Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.

University News

PATILLO_fukoshimapanel_photoby_mia
University News

Experts discuss effects of nuclear disaster

Though the Fukushima nuclear disaster occurred six years ago, it carries lasting implications that remain today throughout Japan and around the world. On Thursday, Brown’s Japanese Cultural Association presented “The Politics of Uncertainty: Reassessing Japan After the Fukushima Nuclear Disaster,” ...


Everett_RISDBathroom_Eli-White-2
University News

RISD students gather to oppose recent vandalism

Rhode Island School of Design students and resident advisors gathered Wednesday night in front of Nickerson Hall to demonstrate their opposition to hateful acts that occurred on campus in the past week and a half. The first occurred the weekend of Feb. 18 and attracted national attention: A swastika ...


Behnam_Populism-Event_Huayu-Ouyang_-1
Events

Political science professors contextualize global populism

The University cannot stop talking about President Trump. On Wednesday, Chair of Political Science Wendy Schiller and Professor of Political Science and International and Public Affairs Ashutosh Varshney dissected the rise of Trump within the context of national and global populist movements in their ...


Dorothy-Windham-Podcast-Illustration
University News

Watson Institute launches new political podcast

The voices of Brown’s most renowned scholars have broken out of the classroom and into the airwaves. As part of a larger effort to make research from scholars of different disciplines more accessible to the community, the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs launched its podcast “Trending ...


Roberts_UCS_Jasmine-Ruiz-1
University News

UCS proposes app to report sexual assault

The Undergraduate Council of Students discussed new initiatives to combat sexual assault at their meeting Wednesday. Members proposed that the University start using an application called Callisto, which would allow students to report sexual assault through their phones. Community members also asked ...


Wang_Mountain-School_Marlis-Flinn-1
University News

Mountain School overrepresented in admissions

When most students step on Brown’s campus for the first time as first years, they might know at most a handful of people, if any at all. Some, however, step on campus as part of a much larger community. Each year, the Mountain School, a selective semester-long program tucked away in the small, rural ...


The Setonian
University News

Diversity initiatives make strides in comedy scene

Noelle Austin ’18 made her Brown stand-up debut Tuesday night, but finding a space where she felt comfortable performing was not easy. Her set, part of a showcase hosted by Production Workshop, drew on “experiences that are not often conveyed in popular venues at Brown,” she said. “As a black ...


Wells_SCT_Laura-Felenstein
News

U. study finds discrepancy in standard blood glucose test

University scientists found that a test used to monitor blood sugar can be ineffective for those with the sickle cell trait. The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association February, tested African American sickle cell trait carriers to see how carrying the trait affects results ...


Sheehan_CSandJohnSavage_COBrown
University News

Co-founder of CS department reflects on 50-year career

In a career spanning several disciplines and nations, John Savage has advised the Obama administration on cybersecurity, traveled around the world to provide his expertise to international leaders and co-founded the computer science department at Brown. Now, as he enters his 50th year at the University, ...


Athena-Feng-Advising-System
University News

U. creates new first-year advising programs

In response to survey results indicating a decline in student satisfaction with academic advising, the University is in the process of launching both a three-session workshop called Pathways, and an online summer module for first-year students. The idea for these developments stemmed from a working ...


The Setonian
Metro

Citywide conversation tackles race, environment in Providence

Community organizers and residents gathered Monday evening in the basement of Bell Street Chapel on Federal Hill to launch a discussion on the role race and racism play in the environmental challenges that Providence faces today. While environmental justice is often thought of as an abstract, large-scale ...


Kim_BPAC_NaomyPedroza-1
University News

BPAC promotes progressive causes at grassroots level

“In this kind of new age where you don’t have a Democratic president, what do the Brown Dems look like on campus?” This was the question that Brian Cohn ’17, president of the Brown Democrats, was left asking himself in the wake of President Trump’s victory. The group’s response came in January: ...


Douglas_BatDrone_COBrown
Science & Research

U. researchers create bat-inspired robot

A building collapses and victims are stuck beneath rubble. A rescue team moves debris as quickly as possible but struggles to find people in the chaos. The team launches a robot that can fly through the narrow spaces and nimbly maneuver through the rubble. With the robot’s help, it locates people ...


KRAMER_UEL_Eli-White-1
University News

Planned UEL demolition invokes criticism

Since the University announced the potential demolition of the Urban Environmental Lab to make room for a new performing arts center at the Corporation meeting in February, students and faculty have been pushing to save the UEL and the communities it supports. The University is currently selecting an ...


The Setonian
University News

Swastika drawn in feces found at RISD

A swastika drawn in human feces was found in a gender-neutral bathroom in a Rhode Island School of Design dormitory the weekend of Feb. 18. “RISD public safety is investigating this isolated incident as both an act of vandalism and potentially a crime of hate,” wrote Jaime Marland, director of public ...


Reyes_ACA_Stephanie-Reyes
University News

RI congressmen vow to safeguard Obamacare at rally

In a letter to their colleagues written earlier this February, U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY, and U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-VT, encouraged Democratic senators to lead rallies on Feb. 25 across the nation to safeguard the Affordable Care Act. In Rhode Island, hundreds gathered at ...


Powered by SNworks Solutions by The State News
All Content © 2024 The Brown Daily Herald, Inc.