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  • 8/3/2019 October 11, 2011 issue

    1/8

    Tuesday, October 11, 2011

    Daily Herald B

    Since 1891vol. cxlvi, no. 83

    64 / 57

    tomorrow

    71 / 52

    todaynews....................2-3

    CITY & sTaTe............4

    edITorIal...............6

    opInIons................7

    sporTs....................8inside

    Cmpus nws, 3

    Rons cbchallenges, accomplishments

    Jh 14: w ct th t

    opnons, 7 weather

    No Ofn

    B Lucy FeLdmaN

    Senior StaffWriter

    Crime on or near campus de-rasd 200, ardg t th20 Aua Surty Rprt r-leased this month. Robbery and

    motor vehicle the on and nearcampus were the only crimes to

    increase last year, and all other cat-egories decreased or remained thesame. Te report includes statis-

    tics or nine oenses as stipulatedby th Urm Crm RprtgPrgram.

    Te seven robberies reported

    in 2010 took place on public prop-rty, mpard t ur pub

    property and one on campus in2009. Rhode Islands continuing

    economic woes may be responsibleor the uptick, said Mark Porter,

    chie o police and director o pub-lic saety. Te rest o Providence

    has seen a similar increase in rob-brs, h sad.

    On-campus burglaries weredown 42 percent last year rom

    the year beore, rom 67 in 2009 to39 in 2010, according to the report.Porter attributed this reduction

    partially to the departments e-orts to make students more aware th rsks d wth aglaptops unattended and dormi-try rms ukd. Rmdrsabut aptp ths ad ukddorm rooms are regularly included

    in the departments campus-wideemails. Increasing participation

    in the DPS laptop tracking serviceis another possible actor, Porter

    sad.Forcible sex oenses saw a

    slight decrease rom 10 oensest but Prtr sad th sta-tistics may not ully reect the in-cidence o sex oenses because thecrime is requently underreported.Next month, DPS will make a pushto publicize the support and re-prtg pts r tms srms, h sad.

    Te report also included sta-

    tistics on drug, alcohol and weap-ons violations, which include datacompiled by both DPS and the O- Studt L.

    Campus crimes decreased in 2010

    B aLex BeLL

    neWS editor

    Four years aer signing o on a

    $68 million executive bonus atth hght th m bmand two years aer parting ways

    with Goldman Sachs amid a reces-sion, President Ruth Simmons saidsh ds t hr dad-gtenure on Goldmans board hasnegatively impacted the University.

    Simmons joined the board in

    2000 when she was president oSmth Cg ad stppd dwa year and a hal ago, saying she

    wanted to devote more time toBrw. T Nw Yrkbasd -

    vestment bank was suering harshcriticism at the time or doling outhigh bonuses to its executives aerrg my rm th drabaut prgram.

    As Gdmas 0 dr-tors and a member o its compen-sation committee, Simmons sharedresponsibility or determining andapproving the compensation or

    the banks CEO and executives,udg CEO Lyd Baks$6 m bus 2007.

    w wks ar Smms a-ud sh wud t stad rr-t t Gdmas bard, aNew York imes eature portrayeda campus outraged over Simmons

    association with Goldman andpatd a ptur a bgymao Wall Street lurking behindthe wrought iron gates o Brown.

    When asked whether her ser-

    vice on Goldmans board has evercast the University in a negative

    light, Simmons said she cant

    Simmons defends

    Goldman ties

    McCmick t gtdnatin cds

    A dral judg ordrd th

    Univrit Frida to hand ovr to

    William McCormick all rcord

    o donation and undraiing b

    th athr o th woman who ac-

    cud McCormick o rap in 2006.

    Th judg, John McConnll

    80 o th Rhod Iland Ditrict

    Fdral Court, i th ixth to

    th ca land on hi dockt. Th

    ca wa bing hard b a Nw

    Hamphir judg bor it wa

    tranrrd back to Rhod Iland

    Oct. 4.

    McCormick, a ormr mmbr

    o th cla o 2010, i uing th

    Univrit, hi accur and hiaccur athr both alum

    ovr what h claim i a al rap

    accuation mad againt him

    during th rt da o hi rh-

    man ar at Brown. Th accur

    athr i a prominnt Univrit

    donor and undrair. Th uit al-

    lg that th athr donation

    and undraiing activiti ld

    Univrit adminitrator to trat

    McCormick unairl and improp-

    rl orc him out o Brown.

    McConnll alo ordrd th

    Univrit Frida to provid

    unrdactd copi o commu-

    nication btwn th accur

    athr and Rull Car 91

    MA06, currntl nior vic pri-

    dnt or Corporation afair and

    govrnanc and thn-intrim

    vic pridnt or campu li and

    tudnt rvic.

    Hl stf

    N e W s I N B R I e F

    B sam RuBiNROit

    aSSiStant SportS editor

    Te mens soccer team earned a vic-tory in its conerence home openerSaturday, datg th ddgIvy League champion Princeton

    grs rtm -2.It was a gratyg w r th

    Bears (6-4-1, 1-1 Ivy) aer two re-cent overtime disappointments.Te team lost its league openerto Columbia a week earlier indouble overtime 2-1 and battledNo. 9 St. Johns to a 0-0 draw in

    another double overtime thriller

    ast usday.

    Princeton is the deending IvyLagu hamp, ad I thk w r-alized with the Columbia gamethat the margins between a loss

    and a victory are very small in theIvy League, said Co-captain RyanMcDu 13. Its good to get into anrtm gam aga, k agastColumbia, but this time come out th rght sd thgs.

    Te Bears set the tempo early

    against the igers (2-7-1, 0-2), get-tg th srbard rst th31st minute with a goal rom EvanColeman 12, his rst o the season.

    Popolizio 12 hero as Bears vanquish TigersM. SoCCer

    B mORgaN JOhNsON

    Senior StaffWriter

    Rhode Island School o Designpublic saety ofcers will soon as-sum th pwr t sarh, dtaand arrest criminal suspects on

    Cg H.

    Legislation authorizing thechange, signed into law this sum-mer by Gov. Lincoln Chaee 75

    P14, grants RISD police the legalstatus pa frs, a statuscurrently held by state and local

    p as w as pub saty -cers at Brown, Rhode Island Col-g ad th Ursty RhdIsad.

    RISD ofcers must enroll atthe Rhode Island Municipal Po-lice raining Academy and pass

    training beore assuming policepwrs. N ur frs arsworn yet, so we are operating un-der the same guidelines as years

    previous, said Jaime Marland, di-rector o media relations at RISD.

    Hary Wag, a sphmr atRISD, said she was unaware o thechange. She said she assumed theshs pub saty frs hadno powers beyond asking or stu-dt dtat ards.

    I didnt even know Brown po-lice could arrest, said RISD juniorHary Bart, wh as had thard th aw.

    he bill does not authorizeRISD ofcers to carry weapons.

    DPS ofcers have been armeds 2006.

    RISD cops

    to get fullpolicepowers

    ctiu g 2

    ctiu g 5

    emil Gilbrt / Hrald

    T.J. Popoliio 12 cord twic, including a dramatic ovrtim goal, to datPrincton 3-2 saturda night.

    Glnn Lutk / Hrald

    All-night contruction on Thar strt angrd and xhautd tudnt innarb dorm. S ull cvag n pag 4.

    ctiu g 4

    ctiu g 4

    i t s g e t t i n g lo u d

  • 8/3/2019 October 11, 2011 issue

    2/8

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    Daily Herald B

    ITORIAl

    (40) [email protected]

    BSInSS

    (40) [email protected]

    Campus ews2 he Brown Daily eralduesday, ctober 11, 2011

    4 P.M.

    Talk b Lli Chang: Factor Girl,

    salomon 101

    4:30 P.M.sh Wa M sitr, CIT 477

    12 P.M.

    Th Dvloping Brain, sharp

    Rctor, Dining Room 8

    7 P.M.Coming Out Panl,

    Huntr Lab Auditorium

    SHArPe reFeC TorY VerNeY-WooLLeY DINING HALL

    LUNCH

    DINNer

    Curr Chickn with Coconut, Vgan

    Chana Maala, Apricot B with

    sam Noodl, Rapbrr Bar

    Roat B au Ju, Vgan Vgtabl

    Coucou, Chickn Broccoli Pata

    Alrdo, Rapbrr Bar

    Artichok, Kalamata and Pppr

    Calon, B and Andouill

    Burgr with Kair Roll

    Hon Mutard Chickn sandwich,

    Vgtarian Pot Pi, Marinatd Bt,

    Buttrcotch Chip Cooki

    ToDAY oCTober 11 ToMorroW oCTober 12

    C R O s s W O R D

    s U D O K U

    M e N U

    C A L e N D A R

    B gaBRieLa gutieRRez

    ContributingWriter

    As the window o opportunity to bepart o the Campaign or Academic

    Erhmt was sg th ao 2010, Kay Warren knew she hadt at ast t auh a udrasgeort or the Pembroke Center.Warren, who had been nameddirector o the center that Octo-

    br, had y tw mths t mup wth a prjt t rsarh thhuman cost and benet o socialhag, sh sad.

    ogether with Elizabeth MunvesSherman 77 P06 P09, chair o thePembroke Center Associates Coun-cil, Warren, who is also a proessoro anthropology and internationalstudies, brainstormed ideas or ac-

    ulty-led initiatives that would osterresearch across the humanities andsocial sciences about global issues.T tw am up wth a pa the Pembroke Center could raise$750,000 r auty rsarh wththe help o the campaign, Shermanand her husband David Sherman79 P06 P09 would make it $1 mil- wth hr w my.

    oday, the Pembroke Chal-lenge has exceeded that originalgoal, though the actual sum willremain a secret until Nov. 5, the

    0th arsary th PmbrkCtrs udg. Warr attrb-utd th hags suss t th

    grsty aums.Warren said the challenges ocus

    gba ssus s a way th U-versity can increase its prominencein the international community.Well be seen as a positive orce orudrstadg mpatd ssusthat ar gba ad th rsut atrtd wrd, sh sad.

    Te unds raised by the chal-lenge will rst go to the Univer-

    sity endowment and then will bespent according to the needs o theinitiatives, which all under three

    broad categories: Gender, Medicineand Science; Gender and Public

    Py; ad Fams ad Wrkrson the Move. Both graduate andundergraduate students will have

    the ability to participate in theseinitiatives through assistantships

    ad wrkshps.Studts w bt spay

    rom hands-on experiences becausethy w s hw rsarh s -ducted rom the very beginning,

    Warr sad.In addition to starting the Pem-

    broke Challenge, Warren has insti-tuted other changes to the centersince she returned rom leave in

    July. She has increased the numbero aculty members involved in thetr ad ratd a auty bardwth tahrs rm drt dst hp ru t.

    Warr s sdrg w u-drgraduat aadm pprtu-ties. One idea would have studentsrom the humanities and thoserom the social sciences provide

    input on each others research. She

    s as wrkg a arh thatcollects papers by eminist theo-

    rsts ad maks thm aaab rscholarly research, a project recent-ly renamed the Feminist Teory

    Arhs.But Warren still has a ew goals

    or the center she would like to ac-complish, including a general ex-

    pansion o the Pembroke Center to

    rah mr studts rm drsds.

    As r th Gdr ad Sua-ity Studies concentration, whichthe Pembroke Center sponsors, shesad sh wud k t s th ur-ruum grw ad mayb taha course about human trafckingad th ga dmss tras-national commerce with a legalscholar or prosecutor who works

    huma rghts.But Warren said she does not

    know how easible such a classwud b. I guss Im awd tdram, sh sad.

    Pembroke Center beats fundraising goal

    Brown Dpartmnt o Anthropolog

    Pembroke Center Director Kay Warren aid he hope to expand the center toattract tudent rom dierent eld and to teach a coure on human trafcking.

    RISD began pursuing peace o-r gbty sra yars ag,Marad sad. T shs urbacampus necessitates a strongerpublic saety presence than would

    be required at schools in moresatd aras, sh sad.

    Te bill makes RISD police bet-ter equipped to deal with routinequality o lie issues and improvespartnerships with Brown and mu-nicipal police orces, Marland said.

    Barton, who holds a prettypst p RISD pubsaety, said she is pleased with thepeace ofcer designation. She saidthe knowledge that campus policecan arrest would make her eelsar wh trag at ght.

    A lot o students walk aroundwith expensive equipment, she

    said. Sometimes they get ha-rassd.

    But Wang said RISD publicsaety ofcers reputation or beingstrict when dealing with studentsmakes her concerned that RISDpolice might overreach in using

    thr w pwrs.It makes me more wary o

    the abuse that might happen,sh sad.

    RISD public saety recordspaint a picture o sporadic the

    RISDs ampus. E bur-glaries, two motor vehicle thesand one robbery were reported

    btw 200 ad 200.

    RISD public safety ofcers get powerto arrest, carry weapons

    ctiu mg 1

  • 8/3/2019 October 11, 2011 issue

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    Campus ews 3he Brown Daily eralduesday, ctober 11, 2011

    B kate NusseNBaum

    ContributingWriter

    Since committing $400,000 toUniversity research in January,Medtronic Fortune 500s topmedical product and equipmentmpay has prdd supprtor three engineering research proj-ects, according to Brian Sheldon, aproessor o engineering who hasb drtg th abrat.

    In addition to the unding,Medtronic also works with Uni-

    versity proessors to identiy topicsor projects and helps to determineth prjts drts.

    Trough the collaboration with

    Medtronic, Sharvan Kumar, proes-sor o engineering, is leading re-search on specialty steels that are

    used to manuacture dierent med-ical products, and Kyung-Suk Kim,prssr grg, s wrk-ing on ways to prevent coagulationproblems in heart valves withouttreating patients with large doseso the drug Coumadin. Sheldon,

    who said the unds will providetwo years o support or his proj-ect, is exploring the development

    a w matra that mght hpprt th aur apatrs dbratrs.

    T md r rsarh ab-

    oration was inspired by the Uni-rstys ratshp wth GraMotors, Sheldon said. Allan Bower,proessor o engineering and co-director o the GM lab, said GM

    began collaborating with univer-sities in 2001 when it establishedresearch satellite labs around the

    wrd.Bower said all o Browns col-

    laborative projects have two orthree GM sta members who arecontributing to the research. Brownrsarhrs ad GM sta mt -ery six months to review past workad pa utur rsarh.

    Te success o the GM programad th grg dpartmtsprts mhas ad mat-ras s pqud th trst Medtronic executives, who decidedt stabsh a smar md, Sh-d sad.

    In the summer o 2010, aerseveral Medtronic executives andresearch scientists visited Brown,

    the company started meeting withengineering proessors to discuss

    how the Universitys expertise couldsupprt ts ds.

    We identied a huge number

    o possible projects, Sheldon said.W usd that as a startg pt.

    Aer several groups o a ew ac-ulty members visited Medtronicmultiple times to work out the spe-cics, the three dierent projectswr auhd Jauary.

    Lk th GM md, thr s designated Medtronic lab building researchers work in the Barus

    ad Hy abs ad th PrLabratry basmt.

    Sheldon said the collabora-

    t rsarh md aws Brwproessors a certain degree o ree-dm. T udg r th rsarhcomes in the orm o gis, which

    means they actually cannot dic-tat aythg t us, Shd sad.Te arrangement allows Brown re-searchers to pursue projects theyar trstd pubshg.

    But Sheldon said that because

    the University wants to developa long-term relationship with the

    company, there is requent commu-nication with Medtronic sta. Shel-don and his post-doc researcher

    speak on the phone with Medtronicscientists several times a month,

    and he is working with them onthe presentation o their joint proj-t that h w dr durg thrst wk Dmbr Bstat the Materials Research Society

    mtg.Sheldon expressed appreciation

    or the collaborative research mod-el, explaining that working directlywith a company allows his depart-ment to research relevant industrialproblems and oers students and

    post-docs who are interested inpursuing industrial jobs the chanceto actively engage with the industry.

    Sheldon said he believes re-

    searchers in his department areparticularly well-suited or such

    joint endeavors. Tis group opeople has, or a very long time,

    worked in a very collaborative waywth ah thr. H sad ths putssmall groups o aculty in a positiont sud at sg th dustr-a prbms that ar trst tMdtr.

    Medical corp. fundsengineering research

    B aLex BeLL

    neWS editor

    A lot o the things that havehappd that smd t b m-portant to people, I missed, saidPresident Ruth Simmons o her

    accomplishments at Brown. I washere, I was doing it and nowsomebody deines it as havingb mprtat.

    Simmons said she receives longttrs whh admrrs t hrwhat her greatest achievements

    have been. he dierences, shesad, ar strkg.

    I thk ts kay r pp thave dierent perceptions o whatIve done, and I think Ill enjoy

    learning that what Ive ocusedon and what Ive thought I was

    doing are sometimes very dier-ent rom what people see in whatIm dg .

    Simmons cited her boldness

    wh sh rst tk as kyto her success as president. Arriv-ing in the wake o the tumultuoustenure o Gordon Gee, Browns

    shortest-tenured president, Sim-ms tk th Crprats ad-vice in acting switly to drat a

    ive-year plan to lit the schoolout o stagnation. In hindsight,Simmons said drating her plan

    without irst better understand-

    ing the school seems completelyga.

    h thg that sars th ut m s that ts what ry -body talks about, she said. It

    was need-blind. It was expand-ing the aculty. All the things that

    people talk about now, I did withno knowledge o Brown, and so

    wh I thk abut that, I thk,Gdss, mayb thats th wayto make decisions in the dark.

    Simmons said she lacks thecourage today to do what shedd wh sh rst startd. Nw,decisions take more time and en-ta th rmat grups adstat ps.

    Id go through all o that pro-cess and then end up in a place

    where who knows i it would

    ha b bttr. I raz w I hadnt done it early, we probablywudt ha gtt muh dbecause it takes a long time or

    ths rts t matur.Simmons credited her ability

    t wthstad sruty as athrkey to her success. She remem-brs ata mda spuatgwhat th ma, Ara-Amr-ican Dillard graduate rom exaswould do or Brown ater she wasapptd.

    I had some diicult timeswhen I was president, she said.

    You always have a lot o sel-doubt, and I had as much as any-body else when you start thesekds jbs.

    At irst, Simmons hopedBrw hadt mad a mstak ts apptmt, sh addd. Sh

    sad sh sttd t hr w jbad rspsbts graduay.

    Ive been very lucky, actu-ally, because when I look to thenorth and I look to the south, Ivehad ar ewer perturbations thanmost o my peers. And yet, I thinkpp wathg s tty r-atd a rta srt dsmrtr m that has b a atur my prsdy t b sur.

    Simmons called it a milestonethat she will have gotten through11 years without a conlagrationo some kind, which some mayha ptd.

    hey expected the Slaveryad Just thg t bw up adt b a gat, sh sad, rr-ring the University Steering Com-mittee on Slavery and Justice sheconvened in 2003. In act, itsturd ut t b a pst.

    Simmons said she was mostgrateul or the act that she sur-d.

    I think Ive had all the luck inth wrd r ths jb, ad muhmr tha I ud ha ptdad prbaby muh mr tha Ideserved, she said. I have nocomplaints, and my aim now is

    really to make it as easy as pos-

    sb r th t prs t haas gd a p r.

    Simmons reects on themes of presidencyBoldness, endurance and a touch of luck is recipe for success

  • 8/3/2019 October 11, 2011 issue

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    City& State4 he Brown Daily eralduesday, ctober 11, 2011

    B haNNah LOeweNtheiL

    StaffWriter

    All-night construction on TayerStreet to complete renovations to

    the Metcal Chemistry and Re-search Laboratory Sept. 29 leangry and tired students in itswak.

    At the completion o the Met-cal renovation project, TayerStreet was cold planed and re-paved, Stephen Maiorisi, vicepresident o acilities manage-ment, wrote in an email to Te

    Herald. He added that no urtherconstruction on Tayer is planned.

    Nighttime construction oc-

    curs only when necessary, he ex-plained, adding that pedestrian

    saty s ras r authrz-g strut at ght.

    Tis is not the rst time Brown

    has resorted to overnight con-struction, Maiorisi wrote. woyears ago, the strategy was em-

    ployed when workers replaced theUniversitys high temperature hotwatr ppg.

    While Maiorisi said he was notaware o any ormal noise com-

    pas, studts k Adam Frs13 were nonetheless disturbed bythe late-night construction. Freeswrt a ma t T Hradthat he rst noticed the noisy con-

    struction around 2 a.m. one night,wh h was tryg t a asp.

    Margarta Rdrguz , whlives in Hegeman D, said the con-struction made her very uncom-

    rtab.It was very hot that night, she

    said. I wanted to keep my windowp, ad I udt baus thsud was just ubarab.

    Laura Curlin 13 said the loudand disruptive construction nois-s trruptd hr sp.

    Mars wrt that stru-tion which was supposed tobg arud 4 p.m. ad d b-tween 1 a.m. and 2 a.m. didt bg ut 6 p.m. du t u-

    rs prbms. At that pt,the asphalt was already on its wayto the site, so the project couldntbe postponed to another time,

    Mars wrt.

    Frees said he was impressed theDepartment o Facilities Manage-ment nished the work in a singlenight, but he was still rustrated. Iunderstand that they had a sched-u t kp, h wrt, but t wasreally inconsiderate o them to notg ay warg t th hudrdr s studts that ss tha50 eet rom where they were jack-hammrg at 4 th mrg.

    In act, students had beenwarned, according to Maiorisi. In

    accordance with its policy, Facili-ties Management had originally

    coordinated with the Ofce oResidential lie to alert students

    o the construction by sending

    a morning mail announcementthat day.

    But Maiorisi acknowledgedthere was a breakdown in com-

    munication aer the delayed start.Once construction did begin, Fa-cilities Management did not co-

    rdat wth RsL t s hwthe change in timing would aectstudts g arby, h wrt.

    h g bC Pcch

    All-night construction on Thayer unbearable for students

    Campus drug violationsjumped rom ve to 20, accord-

    g t th rprt. Prtr sad DPSdealt with roughly the same num-ber o drug-related incidents in

    bth yars, but dts 200involved more violators on averagetha dts 200.

    Mst drug, ah ad wap-ons violations result in disciplinary

    rrras.

    he University disciplinaryprocess is usually equipped todeal adequately with such oenses,Prtr sad. But wh a stuatjpardzs th hath ad satyo the community, DPS will makea arrst, h sad.

    Tr was sta ag-gravated assault last year and no

    incidences o homicide, negligentmanslaughter, non-orcible sex o-enses or arson. Te ull report

    can be ound on the DPS website.

    Crimes decline, butdrug violations jumpimagine how it could have, thoughshe admitted she tends not to readwhat thrs wrt abut hr.

    Im not the person to judge,but I have never been unwilling toha rspsbty r what I d,she said. Everything I do and ev-erything I say is subje ct to peoples

    judgment. Im entirely comortablewth that.

    Prior to leaving Goldmansboard, Simmons said in a February2010 interview with Te Herald

    that negative publicity she received

    would not hurt the Universitysrputat.

    I a pa th ras I wason the Goldman board becauseboth Brown and Smith encour-aged me to be on the board andthat is al l I can say, Simmons saidast wk. Ad I thught r aminute that my being president

    o Brown served Brown poorly orwas an embarrassment to Brown, Iwould have been gone a long timeago. Its not my intent to embar-rass the University. Quite the con-trary, I thk my bg prsdt

    o Brown has lied Brown. So Imcomortable with that entirely, andthats a I ha t say abut t.

    Simmons declined to speak onhow involved she was in compen-sation discussions. She also de-d t mmt th thrythat gg Wa Strt utsexorbitant pay to reward short-

    term prots could have contrib-

    uted to the poor decision-makingthat precipitated the inancialmtdw.

    She said she thinks her sepa-

    ration rom Goldman is not ad-

    versely aecting the companys

    recruiting on campus, notingthat Gdma has a muh grratshp wth Brw tha shds.

    I you look at the history, thereare a lot o people who have le

    Brown and gone to Goldman,Simmons said. Tats been goingon or a long time and has nothingt d wth m whatsr.

    A LkdI sarh r prslisting Brown as their education

    and Goldman as a current or pastemployer turned up more than00 maths.

    I dont think their recruitinghr has aythg t d wth mat a, atuay, Smms t-ued. Tey recruit everywhere,ad th thgs that (Gd-ma) says abut Brw studtsis they like Brown students or thesame reason other companies likeBrw studts: Ty td t tbe cookie-cutter. Tat means theycan walk into an organization andthey can think or themselves andadd value because they have not

    had the traditional educationalprogram in which they have beenpass arrs.

    Simmons still serves on theboard o exas Instruments. She

    dd t say whthr sh pas tcontinue ater her presidency,citing Securities and ExchangeCommission insider tradingpolicy. Simmons joined exasInstruments board in 1999. She

    also served on Pzers board rom7 t 2007.

    She credited her service on thethr bards wth stg mrurag hr.

    Im essentially a pretty shy,pretty retiring person verymuch an introvert, she said.I would say the one thing thatboards have enabled me to do is tobe a little bit bolder than probablyI wud ha b.

    ctiu mg 1Simmons does not regret board position

    ctiu mg 1

  • 8/3/2019 October 11, 2011 issue

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    Sports uesday 5he Brown Daily eralduesday, ctober 11, 2011

    Cant Vltai | Ab Prman

    Fatnity evil | ehan Mitra, Brndan Hainlin and Hctor Ramir

    Lgic Puzzls | Aidn schor

    C O M I C s

    But the igers responded with ascore o their own less than ve

    minutes later on a penalty kick, and

    the teams entered halime knot-td at -.

    Te igers took a 2-1 lead aerth brak a urthd ga.Princetons Matt Sanner sent anaerial pass into the box, orcing

    Bears keeper Sam Kernan-Schloss t stay hm th mdd th ga t prt a atpatdhadd sht. But th bdg bawent through trafc untouched,

    and the unintentional shot woundup in the net past Kernan-Schlossast-gasp d.

    But with the pressure mountingand time running short, .J. Popo-

    lizio 12 headed home a clutch goalr th Bars th 2d mut,tying the game at two goals apiece.Nthr tam was ab t rtin the closing minutes, sending the

    gam t rtm.Te memory o coming away

    wss thr ast tw rtmmatchups was resh in the playersminds, and McDu said the squad

    learned rom its previous mistakesto come away with the win againstPrt.

    With that loss against Colum-ba, w ddt apprah th r-tm w, h sad. T tam hasreally come together and oundts dtty ad gtt bak t thdeensive basics that tradition-ay Brw ms sr has babout. Now, when we head into

    overtime or a game in general, thebak s dt that w aget the job done, and that will giveur s a ha t w.

    Te deense was unrelenting

    in extra time, and just 1:23 intothe overtime period, Popolizioscored the golden goal with hishead on a set piece. On a ree kickrom outside the 18-yard box, Co-

    captain aylor Gorman 12 oatedthe ball into a crowd o players andth 5-t-7-h Ppz agaoutleapt his deender and drove theba hm t sa th try. T

    score marked Popolizios eighth oth sas, ad hs urth gam-winning goal o the year. He wasnamed Ivy League Player o the

    Week or his recent strong per-rma.

    McDu said he was proud o histeammates resiliency to bounce

    back rom a goal down to clinchth rtm w.

    Its a veteran team, so the guyskept their composure very well, hesaid. I think its the rst time wevecome back rom a decit and wonthe game, so it was just about keep-g stat prssur thm.

    he squad will continue itsqust r a Iy Lagu tt whit travels to Cambridge to ace astruggling Harvard team (2-7-1,

    0-2) Saturday at 7 p.m.

    Bears eke out win over Tigers in OTctiu mg 1

    Crss 4-yard ar ODcame up with a big tackle to thwarta aggrss ak put a by thCrusaders. A hard-nosed 16-yard

    run by running back Mark Kachmer13 red up the Brown sideline andst up a 4-yard d ga attmpt,ad ths tm Nra was thmark, tyg th gam at .

    Ater the Crusaders punterredeemed himsel with a picture-

    perect kick, the Bears had theirbaks agast th wa at thr wone-yard line. But aer a rst down

    completion to Lundevall, Kachmerand John Spooney 14 had room to

    ru, ad bth rppd bg gasto enter Holy Cross territory. wice thrd dws, udg th ending with the touchdown to Fay,Newhall-Caballero used his mobil-ty t ud th pass rush ad buytm r hs rrs.

    We had to scramble to make

    some plays, and thats when I thinkKyle Newhall-Caballeros at hisbst, Ests sad. Wh hs ut th pkt ad makg pays wthhs t, hs aways kg dw-

    eld, and the receivers do a great

    jb dg p spts.

    Holy Cross had two more chanc-s t t th gam. A urth-dwpass by aggart was dtd adell incomplete, and then on theCrusaders nal chance o the game,saty Pyt pkd aggart tsa th w.

    It was just embarrassing today,sad Hy Crss Had Cah mGilmore. We made errors thatshouldnt happen in Pop Warner,

    no less in college ootball. Teresno excuse, especially when youre

    payg a gd tam k Brw.Te victory gives the Bears an

    undeeated non-conerence record

    ths sas, wth th tam paygts bst s ag t Harard its Ivy opener. Every game mov-ing orward will be an Ivy League

    contest, starting Saturday when theBears take on Princeton (1-3, 1-0) inBrw Stadum at 2:0 p.m.

    Tat Harard gam was raydevastating, and we eel like they

    got away with one, Lundevall said.Wr td t gt bak t IyLeague play and take it to the i-

    grs.

    ctiu mg 8

    Late touchdown liftsBruno over Holy Cross

    Attntion tudnt groups thi blank pac?

    Yu ad culd h!

    Pric a low a $15For mor inormation, contact

    [email protected]

  • 8/3/2019 October 11, 2011 issue

    6/8

    ditorial & Letter6 he Brown Daily eralduesday, ctober 11, 2011

    L e T T e R TO T H e e D I T O R

    C O R R E C I O N S P O L I C Y

    T Brw Day Hrad s mmttd t prdg th Brw Ursty mmuty wth th mst aurat rmat pssb. Crrts may b

    submttd up t s adar days ar pubat.

    C O M M E N A R Y P O L I C Y

    T dtra s th majrty p th dtra pag bard T Brw Day Hrad. T dtra wpt ds t ssary rt th ws

    T Brw Day Hrad, I. Cums, ttrs ad ms rt th ps thr authrs y.

    L E E R S O H E E D I O R P O L I C Y

    Sd ttrs t [email protected]. Iud a tph umbr wth a ttrs. T Hrad rsrs th rght t dt a ttrs r gth ad arty

    ad at assur th pubat ay ttr. Pas mt ttrs t 250 wrds. Udr spa rumstas wrtrs may rqust aymty, but ttr w

    b prtd th authrs dtty s u kw t th dtrs. Aumts ts w t b prtd.

    A D V E R I S I N G P O L I C Y

    T Brw Day Hrad, I. rsrs th rght t apt r d ay adrtsmt at ts dsrt.

    No more drama in Shakespeare productionsT th edit:

    In your review o Measure or Measure (Sinulproduction measures well, Oct. 7), you quoted, out

    tt, a mmuat btw mys ad T

    Herald reporter that makes it seem as though I meanmy prdut as a ra t Shakspar th Gr.I hold the greatest respect or Shakespeare on the Greenad dd am th sta thr a prdut. Im

    disappointed in Te Heralds decision to publish materialthat was included in my email as part o an explanation owhy I did not wish to answer what I saw as gossipy ques-ts uratd t th thms th pay ad, hagd s, t mt ssary tt rdr t y a

    mag qut ppst rm that th ma as wrt-t, ad mauatur a trrsy whr sts.

    rcca Maxfld 13

    eDITORIAL CARTOON by sam rosenfeld

    Goodn, mab that th wa to mak dciion in th dark.

    Pridnt Ruth simmon

    s preSidenCy on p 3.

    e D I T O R I A L

    We cannot wait or increased unding levels to be in place beorestabshg a s r grwth, pas th Rhd Isad Pubrast Authrty ts rst-r stratg pa, whh t rasd Marh. T dumt bd ts s ad rak ts dsus-s was just datr a audab sh tward a g-trmapprah t trasprtat dpmt Rhd Isad. W m-mend RIPAs eorts to take an in-depth look at transportation needsad hw trasprtat rastrutur a rat pprtuts reconomic growth, promote greater social inclusivity and improvequaty Rhd Isad.

    Te Providence Journal reported that more than 100 RhodeIslanders joined a nation-wide rally Sept. 20 in support o publictrasprtat, r whh a -thrd dra udg ut has bsuggested. For RIPA, which is 21 percent ederally unded and

    acing a $4.6 million decit this year, the impact o the proposeduts wud b sr. But as RIPA trrsay apprd

    sr rduts t s ts udg gap at th d ast mth,t tud t push rward wth stratgs amd at hagg thutur trasprtat Rhd Isad.

    Troughout the past year, RIPA has conducted a Core ConnectorStudy aimed at developing, rening and adopting a streetcar systemas a locally preerred alternative in Providence. RIPA encourageddagu ad pss ts prss, suryg th pub, mmu-nicating updates online and presenting in open orums beore nallyprpsg a strtar systm just r a wk ag.

    Dspt th $26 m stmt, th strtar prjt s -pected to require, we support RIPAs proposed streetcar system andt just baus t wud b partuary w-sutd t trasprtgstudents rom College Hill. A streetcar system might appear to be

    a apprprat uury g RIPAs budgt rs, but uturmprmt rqurs urrt stmt. O y ds k tthe revitalization success in Portland, Ore., to see the potential o

    prjts k ths t prmt grwth. W mtd th dsps-

    abty trasprtat ur Spt. 22 dtra ad mata thattrasprtat rastrutur s a rta prrty r Rhd Isadsdpmt.

    While we are excited about what streetcars could do or Providence,w ar as k t rmmbr that th prpsd strtar systm sjust a sma part a majr s r mprg trasprtat Rhode Island. Assuring accessible transportation or people o allincome levels, or example, is a pressing issue that requires continuedmmtmt. A strtar systm a s t ugh.

    We applaud RIPA or documenting the impact o transportationservices, reaching out to users to identiy their needs and advocatingor changes streetcar included to support a stronger RhodeIsland. We also maintain that transportation can be a vehicle not

    y r grwth, but as r prmtg sa just. W k r-ward t a Rhd Isad whr a strtar systm braths w t dwtw Prd ad t a Rhd Isad whr s

    barred rom educational or job opportunities because o inadequatetrasprtat.

    editorials ar writtn by T hralds ditorial pag board. Snd commnts @bh.c.

    qUOTe OF THe DAy

    RIPTA has right ideas fortransportations future

    A art Frdays Hrad (WPCs rtz prgram, Ot. 7) rrty statd that Otaa Waa 2s a Wm Pr Cusr. Sh s a Cmmuty Assstat ad a rmr WPC. T art as statd thatWallace said she wanted the WPC program to merge with the Minority Peer Counselor program. In act,

    Waa sad sh thught th WPC prgram shud adpt a prgrammat md smar t th usd byth MPC prgram. T Hrad rgrts th rrrs.

    C O R R e C T I O N

    Ltts, [email protected]

    the brown daily herald

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  • 8/3/2019 October 11, 2011 issue

    7/8

    pinions 7he Brown Daily eralduesday, ctober 11, 2011

    Trwg th shaks -ampushusg a b a r. N mr atyabut th spg pattrs yur ra-dmy std rmmat, mr ua-ud r drs wh yu ar just trygt tak a shwr, mr uwatd p-sur t th mpusry Brty Spars sp-g parts thrw by that gr yurr. But ths dram a quky tur t aghtmar yur -ampus abd mswth a adrd r adady wh maks yur

    msrab. Sm ths adrds rmh a b ud rght th UrstysAuary Husg wbst, a prbm thata b sd by a jt rt rm bth stu-dts ad th Auary Husg f ts.

    T f pty ds rspsb-ty r th apartmts std ad th d-duas marktg thm ad as suh atb hd autab r dpts that arth rsut ass sad thrugh th wb-st. But th mr prs adrds th Brw stg sr ds thm a ar authtty ad rdbty. Studts ard t assum ad udrstadabys that th adrtsmts th stgsr ar mr trustwrthy tha ths thr wbsts, suh as Cragsst, whs us-

    rs kw that thy w ha t sparat thwhat rm th ha wh kg r thrhumb paa.

    W a kw th strs adrds ask-g r ada dpsts r a a sudd

    mspag th mmry ard wth th p-turs ths y Vtra g dtas t. But thats kay th smp at thatths happs thrugh Cragsst s ught st aarm bs th studts had.But thrugh th ag-d pwr assa-t, ths shud t b th as r Brw-afatd husg. Just th appara th Ursty g th tp- rr th brwsr s ugh t prsuad studts

    that th adrd s gt, as graduatstudt put t. Sady, ths ptats arsmtms uudd.

    ak th as a uamd graduatstudt wh ud a urshd apart-mt prt r a trata studtk hrs. Wh sh arrd, th adadyhad rtd hr bd t sm s, tghr that thrs a arpt th rm whaskd hw ths prbm shud b rsd.w wks atr, I ud mys hpg sadgraduat studt hau th g rdu bdup th stars wh th prty ab-bdd

    adady rusd t m a gr. T thrrgratr brk dw. Ad th shwrdra bam ggd. A sh hard rm

    th adady was a dag s. Whth studt td hr adady that sh wat-

    d ut th as a th -mth tspd t, th adady t y adhr a sw bad ams, but as td hrthat sh wud drag hr t urt.

    It a ud ha b prtd. Whsh tatd th graduat studt awyrad Auary Husg, t turd ut thatth adady had m t thr attt b-r. But s d a fa m-pat, thr was thg thy ud d. T

    gg studts t rprt a bad -prs t th Auary Husg f,thr baus th tm mmtmt rut ar urthr saat th -t wth thr adrds, s usab. Itsurs that thr studts wak t thsam trap wh thy shud t ha t.Wh rprtd, th adrd a a u-s rm th stg sr Brw U-rsty rsrs th rght t dy pamt ad/r rm rm ts husg sray stg(s) by ay ddua r mpa-y r ay ras whh t dms suft,

    th trms ad dts rad.But thr ar thr, ss rt-ts

    ways whh studts ud shar thr

    adrd prs. Tr s th pssb-ty a tstma that ud appar t t

    th adrds am th wbst wtha dsamr that ths rt th studtsprs, t abs Brw rm ay -ga abty r th smp thumbs up rthumbs dw t dat apprat rdsappra. prtt suh a mmuty-dbak systm rm utsd spammg,th pssbty t shar s prsud b rstrtd t studts wth a Brwma addrss. T argumt that a pubrum ud prd rarus studtswth a p patrm t sadr a ad-rd s a mprtat , but t ky at a.Ts wh ar uwg t mak th rtt a fa mpat a prbaby tb bthrd t d s fusy thr. It w

    rtay bt th may upstadg ad-rds Prd, ad wh tats arrqurd t prd rrs t sur aapartmt, why shud w t pt thsam adrds?

    O urs, aways has t rsaut ad us mm ss br -trg ay typ trat, but a dbaksystm ud mak th Auary Husgwbst mr wrthy th Brw sa appra that ufay hrs r t. A-tr a, ks a hus rm h, ptmayb wh ts Haw.

    suann enrink Gs i a matr tudntin Amrican tudi rom th Nthr-

    land. sh i happ with hr landlad andcan b rachd at

    [email protected].

    Thumbs down for lousy landlords

    Happy batd Cumbus Day. Or, as wa t hr at Brw, Fa Wkd.

    As many students know, in 2009 the ac-ulty voted to change the name o the holidayweekend to avoid celebrating a man who

    was responsible or the deaths o count-less Native Americans. Despite the act thatColumbus Day began with the eorts oItalian-Americans to celebrate their heritage,th Ursty t t wud b bst t adsutg ay at ay st.

    But why stp wth Cumbus Day?Tr ar s may thgs hr that mghtpssby d sm. Why t ramrythg?

    Fr startrs, th Ursty shud stpaptg ash as paymt at dg has,th bkstr ad dg mahs. Oth s majr bs ssud by th FdraRsr, thm atur th as sa wrs. Baus th k ad thdm ud as b wd as s, thUrsty shud t apt s.

    Athr s Ursty s th ss budg, whh s urrtyamd hr amus drput SdyFrak 42. H ratd th mprtg dyas-ty that brught Gry Gs dka ad Jag-rmstr quur t Amra ad datd$00 m t th Urstys aaad ud. Fr ths wh b that a-

    h sumpt s mmra, th am

    that budg ud b trmy s.Athr atrusy s budg

    s that th Frh ad Hspa studsdpartmts, Rhambau Hus. Brwhas sra studts Brtsh dst, ad

    Ja-Baptst Rhambau ught agastth Brtsh th Amra Rut.W at rsk dg ay rmGrat Brta just t mmmrat thudg ths utry.

    Ad th thr s th am th U-rsty ts. Brw s amd ar Nh-as Brw, a Prd mrhat wh

    was d th sa trad. Baus ths ts t sary, th Ursty shudsk a mmdat am hag. Prhapst ud rtur t ts rga am, thCg th Egsh Cy RhdIsad ad Prd Patats. Tatwud k grat a tba urm.

    Tr s, urs, a atrat. Rath-r tha hagg ry am, w ud a-pt hstry as t happd ad attmpt t

    ar rm th aurs ad atrts ur

    past.Smpy hagg th am sm-

    thg t ad s s mr sutgtha kpg th sam am ad prmt-g a dagu abut th bdy hstry

    ths utry. I hagg Cumbus Day tFa Wkd, r amp, th Urstysms t thk that t a ras th past.Tr s a atttud that th w am ur thr-day wkd w smhw hath wuds Nat Amras wh su-rd baus Cumbus. T truth sthat th hrrb thgs that Cumbus dd

    ha arady happd. Ty ar rrrs-b, ad t s dsrsptu t assrt thata smp am hag w aat pasttragds.

    Dt gt m wrg: Tr s a sstty wth whh ssus sary adzat shud b dat. W shudt, as a Harard ratrty dd ast yar,thrw a Cqustabrs ad Naajs par-ty t brat th sd Mday O-

    tbr. Athugh Brws party pars

    ud us a w rsh das I adCHEM 060 tw arady w shudt stp t rty mkg a sstsubjt.

    I b that hdays k Cumbus

    Day prst a uqu pprtuty t ds-uss bth th gd ad th bad aspts ur hstry. It s pssb t rspt th h-day whh hrs a uragus prrad -dsrr th Wstr wrdwh as rgzg that Cumbusmmttd hrrb ats that ra ths Htr ad Sta.

    Tr ar rtay ths wh w b -dd that I mtd Cumbus a partay pst ght. But I wudrspd that th bst way t ar rmth past s t t gr t ad hag tham t mt th appra mdr-daypta rrtss. Rathr w must a-pt what has happd, am t rt-ay wthut shyg away rm th grydtas ad w r t aw suh aatrty t happ aga.

    Or w a kp dg what w ar d-g. I that as, studts w graduatrm th Cg th Egsh Cy Rhd Isad ad Prd Pata-ts wthut r sttg ys th a Grg Washgt, wthut kwgwhr thr aa ad ms rm adwthut kwg why thy ha th s-d Mday Otbr ry yar.

    Garrt Johnon 14 i a nurocincconcntrator rom Boxord, Ma. who

    will gladl chang hi nam

    i it ofnd ou.

    Lets rename everything

    Thr i, o cour, an altrnativ. Rathr than changing

    vr nam, w could accpt hitor a it happnd

    and attmpt to larn rom th ailur

    and atrociti in our pat.

    som o th landlord rom hll can b ound right on

    th Univrit Auxiliar Houing wbit, a glitch that

    can b countrd b a joint fort rom both tudnt

    and th wbit itl.

    By GARReT JOHNsONopinions Columnist

    By sUzANNe eNzeRINKopinions Columnist

  • 8/3/2019 October 11, 2011 issue

    8/8

    DailyHerald B

    Sports uesdayuesday, ctober 11, 2011

    B sam wickham

    SportS StaffWriter

    Te womens soccer team deeatedPrt r th rst tm years Saturday aer back-to-backgoals erased an early decit. Te

    grs (--, 0--0 Iy) had rtwice as many shots on goal asthe Bears (7-3-1, 2-1-0) but onlybrahd Brus bak .

    Maddie Wiener 14 and CaptainSarah Hebert-Seropian 12 eachscored their second goals o the

    sas wth a 2-mut prdto claim the lead in the rst hal.Star pay rm tr baks D-aa Ohrt ad Jaa Pr 2kept the Princeton attack at bayr th rst th gam, ad sdgoalkeeping rom MC Barrett 14

    prtd a gr mbak.I was excited that we came

    bak ar gg up a ary ga,sad Had Cah Ph P. Ithught t was a grat rt thrst hal to score two and be up 2-1at halime, and I really thoughtdeensively we hung together inthat wh sd ha.

    We did the little things that

    mattered to come out with thew, Hbrt-Srpa sad. Tswas a bg w, ad I thk w ara thrd.

    T grs aptazd thrrst pprtuty th gam justour minutes aer the openingwhistle. Brown keeper Amber Bled-soe 14 was orced to make a divingsave o o a driven shot, but herparry ell to the eet o Princeton

    leading scorer Jen Hoy, who slottedhome the rebound to give her teamth ary -0 adatag.

    But Bruno responded and oundan answer only eight minutes later.

    Aer a oul just inside the Bearshal, Ohrt hit the resulting reekk ut wd t wgr Marybth

    Lesbirel 12. Lesbirel hit the ball onthe volley into the middle, whereWiener rst-timed the cross into

    th rght rr th t r thquazr.

    Bruno kept attacking andsathd th ad just 2 mutslater, again through the play o Wie-ner. Te pacey orward earned a

    paty kk ar sh bat hr d-ender and was dragged down in

    th b. Hbrt-Srpa stppdup ad pad th sht th -ter over the keepers head to put

    Bru ahad.We had great movement up

    top, Hebert-Seropian said. Tatwas good or us, to have the lead

    th rst ha r .Dspt s mr shts rm

    Prt th rmadr thperiod, the Bears maintained their2-1 advantage heading into hal-

    tm.Te igers got o to a roaring

    start once again in the second hal ,applying constant pressure to theBears back line. But Bruno held

    ast and withstood a rantic six-minute period that included our

    corner kicks and three attempts on

    goal. Brunos deensive unit heldthe igers or the remainder o thegam, dspt bg utsht 20-.

    I thught ur gakprs ddth jb aga, P sad. AdI thught th wh bak ur was as they have been all year phe-ma.

    Bruno will ace Francis MarionUniversity (3-9-1) tomorrow at 4

    p.m. at Sts Fd. T Barswill look to carry their momentuminto the seasons nal stretch as theyhas th Iy Lagu tt.

    We denitely want to be at thetop, Hebert-Seropian said. All

    wins in the next games thatswhat were aiming or, nothingwr.

    Bears defeat Tigers,

    move to 2-1 in Ivy

    B James BLum

    SportS StaffWriter

    Te cross country teams traveled toth Nw Egad Champshpsin Boston Saturday with squadscomposed o younger and less-ex-perienced competitors. Te decisionallowed the teams to simultaneouslyrst thr strgst rurs whgauging the progress o de velopingathts.

    In our sport, we try to ocus onth trag th rst part thseason, and racing oen takes awayrom that, said Mitchell Baker,head coach o the womens crossutry tam.

    It was ray abut gttg -perience and skill development,

    said im Springeld, head coach

    th ms squad.

    Te women nished 24th in a

    eld o 39 teams and were led by

    Abigail Jones 15, who nished the-kmtr ra muts,20 sds.

    I think that the training that

    Coach Baker has been implement-ing is really starting to show and

    pay o, Jones said. We did re-ay w rprstg th up-ad-mg rurs.

    Elizabeth Ryan 13 nished sec-ond or Brown in 19:36 and aylorWilliams 15 captured the third spot th tam wth a tm 20:0.

    I was not expecting to be com-ptt as a tam, Bakr sad. Alot o those teams were runningthr bst athts.

    In his rst race o the year, ColinSaag 4 d th m t a 5th-

    place nish in a eld o 43 teams

    wth a tm 26: r th ght-kmtr ra.

    Savage was ollowed nine sec-

    onds later by Ethan Hickey 12.Benjamin Stephenson 13 nishedthrd r Brw 26:24.

    I thought they executed their

    game plan pretty well, Springeldsaid o his top three nishers. Teyra tgthr as a pak mst thway and climbed through the eld.

    Te squads will host the Rothen-berg Run Friday at their homecourse in East Greenwich. Accord-ing to both coaches, more runnerswill compete than did Saturday, butsm th tp rurs w kyrg th ra.

    Tis is a lot o our teams last

    chance to race, Baker said. I hopewe can do well, especially at the

    hm mt.

    Top runners rest during Fall Weekend

    W. SoCCer

    B ethaN mccOy

    SportSeditor

    With the game tied at 13 in theurth quartr, -apta quartr-bak Ky Nwha-Cabar .5orchestrated an 11-play, 99-yardtuhdw dr t ad th Barspast Holy Cross 20-13 Saturday. Tedrive started at the Bears own one-yard line with 9:06 le on the clockand ended when Newhall-Caballeroud wd rr Jah Fay 2 th bak th d z r a-yard sr.

    Te team played really hard,and we were resilient, said wide re-ceiver elle Lundevall 13. Tings

    ddt aways g ur way, but ts aabout resiliency and toughness, andthats something our team has. Tatswhat ga us th w t sh thatgam.

    Browns (3-1, 0-1 Ivy) deense

    was staunch all day and playedptay w th rd z, wthut -apta dstackle Kyle Rettig 12. Te unit con-tad th Crusadrs (2-) whhad scored over 30 points in each

    o their last three games to asingle touchdown. Saety StephenPyt 2 sparhadd th rt,ggg 0 taks ad a trp-tion. Linebackers Matt ODonnell

    2 ad Da Smthwk 2 wrclose behind, with nine stops apiece.

    Newhall-Caballero completed

    25 o 39 passes or 229 yards andtwo scores. He spread the wealth

    among his weapons, but the hothand belonged to Lundevall, who

    haud aths r 0 yardsad a tuhdw.

    Kyle just does a great job oreading coverages, said Head CoachPhil Estes. He just sees the elds w .

    Going into the game, the contesthad the potential or a shoot-out

    between two high-powered aerial

    attacks. But early on, neither sideud mustr muh aythg oense. Aer a scoreless rst quar-ter, Holy Cross drew rst blood on a0-yard d ga, whh th Barsanswered seven minutes later when

    kicker Alex Norocea 14 split the

    uprghts rm 5 yards ut t th sr -.

    On their next possession, theCrusadrs marhd dw th dbut wr aga hd by Brws d-ense inside the 20 and had to settler athr d ga.

    he Crusaders 6-3 lead wasshort-lived. On the ensuing kick-o, returner A.J. Cruz 13 looked

    to be wrapped up but was able to

    slip out o a mass o white jerseysand cut upeld all the way to the

    Hy Crss 42-yard . Wth justover two minutes le in the hal,

    Newhall-Caballero made quickwork o the short eld. A pair o

    rst-down completions to Lunde-vall and Jimmy Saros 12 moved theba t th Crusadrs 4-yard .Newhall-Caballero then ound Lun-da r a thrd tm th dror the touchdown, as the juniorreceiver was able to keep one oot

    patd buds wh dg thau th ath.

    I looked back and (Newhall-

    Caballero) was scrambling, so Igot into the end zone just tryingto get open, Lundevall said. Te

    ds rgd hm ad me open, so he just put the ball intomy hads.

    Te score put the momentum inBrowns court as Bruno took a 10-6ad t th kr rms.

    Holy Cross retook the lead mid-way through the third quarter. Aergaining a rst down on a ourth-

    down conversion in Brown territory,the Crusaders quarterback Ryan

    aggart ound Gerald Mistretta overthe middle or a nine-yard touch-

    down, giving his team a 13-10 lead.w, th Bars kd prmd

    to either tie the game or take thelead, but they could not put anypts th bard.

    Aer an encouraging drive, Bru-no could not convert on ourth-and-one rom the Holy Cross nine-yardline, and Brown turned the ball overon downs. On their next possession,th Bars ad t aptaz whthe team was given a rst-and-goalrom inside the Holy Cross ve-yard line aer the Crusaders punterdrppd t hs k t ath a wsnap and was ruled down. But aera sty as start paty ad twincompletions, Norocea missed a

    26-yard d ga attmpt.But on its next turn with the ball,

    the oense made good on its chanc-es. Bruno took over on the Holy

    Late drive clinches win over Holy CrossFooTbALL

    Brian Ballwg Photograph

    Jonah Fay 12 hauled in the winning catch to beat Holy Cro 20-13 on saturday.

    J schwimmr / Hrald

    Maddie Weiner 14 contributed one goal in the Bear 2-1 victory over Princeton.

    ctiu g 5

    CroSS CoUNTrY