Thursday, October 26th, 2023

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SINCE 1891 1891 SINCE

THE BROWN THE BROWN DAILY DAILYHERALD HERALD VOLUME CLVIII, ISSUE 45

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2023

BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM

WHAT’S INSIDE

METRO

Providence Community Herbarium bridges science, storytelling PAGE 5

ADMISSIONS

Brown doubles undergraduate veteran population since 2019 HERALD FILE PHOTO

Lifespan, Brown announce plans to expand existing affiliation, licensing agreements Lifespan hospital network may be renamed ‘Brown Health’ per outside reports BY RHEA RASQUINHA & RYAN DOHERTY METRO EDITOR & SENIOR STAFF WRITER The Corporation and Lifespan’s Board of Directors voted this month on “a new nonbinding term sheet” to extend and expand the existing partnership between the two institutions, accord-

ing to an Oct. 24 Today@Brown announcement. With the existing affiliation agreement between the University and Lifespan, a hospital system that operates in Rhode Island, expiring at the end of 2023, “this is a natural time for conversations about extending our agreement,” wrote University President Christina Paxson P’19 P’MD’20 and Senior Vice President for Health Affairs and Dean of Medicine and Biological Sciences Mukesh Jain in the announcement. On Oct. 20, WPRI reported that “ad-

PERFORMING ARTS

vanced talks” were underway between the University and Lifespan, including the possibility of renaming the Lifespan health system to “Brown Health.” WPRI later confirmed the rebranding on Oct. 23, though neither party has confirmed the naming. Lifespan is currently the state’s largest hospital system with over 1620 hospitals and clinics, according to its website. Three of these hospitals — Rhode Island, Miriam and Bradley hospitals — are academic teaching hospitals affiliated with the University’s Warren Alpert Medical School,

Paxson and Jain wrote. Many Lifespan physicians in those hospitals are faculty members at the medical school, Paxson and Jain wrote. “Both Brown and Lifespan collectively aspire to ensure robust health care services and biomedical research in Rhode Island and beyond” through means such as “creating the Rhode Island Life Science Hub” and “more well-paying jobs,” Paxson and Jain wrote. The institutions also hope to improve primary and specialty care

BY ISABEL HAHN SENIOR STAFF WRITER The Lindemann Performing Arts Center held its opening celebration Saturday, Oct. 21. The day-long festivities consisted of a block party, a ribbon-cutting ceremony and an inaugural public performance featuring world-renowned violinist Itzhak Perlman. The Lindemann’s celebration this past weekend aimed to spotlight the presence of arts on campus and act as a preview of the creative endeavors the space will be hosting after its opening. Arts of many mediums across College Hill were featured, in-

ACTIVISM

Students, community members rally in support of Palestine PAGE 14

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SEE LIFESPAN PAGE 15

WOMEN’S SOCCER

Lindemann Performing Arts No. 15 women’s soccer comCenter celebrates opening pletes Ivy League four-peat

Festivities include ribbon-cutting ceremony, inaugural public performance

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cluding several a cappella and dance groups, a painting booth organized by Arts for Service, a student community service group and several interactive installations from local artists. “This is more than a building,” said University President Christina Paxson P’19 P’MD’20. “It’s a work that reflects the creativity and expression that will take place inside. … We want this to be a catalyst for making Providence an even more creative destination for the arts.” The Brown Arts Institute staff, governing board and chairs are marking the opening of the Lindemann with “a 14-month celebration of the arts across campus and surrounding communities, not just with one jubilant weekend,” wrote Artistic Direc-

SEE LINDEMANN PAGE 12

Brown will host Ivy tournament to determine guaranteed NCAA bid BY NICHOLAS MILLER SENIOR STAFF WRITER It happened again. The No. 15 Brown women’s soccer team (10-1-2, 6-0 Ivy League) are the champions of the Ivy League — just as they were last season, and the season before that and the season before that, only interrupted by the cancellation of the 2020 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This time it was a 2-1 win over Cornell (4-4-6, 0-4-2 Ivy) in Ithaca Saturday that clinched the title, with forward Brittany Raphino ’23.5, the lynchpin of the Brunonian attack across all four championship seasons, fittingly scoring the first goal and as-

sisting on the second. In a sport where consistency can be hard to come by, Brown, which is currently ranked 15th in the country, has not slipped up even once over thecourse of their four-year reign on top of the conference. In that span, the Bears — led by Head Coach Kia McNeill — have recorded 24 wins, two draws and exactly zero losses in conference play. McNeill feels “extreme gratitude and joy” when thinking about the last four seasons, she wrote in a message to The Herald via Brown Athletics. “We have such a special program, and I wish I could pinpoint exactly what it is, but it is something that you can’t put into words.” “It honestly feels amazing; this feeling never gets old,” midfielder Sheyenne Allen ’23.5 wrote in a mes-

SEE SOCCER PAGE 6

SEE PAGE 8

ARTS & CULTURE

SEE PAGE 12


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