Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998
Tuesday november 17, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 105
{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } STUDENT LIFE
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
PICS now offers 167 paid internships By Drew Brazer contributor
GRACE JEON:: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR
SPEAR’s “Who Do We Kill” protest campaign began on Monday with a talk by Anthony Ray Hinton.
SPEAR “Who Do We Kill” campaign began this week with exoneree lecture By Claire Lee contributor
Students for Prison Education and Reform launched the newest protest campaign, “Who Do We Kill,” on Monday. The campaign is to protest the death penalty in the United States. The campaign began with a talk by Anthony Ray Hinton, an exoneree who was on death row for 30 years. “I have been through pure
hell,” Hinton said, regarding his experience as a death row inmate. He noted that no one, regardless of race or gender, should ever be on death row for a crime they never committed, and urged for the end of death sentence. “We need to put an end to the death row,” he added. Steffen Seitz ’17, co-organizer of the campaign, said that Hinton’s experience is something that few people hear about and it’s important
for people to understand the torture of living under death row. SPEAR co-president Clarissa Kimmey ’16 said that the first piece of the protest would be this Wednesday, when Texas inmate Raphael Holiday is scheduled to be executed. Kimmey explained that all the students participating in the protests will wear black ribbons around their wrists. SPEAR advocacy co-chair See SPEAR page 3
The Princeton Internships in Civic Service alumni initiative has managed to nearly double its number of opportunities in the past two years to offer 167 internships in the summer of 2016. PICS provided 114 internships in the summer of 2015 and 93 in the summer of 2014. “A lot of hard work went into making this expansion possible,” Chairman of the PICS Board Chuck Freyer ’69 said of the jump to 167 internships for summer 2016. “Our team puts in thousands of hours each year to make opportunities like these happen.” These internships cover a wide range of endeavors in both national and international organizations, Freyer said. Freyer added that PICS has enlarged its arsenal to encompass internships in the fields of journalism, government and the arts. Traditionally, students had the opportunity to work in group advocacy, legal services, the environment, health and social services, community development and education. These new fields were chosen based on demonstrated student interest, and the engagements of the alumni contacted through the expanded PICS outreach efforts, Freyer
said. Prior to expansion, PICS had been known as the Class of 1969 Community Service Fund, and was composed almost entirely of Class of 1969 members who had founded it, Freyer explained. The first step to program expansion required a reorganization of the PICS board, he said. “We needed to develop involvement with a greater number of alumni classes,” Freyer said. The program’s name was then changed to Princeton Internships in Civic Service in 2007 as the board began reaching out to other classes to join and support the program, Freyer said. The board then networked with alumni through groups such as Princeton regional associations and partner classes. As a result of this effort to engage alumni support, PICS now has eight different alumni classes serving on the program board, spanning from the class of 1967 to the class of 2006, Freyer noted. Likewise, PICS currently has five different classes serving as program partners — meaning that they help to sponsor one or more interns. Freyer also explained that the Community Service Fund partnered with the Pace Center for Civic Engagement to support PICS in May 2010. By partnering with the Pace See PICS page 2
LECTURE
Authors lecture on Medicare, Medicaid history, future By Samvida Venkatesh contributor
The story of Medicare and Medicaid is one in which the public sector has helped to finance the growth and development of the private sector, Wilson school professor Keith Wailoo, co-editor of the new book “Medicare and Medicaid at 50: America’s Entitlement Programs in the Age of Affordable Care,” said in a panel discussion on Monday. The panel discussed the original vision behind Medicare and Medicaid, the momentous transformation events since their initiation and how the two programs are likely to unfold in the future. Wailoo explained that Medicare was initially designed to evade criticisms that had been built up against national healthcare. “So the elderly were identified as a deserving part of the population, out of the workforce and unable to afford healthcare; benefits were defined very narrowly and linked to social security,” he said.
He added that the motivation for Medicaid stemmed from the federal system becoming a limiting factor; the federal government had to negotiate state by state the benefits of the program because the rubrics for benefits were not standardized. Wailoo explained that although it was well defined what would fall under the rubric of Medicaid coverage, Medicaid ended up covering gaps that any national policy had been reluctant to cover over the decades, including HIV/AIDS in the 1980s, children’s health in the 1990s, disability and mental health. Speaking of the challenges faced by Medicare and Medicaid, sociology professor Paul Starr, a contributor to the book, said that there were many elderly who believed that Medicare was “their” program and were not open to the idea of it being expanded to everyone. Wilson school professor Uwe Reinhardt, another contributor to the book, also explained that financial profit amongst private health care See LECTURE page 4
ATAKAN BALTACI :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Professor Keith Wailoo discussed his new book about Medicare and Medicaid in a panel on Monday.
STUDENT LIFE
Candidates for USG elections announced, voting begins next Monday There are 22 candidates in the upcoming USG elections, USG president Ella Cheng ’16 announced in an email to the student body on Monday. Cheng is a former staff writer for the Daily Princetonian. Aleksandra Czulak ’17, Grant Golub ’17 and Simon Wu ’17 are running for USG president. Czulak is cur-
rently the vice president, Golub is the former chief elections manager and Wu is currently the social committee chair. Golub is a former copy editor and staff writer for the ‘Prince.’ Jeremy Burton ’18 and Shobhit Kumar ’18 are the candidates for USG vice president. Burton is currently the executive secretary and Kumar is currently a U-Councilor. Hunter Dong ’17, the current trea-
surer, is running for reelection unopposed. Patrick Flanigan ’18, David Landeta ’19 and Shannon Osaka ’17 are running for academics committee chair, and Lyon Aung ’18 and Class of 2018 senator Rachel Park ’18 are running for social committee chair. Michael Cox ’17, the current campus and community affairs committee chair, is running for reelection unopposed, and Jenny Zhang
’18 is running for University Student Life Committee chair unopposed. Additionally, nine students are running for the position of Class Senator. Current Class of 2017 senators Kishan Bhatt ’17 and Cailin Hong ’17 are running for reelection. Hong is a former design editor for the ‘Prince.’ Current Class of 2018 senator Paul Draper ’18 is also running for the
In Opinion
Today on Campus
Columnist Max Grear explains why we need to shut up and listen instead of injecting our own opinion and guest contributor Trevor Klee questions President Eisgruber’s salary. PAGE 5
6 p.m.: Paleontologist Jack Horner will talk about his research on dinosaur behavior and physiology in a public lecture hosted by the University’s Vanuxem lecture series. McCosh Hall 50.
same position. The other Class of 2018 position will be appointed after the elections since there is only one candidate. Ruby Guo ’19, Wesley Johnson ’19, Chris Kellogg-Peeler ’19, Andrew Ma ’19, Kai Xin Tai ’19 and Sarah Varghese ’19 are running for the two Class of 2019 senator positions. Campaigning began on Monday, and voting will begin on Nov. 23, according to Cheng’s email.
WEATHER
By Daily Princetonian Staff
HIGH
51˚
LOW
40˚
Abundant sunshine. chance of rain: none