Monday, November 6, 2017

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SINCE 1891

THE BROWN DAILY HERALD MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2017

VOLUME CLII, ISSUE 101

WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM

Meme page gains popularity at U. ResLife clarifies policy on

RPL-resident relationships

Over 13,000 students, community members engage with ‘Brown Dank Stash of Memes’

Violating ‘romantic relationship’ rule in Code of Ethics could result in RPL relocation

By BAYLOR KNOBLOCH SENIOR REPORTER

Facebook meme pages have exploded on campuses across the country in the past year, cranking out membersubmitted images that combine humor with school-specific references. With just over 13,400 members to date and new content posted daily, the “Brown Dank Stash of Memes for Unproductive Teens” is no exception. A meme is an image containing an established joke that “gets mutated and turned into other jokes and concepts,” said Matthew Ellis GS, who studies cinema and new media in the Department of Modern Culture and Media. The memes on a page like Brown Dank Stash of Memes are “designed for an in-group specifically,” he said. “We try to avoid posting generic memes,” said Lucy Duda ’20, one of the page’s five administrators. The page is set up on Facebook so that memes must be approved by the five

By MELANIE PINCUS STAFF WRITER

COURTESY OF LUCY DUDA

Combining University-specific humor and internet jokes, the meme group has five administrators that approve content before it is posted. administrators before the content is posted. Brown Dank Stash of Memes was created by current administrator Anina Hitt ’20 in December 2016. At its inception, Hitt and Dylan Garcia ’20 served as the page’s only two administrators, but the original idea for

the page came from Arya Ökten ’20. As the Brown Dank Stash of Memes page garnered popularity, experiencing exponential growth in March, three additional moderators were taken on: Ökten, Duda and Elijah Broussard ’20, the self-proclaimed » See MEMES, page 2

The Office of Residential Life clarified its policy about relationships between Residential Peer Leaders and their residents this year, explicitly stating that any RPL in a “romantic relationship” with a resident under their responsibility could be “relocated elsewhere on campus,” according to the 2017-18 Residential Peer Leader Code of Ethics, which was obtained by The Herald. In comparison, the 2016-17 Code of Ethics instructed RPLs to “not pursue, develop or engage in any inappropriate emotional and/or physical relationship with residents,” though it did not outline any clear consequences of relationships with their residents. The policy prohibiting relationships between RPLs and their residents is “not new,” but ResLife has

been updating documentation and processes “to provide transparency to both students and student staff ,” wrote Kate Tompkins, associate director of ResLife, in an email to The Herald. “The update to the RPL Code of Ethics occurred with the last hiring cycle which occurred in spring 2017,” she wrote. Tompkins declined to comment further because ResLife “looking at all of (its) policies” and is undergoing a program review, which will be finalized in the spring. Policies regarding relationships between students employed in dorms and their residents vary by university. At Penn, resident advisors may not engage in any “sexual or exploitive” relationship with a resident on their hall, and they can be investigated by the university for doing so, according to the resident advisor contract. At Northwestern University, a residential assistant can be fired for dating a resident, according to North by Northwestern. According to three RPLs who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are not permitted to speak to the » See RPL, page 2

VOLLEYBALL

Bruno defeats Crimson in 3-2 senior-day comeback Cairo ’18, Tooloee ’18, Tierney ’18 combine for 10 service aces in last home match for Bruno By MARI HERREMA SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Libero Captain Melissa Cairo ’18 and outside hitters Shirin Tooloee ’18 and Casey Tierney ’18 combined for 10 service aces to power the volleyball team through a comeback win, three sets to two, on Brown’s Senior Day match against Harvard Saturday. Rookie outsider hitter Gabrielle Moriconi ’21 also posted a career-high 18 kills in the victory, which snapped Brown’s five-game losing streak. After losing in a close 3-1 match against Dartmouth (8-13, 4-8 Ivy) Friday, the Bears (7-16, 2-10) were eager to bounce back. “I was a little hard on them last night,” said Head Coach Diane Short of Friday’s game. “I was very disappointed, and so were they. … I told them, ‘Look, you gotta play for the seniors tomorrow.’ You want to end it on a good note.” After equalizing two Harvard (12-9, 7-5) match-score leads and narrowly taking the fifth set 15-13,

INSIDE

ELI WHITE / HERALD

Outside hitter Shirin Tooloee ’18 bumps the ball in the seniors’ final home game of the season. The win against Harvard was Brown’s first after five straight losses to conference opponents. Bruno could not have ended their home-court matches for the season on a more positive note. The fifth set felt “fantastic,” Cairo said. “It was like a movie ending.”

The Bears quickly fell behind 5-2 in the first set, and were caught on their heels defensively and lacking in offensive precision. Though Brown utilized increasingly complex attacks

as the match progressed, its defense still struggled against Harvard’s surprise tips, and Bruno dropped the first set 18-25. The second set opened with a

tone-setting combination block by Moriconi and Courtney Palm ’19. Brown and Harvard went pointfor-point until the Bears gained an 11-9 edge and never looked back. Between discovering a weakness in the Crimson’s inability to effectively return short serves and utilizing a full range of deceptive set plays, Bruno scrambled Harvard’s defense and took the set 25-20. The momentum swung back the Crimson’s way in the third set, as Harvard took advantage of a suddenly sluggish Brown defense. Harvard stepped up its blocking in particular, thwarting Bruno’s cross-court spike attempts and swiftly claiming the set 12-25. But the Crimson’s lead was shortlived, and the Bears exploded into the fourth set with an uncontested sixpoint streak. A well-called timeout and a few controversial calls in Harvard’s favor put Bruno’s opposition back in the competition, but the Bears stayed calm and composed. “Once we started extending the play, we were winning points,” Short said. “Volleyball is about having no fear, because every mistake is a point. You gotta go out and you gotta be » See VOLLEYBALL, page 3

WEATHER

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2017

COMMENTARY Okin ’19: Sexual harassment toward women perpetuated by small, intangible aggressions

COMMENTARY Oke ’20: Students should engage with Providence in meangingful, non-patronizing way

SPORTS Men’s hockey falls to Dartmouth, third-ranked Harvard in two-day Ivy roadtrip

SPORTS Football loses 34-7 to Yale Friday, faces Dartmouth at Fenway Park Friday night

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