SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 2018
VOLUME CLII, ISSUE 35
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
UCS candidates discuss platforms UFB candidates
prepare for elections Schold ’19, To ’19 campaign for UFB Chair, De Georgia ’20 runs unopposed for Vice Chair By MELANIE PINCUS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
COURTESY OF SHANZÉ TAHIR
COURTESY OF FABRICE GUYOT-SIONNEST
Shanzé Tahir ’19 (left) and Fabrice Guyot-Sionnest ’20 (right) will contend for the presidency of the Undergraduate Council of Students after the polls open at noon today. Results will be announced at 10 p.m. Thursday.
Tahir ’19, Guyot-Sionnest ’20 vie for UCS Presidency while Pelsinger ’20, Zhou ’20 compete for VP By MELANIE PINCUS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Polls open today at noon in races for all executive board positions on
the Undergraduate Council of Students. Shanzé Tahir ’19 and Fabrice Guyot-Sionnest ’20 contend for the presidency while Camila Pelsinger ’20 and William Zhou ’20 campaign for the vice presidency. All candidate platforms are available on the UCS website and address issues that range from first-year advising program development to undocumented students protections.
Election results will be announced at 10 p.m. Thursday night on the steps of the Stephen Roberts ’62 Campus Center. The race for the presidency: Shanzé Tahir ’19 With three years of experience in leadership positions within multiple communities at Brown, Tahir hopes » See UCS, page 3
In the Undergraduate Finance Board elections beginning today at noon, Lisa Schold ’19 and Drew To ’19 contend for the chair position while Julian De Georgia ’20 runs unopposed for vice chair. The candidates’ platforms — which are available on the Undergraduate Council of Students’ website — speak to a variety of issues, including increasing the board’s transparency and improving relationships with student groups. Election results will be announced at 10 p.m. Thursday night on the steps of the Stephen Roberts ’62 Campus Center. The race for chair: Lisa Schold ’19 Schold is currently spending a semester abroad in three different countries and will be en route to Buenos Aires, Argentina, when election results are announced Thursday night. “I’ve been … trying to coordinate this campaign while abroad, and it’s been kind of challenging with the time difference and all, but I hope I am
expressing how important this election and this organization are to me,” Schold said over Skype. From fall 2016 through fall 2017, Schold served as the UCS-UFB liaison. As UFB chair, Schold said she would further foster the relationship between UCS and UFB. “Since UCS does officially create (UFB) policies, … it’s important that UCS is aware when UFB is having challenges with existing policies so that they can also be more involved in the process,” Schold said, adding that she would also look to add weekly UFB reports to UCS’ general body meetings. Communication issues also exist between UFB and the student groups it finances: UFB sometimes struggles to convey to student groups how to adequately prepare to present their budgets to UFB. “We have a rule where we’re supposed to meet with student groups before they go in to present their budget, but that doesn’t always happen because sometimes we don’t know who their financial signatory is, or … they don’t know who to contact,” Schold said. “I’m really hoping that we can make this a more fair process by either making sure that we are meeting with our student groups before they come in to present or » See UFB, page 2
Med school students match with primary care, specialty residencies 117 out of 118 students matched with programs, 14 students will stay in Rhode Island By ALICIA MIES CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Over 99 percent of fourth-year Alpert Medical School students matched to residency programs March 16. Of 118 students, 117 were accepted into a wide range of programs, varying from family medicine to obstetrics and gynecology to surgery, said Associate Dean for Medical Education Allan Tunkel. This acceptance rate is consistent with rates in the past years at the Med School and the national average for American medical schools, Tunkel said. Students matched to some of the most prestigious programs in the country, including residency programs at hospitals affiliated with Harvard, Yale, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the University of California at San Francisco, Tunkel said. From the
INSIDE
pool of matched students, 14 students will also be completing all or part of their residencies in Rhode Island, he added. Thirty-four percent of the class matched into primary care disciplines, which include internal medicine, family medicine and pediatrics, Tunkel said. The rest of the class matched into other specialty fields, including surgery, psychiatry, orthopedics, anesthesiology and more, he added. After students complete their third year of medical school, advisors are paired with students based on the medical discipline that the students would like to enter, Tunkel said. Advisors work with students to identify different residency programs and to help them complete a standardized application called the Electronic Residency Application Service, he added. Students will then make a rank order list of their preferred programs. Likewise, residency programs will also make a rank order list of the applicants that they interviewed. These rankings go into a system that pairs a student
with the highest possible residency program that also ranked the student, Tunkel said. Finally, students find out where they will be going for their residency by opening a prepared envelope at noon on Match Day in a celebration at the medical school with their classmates, family and friends. “This is a really big day, because where (fourth-year medical students) are going for their residency is going to define, in many ways, what they’re going to be doing for the rest of their career,” Tunkel said. Meredith Adamo MD’18 was joined by her family and her partner when she found out that she matched to the University of California at San Francisco in internal medicine, her first choice. “I had a lot of family waiting by the phone, waiting to see where I’d end up,” Adamo said. “I think most people would say that (Match Day) is a bigger deal than graduation because it is so unknown, and it’s a culmination of so much work to match with a residency » See MATCH DAY, page 3
SOURCE: ALLAN TUNKEL ALEX SKIDMORE / HERALD
WEATHER
TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 2018
NEWS U. plans to create fellowships, tuition-free Master’s program for DACA, undocumented students
ARTS & CULTURE Multimedia performance “Qyrq Qyz” reimagines ancient story of female empowerment
COMMENTARY Israel ’21, Rock ’19: Domestic abuse, prejudice predict shootings better than mental health
COMMENTARY Young ’19.5: U. should disclose information about internal legacy admissions data, policies
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