns Christchurch victims Students, faculty, community members gather in vigil on Main Green Thursday evening

WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM

Al-Kareem mosque on Monday and time after the weekly Jumu’ah service last Friday, when around 80 people gathered for a reading of the translated Moroccan poem “The Prayer of the Oppressed.” On Thursday, the vigil began and ended with a reading of the opening verses of the Qur’an, which was followed by an array of speakers — from students to staff to other members of the community — who shared their thoughts and supportive words, in addition to offering moments of silence for the victims. Students Hamzah Shah ’22, Muram Ibrahim ’22 and Samy Amkieh ’21 read aloud the names of the 50 people who lost their lives, and then each elaborated on the life story of one victim. Associate University Chaplain for the Muslim Community Imam Adnan Adrian Wood-Smith remarked on the significance of the tragedy taking place during the weekly sacred day Jumu’ah. “The fact that this gathering for our brothers and sisters in New Zealand » See VIGIL, page 9

provided by Barry and Stack. Brown Divest’s referendum passed with 1,939 of 2,810 votes. The University is not obligated to take any action based on the referendum outcome, The Herald previously reported. The University expects “to communicate with the campus community on » See ELECTIONS, BACK page

form to us,” said Misha Gehring ’19, co-executive director of IFF. Not only is Talley a fashion mogul, he also brings a unique perspective to the festival as the subject, rather than producer or director, of the documentary. “The thing that is so amazing about film is its multiplicity and the fact that it is more than cinematography. It is production design, it is costume, it is storytelling, it is documentary.” Official Selection blocks will be the core of the festival, which feature 22 undergraduate and graduate short films, “meticulously curated from over 330 submissions from 26 different countries,” according to the press release. For the first time in the festival’s history, the selection blocks are organized by themes: “Strength,” “Home” and “Selfhood.” “We always find it so interesting to see what student filmmakers want to turn their camera toward and what sorts of issues they want to capture,” said Kripa Venkatesh ’19, co-executive director of IFF. “They approach similar themes in such different, nuanced ways.” » See IFF, page 9

BrownTogether reaches $2 billion milestone BrownTogether Progress by Category (March 2019) BrownTogether has currently raised $2.06 billion of its $3.00 billion goal.

Annual Fund

236

Campus and Community Goal

495

Education and Research

717

Our People

537

0

164

255 83

513

200

400

600

Funds Raised (Millions)

800

1000

Funds to be Raised (Millions)

Source: Associate Vice President for Advancement Communications Joseph Zappala USHA BHALLA / HERALD

Two-thirds of $3 billion goal raised so far, campaign set for completion by 2022 By LI GOLDSTEIN SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The University’s BrownTogether fundraising campaign recently surpassed a $2 billion fundraising milestone in its

push to reach $3 billion by 2022. So far, over 56,000 people have donated to the campaign, which launched publicly in 2015, wrote Associate Vice President for Advancement Communications Joseph Zappala in an email to The Herald. “We are making great progress on the campaign. Being more than twothirds of the way in is exciting,” said President Christina Paxson P’19. “I’m very pleased with the momentum in the

campaign, and I’m also pleased with the number of things we’ve already been able to accomplish.” Paxson believes that BrownTogether is on track to meet its 2022 completion goal. “Right now, we’re actually tracking ahead of our goals, so now we’ve built in some flexibility in case there’s an economic downturn,” she said. After the BrownTogether campaign ends in 2022, Paxson hopes to make » See FUNDRAISE, page 2

WEATHER

FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 2019

SPORTS Marchin '19 leads men's hockey team to victory over Quinnipiac, Bruno to go to semi-finals

NEWS Shake Shack opens to the public with much fanfare, Mayor Elorza participates in ribbon-cutting

NEWS President Trump signed an executive order to protect “free inquiry” on college campuses

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