Daily
Herald
the Brown
vol. cxlvi, no. 58
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Since 1891
‘Renaissance’ reporter mixes media and medicine Driver gets eight years for death of Schaefer ’13 By Shefali Luthra Senior Staff Writer
Sanjay Gupta is lucky, he says. He has always been good at telling stories. It was a skill that came in handy far more often than many doctors might expect. From writing for the hospital drama “ER” to drafting policy speeches for former President Bill Clinton’s administration to his current job as CNN’s chief medical correspondent, Gupta has frequently found himself bridging the gap between medicine and media. But it is a gap easier to bridge than most people think, Gupta told a packed Salomon 101 last night. Both in medicine and the media, you have to do a lot of reading, he said. You can “improve the quality of people’s lives.” You need to maintain your credibility. And you need to know and understand the people you work for — whether they make up your audience or your patients. Once upon a time, Gupta said, doctors were “renaissance folks”
Rachel Kaplan / Herald
CNN reporter Sanjay Gupta told stories of his career in Salomon 101 yesterday.
— along with medicine, they were knowledgeable about politics, culture and writing. “Nowadays, things have become so hyper-specialized,” Gupta said. Gupta’s own journey to reporting
was the result of a “strange confluence of events,” he said. As a student in the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor’s seven-year medical program, Gupta spent his free time writing about medicine and health
care. After graduation, while completing his residency, Gupta worked as a White House Fellow, advising current Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and writing speeches on health care. It was at the White House in 1997 where Gupta met Tom Johnson, CEO of CNN at the time. Johnson wanted to create a medical unit on the news network and asked Gupta if he would help him. But Gupta, who did not quite understand what the job would entail, turned him down. Then, four years later, he ran into Johnson at an airport. Johnson was still interested. And this time, so was Gupta. Since then, Gupta said he has earned the “dubious honor” of being CNN’s most traveled reporter. He has reported on Hurricane Katrina, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and most recently the tsunami in Japan. And with each trip, he said, he
ty-three years had passed, and Brown was a very different place. Kertzer was a professor of social science, anthropology and Italian studies before taking on his current position as provost in 2006. He remains on the faculty — though his duties as provost do not allow him the time for classroom teaching, he said he has continued to serve as a first-year and sophomore adviser. Recently, the resurgence of the debate about allowing ROTC back on campus has brought about renewed discussion of Kertzer’s activist past. As a student, he was a leader in the fight to get ROTC off campus.
Daniel Gilcreast, the driver who struck and killed Avi Schaefer ’13 last February, was sentenced to eight years in the Adult Corrections Institution in an emotionally charged hearing yesterday. Magistrate Judge William McAtee handed down a 15-year sentence for Schaefer’s death and a 10-year sentence for injuring Marika Baltscheffsky ’13 in the same incident. Gilcreast will only be required to serve eight years for both sentences. He was also sentenced to pay a $6,000 fine and have his driver’s license suspended upon release from prison. The 24-year-old Gilcreast was arrested Feb. 12, 2010, after striking Schaefer and Baltscheffsky at the intersection of Hope and Thayer streets. A passenger in the vehicle warned Gilcreast of the pedestrians, but he did not stop. Gilcreast was the first person in Rhode Island forced to submit to a blood alcohol test under a law passed in November 2009. Gilcreast’s blood alcohol content was .220, more than three times the legal limit, at the time of the accident. Gilcreast pleaded no contest to two of five counts — driving under the influence, death resulting, as well as driving under the influence, serious injury resulting. The remaining three counts — driving to endanger, death result-
continued on page 2
continued on page 2
continued on page 4
To finance Kertzer reflects as term winds down projects, U. to take on more debt By Mark Raymond Senior Staff Writer
The University’s debt has risen by almost $500 million over the past decade, largely to finance infrastructure improvements on campus, according to Beppie Huidekoper, executive vice president for finance and administration. The accumulation of debt is part of a broader trend in higher education, and Brown plans to borrow more in the coming years, Huidekoper said. In 2000, the University’s debt stood at $115 million. This figure has since increased about six-fold — to $609 million. Administrators in 2000 saw a need to repair infrastructure flaws they viewed as liabilities. The University decided to fund these projects largely through debt, Huidekoper said. Universities and other nonprofits began accumulating large amounts of debt about 40 years ago, when the government began to incentivize borrowing as a means to fund institutional growth. For example, the federal government began to pay debt services on certain
inside
continued on page 6
news....................2-6 CITY & State.....7-11 Sports............12-13 editorial............14 Opinions.............15 ArtS.......................16
When Provost David Kertzer ’69 P’95 P’98 steps down from his post June 30, his five-year term as the University’s second-ranking administrator will draw to a close, though he will remain on the faculty as a professor. He leaves after a term marked by a national financial crisis, a heated tenure debate and a renewed interest in his own activist past as the University revisits its relationship with the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps. As as undergraduate, Kertzer was one of the most vocal members of the Campus Action Council — an activist organization founded in
1966 and a successor to Students for a Democratic Society and other radical student groups — and served on its executive board during his senior year. He actively protested the Vietnam War and fought for civil rights, said Robert Cohen Jr. ’68 P’13, a college friend of Kertzer’s and fellow campus activist. But despite his past, Cohen said he was not surprised Kertzer returned to Brown as a faculty member. “David was a scholarly kind of guy,” he said. When Kertzer came back to the University to teach in 1992, not many people remembered or remarked upon his political past, he said. Twen-
Suspects in two-night robbery spree detained By Lucy Feldman Staff Writer
Five armed robberies occurred on or near Brown’s campus early Tuesday morning and yesterday morning. Two suspects, one male and one female, were identified by victims and arrested yesterday morning. The robberies yesterday occurred within a four-block radius between Brown Street and Hope Street, according to Providence Police Department reports. Around 3:28 a.m. yesterday, three Herald editors — two male juniors
and one female junior — were approached on Charlesfield Street by a male and a female in a light-colored sedan. While the female suspect remained silent, the male got out of the vehicle and asked for directions to the Fish Company, according to statements filed with the Providence police by the victims. Wielding a wrench or other tool, he then demanded money. The students gave him $40 and two cell phones. The male suspect then returned to the vehicle and fled eastbound on continued on page 13
Jarret t on Gender
Stephanie London / Herald Valerie Jarrett, senior adviser to President Obama, spoke of policy, political change and passion during her talk in Salomon 101 yesterday. See full coverage on page 5.
Editors’ note
D&C
This is The Herald’s last issue of the semester. For updates, see browndailyherald.com. Thanks for reading.
Our readers get a diamond — find out why diamonds & coal, 14
weather
By emma wohl Senior staff Writer
By Katrina Phillips Staff Writer
t o d ay
tomorrow
65 / 53
67 / 45