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Job board restored yesterday
Students can now access the CareerLAB Student Job and Internship Board after an outage that lasted from Thursday afternoon to Monday afternoon. The failure was caused by a critical hardware outage on the part of the vendor Symplicity Corporation, said Andrew Simmons, director of the CareerLAB. CareerLAB staff worked with employers to ensure students would not miss application deadlines or interviews they had scheduled, Simmons said. I want to emphasize that our staff has been working very, very hard to mitigate any potential impacts on students, he said. Approximately 1,000 other colleges and universities that use the system were also affected, Simmons wrote in an email to the student body Monday. It took slightly longer for the University to repair its job board because of its password authentication system, Simmons told The Herald. It was just annoying, Scott Freitag 14 said. There was no information about why it was down on the webpage, he said. These things do happen, Simmons said. These are large databases that are subject to occasional failure. Kate nussenbaum
Youre going to feel hopeless, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter David Rohde 90 told a room of almost 50 students and community members last night. Youre going to feel theres no future in journalism. Breaks will come. Rohde, adjunct professor of English, shared his experiences pursuing a career as a journalist and seeking ground truth on-the-scene news reporting in a lecture in the Brown/RISD Hillels Winnick Chapel. The talk was the third in a lecture series hosted by the Nonfiction Writing Program. One of the founding editors of the College Hill Independent, Rohde said he was inspired to pursue journalism because of a nonfiction writing course he took his senior year. But the road to reporting was not easy. After
graduating, Rohde pursued a series of unpaid internships at newspapers and TV stations. As a secretary at ABC News, Rohde picked up drycleaning and helped his boss seventh grade son write a book report. Rohde then decided to teach English in Lithuania. A coup broke out in the Soviet Union that year, and Rohde spent his time stringing for the Associated Press and the New York Times. Upon returning, he covered local news at the Philadelphia Inquirer and later moved to the Christian Science Monitor, where a position eventually opened up in foreign correspondence. He jumped at the chance. Two Pulitzers, one kidnapping and two books later, he left the Times where he worked as a night reporter and then as South Asia bureau chief after 15 years to become a continued on page 3
W. BBAll
The womens basketball team bounced back from halftime deficits against Columbia and Cornell this weekend to grab two key conference victories. Despite struggling offensively both nights at the Pizzitola Center, Bruno (14-8, 5-3 Ivy) utilized an aggressive defense to defeat the Lions (2-19, 0-7) 7263 Friday and the Big Red (9-12, 3-4) 60-49 the following day. Entering the first game of the Ivy weekend, the Bears held a .500 Ivy record at 3-3 and were looking for a weekend sweep to move up in the Ivy standings. But in the first half, the Bears struggled to find the basket. They shot just 32 percent from the field and 33 percent from behind the arc, while the Lions shot 41 percent from the field and 50 percent at the three-point line. This difference put Columbia in the lead heading into the locker room 31-29 and just 20 minutes away from its first Ivy win of the season. On Friday, Coach (Jean Marie) Burr said that we were waiting to continued on page 5
Brown 72, Columbia 63
Mayor Angel Taveras stressed the importance of making sacrifices as the city faces the looming threat of bankruptcy during his annual State of the City address last night. In an unprecedented gesture, Gov. Lincoln Chafee 75 P14 attended the speech, standing behind Taveras as he spoke. Providence is in peril, and we must work together to save our great
$3 billion worth of city property, preventing Providence from collecting a potential $105 million of property tax revenue each year. No one is exempt from the sacrifices that need to be made to save our city, Taveras said. Tax-exempts must be part of the solution, not the problem. Taveras announced that an agreement with Johnson and Wales University for additional contributions continued on page 5
Some Ivy League students may be single this Valentines Day, but they dont have to be. Two dating websites started by alums in the past two years are helping Brown students and others find love.
Feature
For those who hope to meet people who value creativity, intellectual curiosity and drive from dozens of cities around the world, IvyDate, a selective dating site cofounded by Beri Meric 06, is here to help. Membership to the site requires an extensive application, including questions about users favorite philosophers, things they like to spend money on and what they would do if they were president. If approved by IvyDates member-
ship committee, users receive five matches per week, based on an algorithm that analyzes their preferences on location, age, religion and ethnicity, Meric said. For students seeking love locally, Kai Huang 11 and Arune Gulati 11 have left their legacy on campus with Prospect and Meeting, a site on which users list their prospects people in whom they are romantically interested. If two people list each other as prospects, their names are exchanged, prompting a meeting. IvyDate now has more than 17,000 approved members internationally whose ages range from 18 to about 35. The site states that it is not exclusively for Ivy League alums, but rather is the Ivy League of dating. The membership committee seeks intelcontinued on page 5
high-end dating
Courtesy of IvyDate
The new online dating service, IvyDate, offers matches for selective singles.
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TODAY 12 P.m. Mayor Alex Morse 11 Talk, List 120 4 P.m. College Sex Book Talk, Brown Bookstore 7 P.m. Your Friends and Neighbors film, Granoff Center FEBRUARY 14 TOmORROW 4 P.m. Soul Food Celebration Dinner, Sharpe refectory FEBRUARY 15 By meia geddeS staff writer
MeNU
SHARPE REFECTORY Green Chili Chicken enchilada, Vegan Taco, Corn and Sweet Pepper Saute, Cupcakes and Cookies VERNEY-WOOllEY DINING HAll lUNCH Shaved Steak Sandwich, Vegan Stuffed red Pepper with Brown rice, Chocolate Chip Cookies
DINNER Grilled Turkey Burger, Black Bean and Spinach Soft Taco, Au Gratin Potatoes with Fresh Herbs Saigon Beef & Ham with Vegetables, Turkey Pot Pie, Saigon Sauteed Vegetables, Magic Bars
SUDoKU
45 Offended 34 Rapid economic DOWN 1 Bespectacled 46 Signed a pact, say expansion dwarf 47 Circus performers 35 Plains tribesmen 2 Role for Patti 51 Slays, mob-style 39 Powerfully built LuPone or 53 Care for __?: 40 Tip on a table Madonna after-dinner offer 41 City bond, 3 Layered pastry 54 Numbskull informally 4 Hogwash! 57 See 28-Across 42 Dynasty during 5 Scissors cuts 58 Hodgepodge Confucius time 6 Periodic table 59 Mouse 43 Juliets family figs. manipulator name 7 Access with a 44 American territory 63 Night of password anticipation in the Pacific 8 Faster, huskies! ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 9 John Candy skit show 10 Golf bag carrier 11 World Cup chant 12 Runner-ups news 15 Earring style 21 Texters From a different aspect ... 22 Say it isnt so! 23 La maja desnuda painter 27 Second-year student 29 High, in Hamburg 30 Spanish river 33 Top Olympic 02/14/12 medals, in Madrid xwordeditor@aol.com
The Office of the Dean of the Faculty described the next phase of the Humanities Initiative in a report released yesterday. The initiative was launched in 2010 to promote teaching and research across humanities departments. This next phase will include a different method of nominating professors for the available teaching slots and will use an endowed fund to promote interdepartmental collaboration, said Kevin McLaughlin P 12, dean of the faculty. The nomination process for hiring new professors through the initiative will change this semester, McLaughlin said. Potential professorships will require nominations from two faculty members in different departments within the humanities. When selecting new professors to fill the endowed positions, the Humanities Initiative Advisory Board will place a premium on candidates ideas for galvanizing collaborative
projects among faculty and students across departments, the report stated. Candidates will be evaluated on their ability to draw connections between the study of humanities and real-world applications. It is important for us to think about how the humanities has a critical role to play, McLaughlin said. Candidates will be asked about their plans to engage with other departments and stimulate further dialogue among their students and peers, according to the report. Six new faculty members will eventually be added under the initiative. McLaughlin said the University is currently in the final stages of evaluating a particular candidate for one of the positions, though no decision has yet been made. The candidate will be subject to the approval of the Corporation, the Universitys highest governing body, in May. The initiative also includes a Humanities Research and Teaching Fund, which McLaughlin hopes will create an atmosphere that encourages
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current faculty members and their students to engage in interesting projects that renew their teaching, he said. The funds will be available on a competitive basis each semester. The fund will target projects that explore critical questions from a diverse set of perspectives across the humanities or between the humanities and other disciplinary fields with some preference for undergraduate courses designed to address a question of broad social and intellectual import, according to the report. The projects will also be selected for their ability to use campus collaborative spaces such as the Perry and Marty Granoff Center for the Creative Arts, the report stated. Though projects must have humanists and humanistic objectives at their core there is no limit on collaborations that reach beyond the humanities to the arts, social sciences, natural sciences, medicine, policy and other fields, according to the report. McLaughlin said the University emphasizes science, technology, engineering and medicine, a trend mirrored by other peer institutions. This is an appropriate focus he said, but it raises questions about the future of other disciplines. This conflict is age-old, McLaughlin added, tracing the tensions between scientific disciplines and humanities to the writings of 18th century German philosopher Immanuel Kant. While science and technology-based disciplines highlight practical aspects of research, the humanities are a way of reflecting on the appropriate way to live, he said. Highlighting the humanities is a way to build one of the traditional strengths of Brown, McLaughlin said.
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that liquid water once existed on the planet. Spirit eventually became stuck in loose material and lost power in 2010. But before it stopped communicating with Earth , the rover discovered water-altered rocks and evidence of a hydrothermal system a hot aqueous environment that may once have been a source of liquid water, energy and potentially even a thriving ecosystem, Callas said. Spirits sister, Opportunity, has also sent evidence of water to Earth, including images of sedimentary rocks, Callas said. Opportunity was also able to drive into craters, he said, revealing older parts of rock and giving scientists a powerful set of measurements. Opportunity is now poised to enter its largest crater yet, and a new nuclear-powered rover, Curiosity, is slated to join it on Mars this August. The new rover, which cost between $2.4 and $2.5 billion, is five times the size of Spirit and Opportunity and is equipped with an analytical chemistry lab to detect the presence of organic molecules, Callas said. Theres an ongoing armada of surface exploration on the planet Mars, Callas said. We are trying to answer great questions about the planet.
Opportunity, the Mars Exploration Rover, is on the edge of a great endeavor, literally. The rover, launched in July 2003, is now positioned to begin exploring the 14-mile diameter Endeavour Crater as soon as Mars winter ends, said John Callas ScM 83 PhD 87, project manager of the NASA Mars Exploration Rover Project. A crowd of about 50 people congregated in Metcalf Auditorium last night to hear him speak. Callas took his audience through the eight-year history of the two Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, giving them a glimpse of what he described as the exciting adventure that still continues. In his introduction, Professor of Geological Sciences Jim Head recalled sitting with astronomer and author Carl Sagan and examining pictures from the 1976 Viking missions to Mars. Unlike the Mars rovers, the Viking was stationary and frustratingly tantalizing, Head said. It enticed us to think about what was over the horizon, he said. We were just fundamentally itching to see what Mars had in store for us. Callas said he felt that same
itch, especially after the 1996 Mars Global Surveyor provided a map detailing the topography of the planet and revealed a very low and smooth northern hemisphere, he said. Did Mars have an ocean? Did Mars have an abundance of water? If so, what happened to it, where did it go? Those questions led to even more exciting inquiries. Is Mars habitable? Was it habitable? What does it mean for our own planet if Mars could change drastically? Callas asked. He then showed the audience photographs of the rovers each with six independent wheels, nine cameras, a robotic arm with four unique tools and solar panels to provide power that would begin to answer those questions. This is a robotic geologist, Callas said. The mission was initially designed to last for ninety days. Callas said when Spirit landed on Jan. 4, 2004, scientists could see hills in the distance through its cameras. At the time, Callas and his colleagues did not know that Spirit would eventually climb those hills in the first ever martian mountaineering attempt and that Opportunity would travel over 34 kilometers, exploring three craters and sending back evidence
of basic reporting
continued from page 1 columnist at Reuters. And this spring, he took up a teaching position at Brown. Rohde, who won one Pulitzer at the Monitor and one at the Times, recounted his experience working on stories for which finding ground truth proved invaluable. In Bosnia, he saw the importance of ground truth in a very visceral way, he said, and when he was later held hostage by Taliban members for seven months, he used the experience to understand the Taliban. The more familiar you are with the place, the more you speak the language, the more you understand where people are coming from, the more people will trust you, he said. In the modern world, Internet-based research is helpful to reporters, but basic reporting remains invaluable, he added. Rohde, who is now a foreign affairs columnist at Reuters, cited an example where he traveled to Raleigh to research a column about universities promoting development in surrounding communities. When he arrived, Rohde discovered the center he was writing about the Raleigh High Tech Incubator was situated in one of the citys poorest neighborhoods and was teaching residents employment skills. He took a tour of the area, talked to locals and overheard conversations between administrators at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He discovered a different story than the one he came for. In his reporting, he heard about the struggling local middle class and about dissent within the university, where one faculty member referred to its chancellor as a kind of Darth Vader. What was supposed to be a
staged interview (with the UNC chancellor) sort of fell apart because I was there, because I was able to meet people, Rohde said. Though journalism is changing, Rohde said, The key thing is going out and meeting people. He encouraged students to be reporters, not curators and to write, edit and rewrite. Rohde shared one of his own old college papers one where his professor had written rewrite. Rohde had spelled wit with an h in the middle and included a statement that had caused his professor to write, this adds nothing. He urged us to keep at it, to keep writing our papers, Rohde said. During the question-and-answer session, Rohde spoke about the value of fact-based reporting, especially with the proliferation of online news sources and politically charged cable news. As people turn to more biased outlets, he said, ground truth and talking to people become more valuable than ever. Once you get out there and meet people, you break through those barriers, he said. Rohde offered the example of a pastor he met when covering a story in New Orleans who asked him why the Times had not covered claims that President Barack Obama was Muslim. Rohde stayed the night with the man. By the time he left, he had convinced the pastor that Obama was a Christian because, he argued, if Obama were a Muslim, then-Senator Hillary Clinton would have addressed that in the primaries. One audience member asked what advice he had for aspiring journalists. Rohde said adapting to the changing media climate is key. Youll find your way, he said. I dont think human storytelling will ever go away.
Emerging from a long winter lull, the student Occupy movement in Rhode Island is looking forward to a spring of cooperation athrough Occupy Rhode Island Campuses, a new collaborative effort bringing together student protesters across the state. Students from the University of Rhode Island, Rhode Island College, Providence College, the Community College of Rhode Island and Brown are coming together to unify the cause, said Professor Peter Nightingale, professor of physics at URI. The group aims to model itself after the national Occupy Colleges movement, which targets higher education reform, the common thread between the institutions, according to Nightingale. The group was founded after Occupy RIC members held a protest last November that attracted students from across the state. It brought people from other schools to RIC, and we connected from there, said Servio Gomez, a student at RIC. But higher education reform is defined differently at each of the schools involved in Occupy Rhode Island Campuses. State-funded institutions in Rhode Island have all seen tuition hikes in the past
few years. Nightingale said many students have trouble managing schoolwork while financing their education. Education is the best thing for society to improve itself, but money that goes to education keeps on declining every single year, Gomez said. Members of Occupy Rhode Island Campuses support increased state aid to public institutions. A student recently emailed Nightingale explaining that he had taken and failed a course Nightingale teaches multiple times because working 25 hour per week prevented him from fully grasping the course material. One of the main problems at the state schools is the increase of tuition and the cost of education as a whole, Nightingale said. We want to act on this together. The private schools like Brown and Providence College share a lot of concerns about social inequality, which has grown at the same time the tuition is rising. Luke Lattanzi-Silveus 14 said Occupy College Hill is exploring how to emphasize the ways in which higher education serves to perpetuate the class structures in society and what we could do to change these things. Though Occupy College Hill does not have an official list of demands, it has expressed interest in ex-
ploring increased transparency for University admissions and investments while approaching the broad question of changing the University and the way it operates by perpetuating inequalities, Lattanzi-Silveus said. But Occupy Rhode Island Campuses is about more than just education reform. Nightingale pointed out that each college is seeking to achieve different goals, but they are united by the fact that there is something fundamentally wrong with a society that treats people as disposable commodities. Though Occupy protestors nationwide also have not presented a unified agenda, the movement has made a huge impact on the United States, said William Keach, professor of English. He said the protests influenced President Barack Obama to address economic inequality in his State of the Union. Keach said he would like to see more transparency from the University when it makes decisions. The institutions involved in Occupy Rhode Island Campuses are planning separate teach-ins at their respective campuses next week, according to Gomez and Lattanzi-Silveus. Occupy Rhode Island Campuses is also organizing an event for March 1 in solidarity with Occupy Colleges, but plans have not yet been finalized.
Over two dozen performers and literary theorists came together this weekend to showcase their talents in Interrupt II, a three-day multimedia art studio that highlighted the impact of writing and performing on digital media.
the user inputs text to interact with characters in the game. Simanowski said he recognizes the seduction of absurdity that attracts users to interactive, computer-generated discussions. Players of Facade are not drawn to dialogues about work, hobbies or interior design when given the chance to provoke any conversation, free of real-world constraints, players consistently move to test the system through socially inappropriate discussion, he said. There is a contradiction implicit to the genre, Simanowski said. The concept of human and computer interaction is so avant-garde that the style of the game must be as conventional as possible in order to fool the player, he said. Simanowski made observations about the need for digital media to appeal to popular culture if the ultimate goal of programming is to be achieved to get the player to believe the scenario and to forget the machine. Vanessa Place, co-director of Les Figues Press, a literary press in Los Angeles, performed fiction based almost entirely around provocative, and often uncomfortable, social trends and subjects. Among them were frank discussions about alcoholism, child abuse, racism, homosexuality, 9/11 and self-identity, framed in viscerally unpleasant but captivating narrative. Many of Places spoken pieces included a key word or phrase, which was repeated in almost every sentence and occasionally between every other word for example, in a piece about an alcoholic man accused of child abuse, she continually repeated the phrase, I dont remember. This element of subliminal influence added another dimension to her performance of otherwise traditional fiction. Only towards the end of the 45-minute reading did sparing laughter begin to surface from the audience. For the majority of the performance, the drama of the pieces was further intensified by Places delivery a deadpan and monotone reading with the sporadic swish of paper falling to the floor, as Place paced around the stage, dropping the pages as she finished reading them. Interrupt II showcased diverse talents in fiction, poetry, digital performance and literary critique, each with themes surrounding the role of multimedia art in modern society. The festival as a whole addressed the question of how art will continue to evolve in an increasingly technology-oriented world.
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continued from page 1 win, said guard Lindsay Nickel 13. We didnt have the same aggressiveness, the same focus that weve had previous weekends. But Brown remained resilient, and for the next 20 minutes, the Bears and Lions were neck-andneck, trading baskets and steals. The two teams were still deadlocked at the end of the half, and Bruno headed into overtime for the second consecutive weekend. Last week, the Bears came away with a 59-55 overtime win against Penn. This week, Bruno again stepped up in extra time, led by its defense. Two steals from guard Sheila Dixon 13 and one from co-captain Hannah Passafuime 12 in the final minute and a half allowed the Bears to pull ahead comfortably, and at the buzzer, the Bears had wrapped up a 72-63 victory. Weve had a lot of experience with playing overtime this season, Nickel said. I dont think that playing overtime makes us nervous. We kind of embrace it now. Dixon led Brown with 20 points including eight of Brunos 15 overtime points and added eight rebounds and five steals. Nickel and Passafuime contributed 11 points apiece.
Brown 60, Cornell 49
Dating site calls itself Despite wins, Bears struggle to score the Ivy League of dating
continued from page 1 lectually curious, open-minded, interesting people, Meric said. The selection process is similar to how Brown admits its students, Meric said. The committee does not just look at credentials, but evaluates the applicant as a whole. They consider, is this somebody that would make for a great relationship? he said. The idea for the site came out of Meric and his co-founder Philipp Triebels experiences at Harvard Business School, where they conducted a study on young professionals and dating. Accomplished individuals often have much less time for the bar scene, Meric said. We wanted to come up with an effective way for extraordinary people to connect with each other. After discovering there was a market for a site such as IvyDate, the business duo launched DateHarvard, a pilot project for what would evolve into IvyDate, in August 2010. The site catered to students and graduates of Harvard, but it accepted applications from members who attended other schools as well. The general feedback was that there was a high level demand for a premium approach to dating, Meric said. Meric and Triebel then embraced the Ivy League heritage to expand the sites target audience, Meric said. IvyDate went live in February 2011 and started matching users last summer. The site currently accepts approximately 70 percent of its applicants. Meric said the high acceptance rate reflects the abundance of compelling profiles a result of the word-of-mouth publicity in Ivy League circles. Unlike other online dating sites, the site does not allow members to browse a database of profiles, a distinction Meric said is in place to protect their members privacy and make the experience more meaningful. In 2010, Huang and Gulati created the dating site Prospect and Meeting for Brown students curious about their crushes. Prospect and Meeting peaked at around 2,000 members, but has had stagnant growth since then, Huang said. Once he and
Crossroads of love
the founders graduated, it became difficult to maintain the site. Huang said he started Prospect and Meeting to encourage Brown students to make themselves more vulnerable. Much of Huangs personal motivation to create the site came from a desire to see if a romantic interest of his was also interested in him, he said. But he said he dropped off a love letter in her mailbox before the site was even fully running. While online dating sites are a new method of finding love, Meric said the goal of IvyDate is to use technology to get back to an older way of connecting. Just like old-fashioned matchmakers would connect individuals with each other, we like to think we do that in a more efficient way, he said. For Huang, dating sites such as Prospect and Meeting are all tools that college-aged individuals have to help find love in our generations hookup culture. I think people are still out there looking for the ... real thing, Huang said. But everyones afraid to take the first step because suddenly youre in a position of weakness. You have to be vulnerable, Huang added. Its you. Its me. Were at each others mercy. Huang said he would consider using a site such as IvyDate in the future, but for now, his responsibilities as a medical school student have kept him too busy for love. If I fall in love right now, its only going to be a distraction, he said. But some undergraduates express doubts about sites such as IvyDate. Elisa Glubok 14 said the exclusivity of the site turned her off. I feel like I wouldnt be attracted to someone who would be attracted to this idea, Glubok said. But Meric said he is confident that users of the site will be happy with their experiences, even if a romantic relationship does not result. If theres chemistry, then its very likely that people meeting are going to hit it off, he said. Even if there isnt chemistry, its a great way to meet new people.
this modern love
The Bears again struggled offensively in the first half Saturday night. But unlike the night before, both squads suffered from poor shooting. Both Cornell and Brown hovered around a dismal 25 percent shooting percentage in the first 20 minutes, which resulted in a low-scoring half, ending 20-14 in Cornells advantage. But the second half was a whole new game for Bruno. The Bears found their stroke, pouring in 46 points in the second half and improving their shooting percentage to 44 percent. At halftime, we knew that it was a poor showing and that wed better get it together quickly,
Nickel said. We do trust each other as teammates, and I dont think there was ever sense of panic, but we knew we had to play with more urgency. Though the Bears offense came alive, the Big Red also hung around for most of the second half. The score was deadlocked six times, including with 4:30 left in the game. It was then that guard Lauren Clarke 14 took the reins and hit a trey to spark a 17-9 run that propelled Brown to victory. Dixon led the Bears again Saturday night with 16 points. The Bears are hosts again this weekend, taking on Harvard (12-9, 5-2) and Dartmouth (3-18, 1-6) Friday and Saturday evening, respectively, at the Pizzitola Center. Currently, the Bears are in fourth place in the standings, and a pair of wins could potentially propel them into second place. Saturdays game against the Big Green is Browns annual Pink Zone game, supporting Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
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of profit and the entrepreneur within a freemarket society. Now you will probably read that first paragraph and assume that you know what I am about to say, so that you can file my ideas under the category ignoramus. If so, I ask that you use some of the charity that you plan to use in the future to read on. Capitalism is a system whereby peoples subjective wants are satisfied through trade on a massive scale in a peaceful, voluntary, interdependent and cooperative manner. and the Newton Apple fail spectacularly, its because ordinary human beings did not want those companies to produce those goods. So where is the entrepreneur, and how does he fit into all this? The entrepreneur is the person who predicts the uncertain future and, in the pursuit of profit, thinks, develops and innovates products and services that customers want. This person dedicates his brilliance and his enterprise to finding ways to make ordinary people better off and spends his entire life taking enormous risks trying to serve Europeans, and his companys current profits are a testament to the success of its ability to give people the flights that they actually want. To say, however, that some entrepreneurship is social is just an incorrect assessment of how we serve one another via the market and how critical entrepreneurs are in creating new value for society. The knee-jerk reaction to such an argument is, What about hunger, indigence, disease, filth, pollution, lack of transportation, lack of clothing and ignorance? Capitalism has not and cannot serve those populations, and therefore the state should provide help for those who need help. The natural condition of human history has been this. But thanks to capitalism, thanks to entrepreneurs, innovators, thinkers and geniuses in pursuit of profit also known as serving the customer better than the alternative we have developed incredibly creative solutions to these issues. Our frustration at the misery felt throughout the rest of the world is the exact result of our prosperity. We have become so wealthy, so accustomed to the benefits of this massive interdependence, that we forget the engine that helped us achieve these goals. To those who want to be social entrepreneurs, all I say is the following: If you want to really help the world, if you really want to help the lives of ordinary people, then be an actual entrepreneur. Daniel Prada 12 would gladly welcome debate at daniel_prada@brown.edu.
In reality, profit is a signal to businesses that they are creating social value to human beings.
Businesses thrive and die every day trying to find ways to make peoples lives easier, more enjoyable or more productive. If they cannot satisfy a customers fickle desires or expectations, they liquidate. But, if they can create more value for human beings than it costs them to mix the land, labor and capital, they remain profitable. In reality, profit is a signal to businesses that they are creating social value to human beings. We often talk about Steve Jobs, Larry Page, Bill Gates, John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie and a whole host of other business leaders as owning an empire. This term is highly misleading, since it totally reverses our understanding of who really is in power the consumer. When Google Buzz, the HP Tablet, Betamax, the Ford Edsel, Windows Vista create value. Take, for example, Michael OLeary, CEO of the Irish airliner Ryanair. He is one of Irelands wealthiest business people. What did he do? He totally revolutionized the airline industry by doing one thing serving the customer. Before Ryanair, companies like Lufthansa, Air France and British Airways dominated the landscape and charged $1,000 for flights, providing free checked bags, luxury dining inside aircraft and lots of faceto-face customer service. These companies made weekend getaways to Spain, Italy, Paris, Rome and so on a luxury for the upper crust. Ryanair totally changed this paradigm and offered flights at a fraction of the cost, turning a luxury into something within the means of an average family. He and his company have done much to
when I walked out of the MCAT exam I realized that what nagged at my conscience was not the questions I couldnt answer, but the pervasive air of mistrust.
warranted. Last year, two Canadian students coordinated a high-tech plot to transmit exam questions via a wireless pinhole camera. The only reason the scam was unsuccessful is that the conspirators one taking the test, the other figuring out the answers were also trying to dupe a crew of MCAT tutors into answering the questions live. When the tutors wised up, the police were called and the perpetrators arrested. Standardized tests are imperfect measures and easy to criticize. But much like the heightened security was needed to eliminate the cheaters, the MCAT was originally instituted to weed out the academically unfit. In
rules with an iron fist. Ability to perform well on the exam requires accepting a certain premise: that subjective interpretations can and should be reduced to objectively correct answers. Even if I could converse fluently on the topic a question posed, my expertise was useless if I could not oversimplify to their standard of correctness. In the same way that the highest standards of moral and ethical conduct are guaranteed on the MCAT by tyrannical proctors, the looming threat of malpractice attorneys enforce a strictly by-the-book standard of care in the industry. An estimated 75 to 99 percent of physicians will at some point
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After losing four straight games, the womens ice hockey team needed to perform well at home against No. 3 Cornell and Colgate over the weekend to maintain hopes of claiming the final spot in the ECAC playoffs. Despite losing 5-0 Friday against Cornell, the Bears bounced back the following afternoon with a 3-2 victory over the Raiders. With the win, the Bears are now tied with Rensselaer for the eighth and final playoff spot with only two games remaining on the schedule. Friday night, Brown (8-12-7, 5-11-4 ECAC) hosted a streaking Cornell (24-3, 18-2) squad that had routed the Bears 9-0 in Ithaca Oct. 29. The Big Red kicked off the scoring midway through the first period. Despite stopping the first eight shots of the game, goalkeeper Katie Jamieson 13 could not prevent Cornells Erin Barley-Maloney from slotting home the puck. Not long after, with less than two minutes remaining in the first period, the Big Red got its second goal from Laura Fortino. Though Cornell outscored and outshot (16-7) Brown in the first period, Head Coach Amy Bourbeau said she was pleased with her teams performance in the early going. We played probably one of our best first periods of the season, Bourbeau said. I thought we did a decent job. It did not take long for Cornell to increase its lead in the second period. After just 28 seconds, the Big Reds Rebecca Johnston scored off a midrange shot that Jamieson failed to control. Despite conceding their third goal, the Bears did well to increase offensive pressure in the second period, outshooting Cornell 14-9. But even with more attacking, the Bears could not find a way past Cornell netminder Lauren Slebodnick. The Big Red re-established its control of the game and dominated Brown in the third period. In addiCornell 5, Brown 0
of ECAC standings
By COnnOr grealy sports staff writer
Sarah robson 15 was instrumental in keeping the womens hockey team in the eCAC playoff hunt.
tion to limiting the Bears to just two shots, Cornell built a commanding five-goal lead after Barley-Maloney and Johnston each scored their second goals of the game. Notwithstanding the five goals, Jamieson managed 44 saves, half of which came in the third period. Theyre quick, and theyre strong, Bourbeau said of Cornell, which clinched its third consecutive ECAC title with a 6-1 win over Yale the following night. They start to just tire you out over time. The Bears looked to end their losing streak Saturday afternoon against Colgate (10-19-2, 5-13-2) a team also vying for the final ECAC playoff spot on Senior Day at Meehan Auditorium. But after just 20 seconds into the first period, such an outcome seemed unlikely. Making the most of a poor defensive rotation and a bouncing puck, Colgate forward Melissa Kueber managed to poke one past Brown goalkeeper Aubree Moore 14 for the first goal of the game, putting the Raiders up before there was even a line change. The start of it was not the way we wanted it to go, Bourbeau said. I dont think we were quite ready to play. Despite the early sloppiness, Bruno bounced back. Forward Sarah Robson 15 scored the equalizer off a rebound with less than two minutes remaining in the first period. During the second period, Brown
Brown 3, Colgate 2
and Colgate looked evenly matched, firing 13 shots apiece. But the Bears were the next ones to find the back of the net, as Jessica Hoyle 14 broke the scoring deadlock in the 11th minute. The Raiders quickly increased pressure on the offensive end, forcing Moore to make several remarkable stops. At one point, midway through the second period, Moores glove was knocked off, but she still pulled off a gutsy, barehanded save on the goal line. (Moore)s always excellent, Bourbeau said. Its hard to say anything other than that. But Colgates Brittany Phillips snuck one over Moores glove on a breakaway and evened the score 2-2. The tie lasted only 30 seconds. Robson came to the Bears rescue once again, smashing in a rebound for what proved to be the game-winning goal and her 10th score of the season. The Raiders outshot Bruno in the third period and pressed for the tying goal, but could not get the puck past Moore, who Bourbeau called the teams backbone. It wasnt our best effort, Bourbeau said. But they wanted it so bad, and they were so happy to get this done for the senior class. The win turned around the Bears fortunes, but the tasks ahead of the team will not be easy. This weekend, the Bears will go on the road for a pair of tough matchups with secondplace Harvard and fifth-place Dartmouth, needing points to keep their season alive.
The mens ice hockey team now mired in a six-game losing streak sustained tough road losses to No. 12 Cornell and Colgate this weekend. The team has also fallen into last place in the Eastern College Athletic Conference after failing to compile a point since its win over then-No. 12 Union Jan. 21. We have four regular season games left, said Jeff Buvinow 12. The only thing you can do is try to stop the bleeding take it one game at a time. The Bears (8-14-3, 5-11-12 ECAC) knew they would be facing rough road tests playing against the top ECAC competition in Cornell (13-6-6, 10-5-3) and Colgate (17-10-3, 11-6-1), and both games showed Brunos resilience. In the hostile environment at Cornells Lynah Rink, Brown was able to shake off its recent problems with early goal scoring by notching the first two goals of the game. Matt Lorito 15 closed out the first period with an unassisted goal off an offensive zone faceoff. The team came out strong in the second period Ryan Jacobson 15 scored on the deflected shot of Dennis Robertson 14. But after the good start, in a scene reminiscent of Brunos previous game against St. Lawrence (12-15-3, 8-9-1), Brown allowed five unanswered goals. We were up 2-0, then they scored and took it from us, said assistant captain Bobby Farnham 12. I thought our work ethic was good this weekend. At the same time, we had too many lapses that cost us in crucial situations.
Colgate 7, Brown 6 Cornell 5, Brown 2
The usually low-scoring Bears followed up with a high-octane affair against Colgate in which 13 different players scored. The game started off with five goals in a first period that resulted in a 3-2 Colgate lead. Captain Jack Maclellan 12 who leads the team with 14 goals and Richie Crowley 13 scored the two Bruno goals. Garnet Hathaway 14 and Massimo Lamacchia 15 also added goals in the second period. Farnham, who leads the team with 12 assists, set up Lamacchias goal. When were at our best when our fundamentals are at our best its when our team wins, Farnham said. Brown, strong all game, mounted a comeback in the third period but fell short at the final buzzer. Goals from Matt Harlow 15, Buvinow and Robertson put the team right within reach of forcing extra time. Despite the teams recent struggles, players said they have not given up hope and continue to push every day. Our goal is still getting home ice, Farnham said. Being fundamentally sound as a team, were going to take care of business heading into the playoffs. We just need some momentum going into the playoffs and get a few wins under our belt, Buvinow said. Brown faces its last home series of the season Feb. 17 and 18 against Ivy foes Harvard (8-7-10, 6-4-8) and Dartmouth (9-12-4, 6-9-3). The series represents the last home games the current senior class will play at Meehan Auditorium. We always notice when we have Harvard and Dartmouth on our schedule, Buvinow said. Theyre always competitive teams. Were excited for this home series and Senior Weekend.
SqUASH
Both squash teams took on top10 ranked opponents this weekend. The women lost 8-1 to No. 8 Dartmouth in the last home game of the season. Meanwhile, the No. 16 men defeated No. 26 Tufts with a resounding 9-0 victory, but fell 9-0 to No. 4 Harvard and 8-1 to No. 7 Dartmouth. The Bears kept busy, playing multiple matches and preparing for the College Squash Association Team Championships, which are this upcoming weekend in Princeton for the men and in two weeks time at Harvard for the women. Sarah Crosky 13 was the lone Bear to win her Dartmouth match for the women, though Sarah Beres-
ford 13 and Dori Rahbar 14 fought hard to push their matches to close five-game thrillers. The overall score doesnt reflect how close the games were. Most matches went to multiple games with close scores in each game, Rahbar said. We can really see how much everyones improved their game in a few short months. It sets us up for a great run at nationals. Co-captain Brooke Dalury 12 said she was proud of the teams performance. Everyone really played their hearts out, Dalury said. We were in a great mindset of positivity for the match, and I think it showed on court. Sarah Crosky had an unbelievable win in three games. For the captains, Dalury and Erika Kohnen 12, the match was
the last home competition of their Brown careers. Senior Day was really great, and Erika and I felt really appreciated and emotional, Dalury said. The girls have been unbelievable this year, and weve felt so lucky to be their captains. They make it easy. The mens team faced Tufts first, where a loss likely would have meant a drop in the national rankings, said Chris Holter 13 Sunday. We were able to beat Tufts without dropping a match, said Tucker Bryan 12. It was a good boost of confidence for the team and gave us an opportunity to rest some of our injured guys. After the win over Tufts, the squad faced off Saturday against powerhouse Harvard. Though the team lost every match, Bryan
credited co-captain Blake Reinson 14 for a particularly strong performance, which he said impressed both teams. We knew we were outmatched going into Harvard, said co-captain Brad Thompson 12. Those guys are a strong contender for the title this year. We took it as a learning experience and enjoyed testing ourselves against such a strong team. We definitely kept nationals in the back of our minds and used the matches to prepare ourselves for this coming weekend. Though the mens team ultimately lost Sunday to the Big Green, the Bears were happy to see Tod Holberton 14 back on the courts after a speedy recovery from a hip injury. Despite the loss, Thompson said he was pleased with the last
home game of his Brown career. For my last home match against Dartmouth, we had a great crowd and tons of support, Thompson said. Personally, I played some of the best squash Ive played in my life at the number one position against a very strong Dartmouth number one. Reinson was the lone Bear to win his Dartmouth match, while Bryan and Holter pressured their opponents before both falling 3-1. On Sunday, we put up a strong fight against Dartmouth, taking the number two match and having close battles at three and four, Thompson said. If we play as tough as we did against Dartmouth at nationals this weekend, well have a strong shot at climbing the rankings.