2 2 - Tuesday, December 3, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com (1ic Adcan Oddu 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ANDREW WEINER KIRBY VOIGTMAN Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-41e-4115 ext. 1252 734-418-4115 eat. 1241 anweiner@michigandaily.com kvoigtman@michigandailyeom GROOVIN' - Prof. looks at water in new way Uo Becker is a professor of earth and environmental sci- ences. He started teaching at the University in 2002, and his research focuses on mineral sur- face chemistry, nanoscience and computational mineralogy. What got you interested in science,andwhy didyouchoose to teach at the University? I was always interested in science since I was little, even before elementary school. I started teaching here in 2002 when they had an interesting opening. I'm from Germany, and I was looking for jobs world- wide, but this seemed to be an interesting opportunity and a good school. This is a depart- ment where I could do what I wanted to do. I'm in a relatively small field, and I had people to collaborate with which also got me interested in applying here. What is your favorite class to teach? Right now I'm teaching Water and the Environment, which asks, how does water behave in the environment, and how do we use water? And then I teach a graduate class on computational technology (whicp deals with) the mechanics of atoms and minerals. It's a more esoteric course, but it also has environ- mental applications, so we apply what we learn to how radioac- tive atoms behave in the envi- ronment. But the class I really like is a 300-level class called Environmental Geochemistry for more advanced undergrads. It's essentially the chemistry of everything in the environment, from the atmosphere to ground- water to 'rivers to natural pro- cesses. - ARIANAASSAF Newsroom 734-48-4115 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Settion sports@mihigandaily.com Display Sales dailydisplay@gmail.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com Lettersto the Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Sectin phoo@michigandaily.com ClassifiedSales elassiied@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com JAMEScOLLER/Daily LSA senior Oliver Hecht performs with Groove on the Diag Monday. CRIME NOTES Outside the law Kidding CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES WHERE: Law Quad WHEN: Sunday at 4:05 p.m. WHAT: A small exterior window was found broken, University Police reported. The damage is estimated to have occured between 4:30 p.m. on Thursday and 3:30 p.m. on Sunday. Mainte- nance was notified. Nothing was found missing. around WHERE: Stadium Gate 9 WHEN: Saturday at about 12:50 p.m. WHAT: University Police reported the arrest of a visi- tor who attempted to strike a child. The child was protected by the parent. Tired Runaway trespasser handbags WHERE: Michigan Union WHERE: University WHEN: Sunday at Golf Course 11:45 a.m. WHEN: Saturday at WHAT: A visitor who had 5:30 p.m. not cooperated with previ- WHAT: University Police ous staff requests was found reported that two purses asleep in a men's bathroom. were taken from a vehicle An officer gave him another parked on the golf course. trespass warning and One was found later in a escorted him away. trash can at a gas station. Design and conservation WHAT: Prof. Robert Grese will give his Roosevelt Professorship lecture on the relationship between conservation and landscape design. WHO: SNRE WHEN: Today at 5 p.m. WHERE: Dana Natural Resources Building Scarcity in China WHAT: Author Damien Ma will discuss the ideas in his book, including how, the impression that China is developing the world's largest economy is the least important aspect of the country. WHO: Center for Chinese Studies WHEN: Today at 5:00 p.m. WHERE: School of Social Work Building, Room 1636 Yiddish movie night WHAT: Students and faculty are invited to a film screening about historical interactions between American and European Jews. WHO: Judaic Studies WHEN: Today at 6 p.m. WHERE: 2022 S. Thayer White House prisoners WHAT: Ken Walsh, the White House correspondent for U.S. News, will discuss various presidents' attempts to break from the isolation of the White House and connect to the nation. WHO: Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library WHEN: Today from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. WHERE: Gerald Ford Library THREE THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW TODAY 1Passengers on a flight thatlanded inPhoenix on Saturday were advised to get tuberculosis shots, ABC15 reported. An airline spokes- man said a passenger had a "medical issue." The passen- ger's status was changed to no-fly. after departure. The Michigan hockey team blew a three- goal lead in Columbus against Ohio State in the third period. But alate goalby senior defenseman Mac Ben- nett saved the win. " FOR MORE, SEE SPORTS, PAGE5 NBC News reported that three people were injured when a heli- copter was forced to make an emergency landing in Ant- arctica yesterday. They are currently being treated by the crew of a second helicop- ter that was flying in tandem. EDITORIALSTAFF Matthew Slovin ManagingEditor mjslovin@michigandaily.com AdamRubenfineManagingNewsEditor arube@michigandaily.com SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Alicia Adamczyk, Katie Burke, Peter Shahin, K.C. 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Winter term (January through Apri)is $115, yearlong (Septemierthrough April)is $195. University affiliates are subject to a reded subscription rate.on-campussubscriptionsfor fallitermare $3.Subscriptionsmust beprepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 6 Investigation discovers speed a factor in deadly train derailing Former medical tech gets 39 years for infecting patients Rail experts say automated safety technology could have prevented crash YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) - A com- muter train that derailed over the weekend, killing four passengers, was hurtling at 82 mph as it entered a30 mph curve, afederal investiga- tor said Monday. But whether the wreck was the result of human error or mechanical trouble was unclear, he said. Rail experts said the tragedy might have been prevented if Met- ro-North Railroad had installed automated crash-avoidance tech- nology that safety authorities have been urging for decades. The locomotive's speed was extracted from the train's two data recorders after the Sunday morn- ing accident, which happened in the Bronx along a bend so sharp that the speed limit drops from 70 mph to 30 mph. Asked why the train was going so fast, National Transportation Safety Board member Earl Weener said: "That's the question we need to answer." Weener would not disclose what the engineer operating the train told investigators, and he said results of drug and alcohol tests were not yet available. Inves- tigators are also examining the engineer's cellphone, apparently to determine whether he was dis- tracted. "When I heard about the speed, Igulped," said Sen. Charles Schum- er, D-N.Y. Engineers may not use cell- phones while on the train, according to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which runs Metro-North. The engineer, William Rock- efeller, was injured and "is totally traumatized by everything that has happened," said Anthony Bot- H,-,,0 talico, executive director of the rail employees union. He said Rockefeller, 46, was cooperating fully with investi- gators. "He's a sincere human being with an impeccable record that I know of. He's diligent and compe- tent," Bottalico said. Rockefeller has been an engineer for about 11 years and a Metro-North employee for about 20, he said. Outside Rockefeller's modest house in Germantown, N.Y., police told reporters that at the request of the family, anyone who trespassed would be arrested. Calls to the home wentunanswered. The NTSB's Weener sketched a scenario that suggested that the train's throttle was let up and the brakes-were fully applied way too late to stave off disaster. He said the throttle went to idle six seconds before the derailed train came to a complete stop - "very late in the game" for a train going that fast - and the brakes were fully engaged five seconds before the train stopped. It takes about a quarter-mile to a half-mile to stop a train going 82 mph,Kevin Thompson,FederalRail- road Administration spokesman. Asked whether the tragedy was the result of human error or faulty brakes, Weener said: "The answer is, at this paint in time, we can't tell. But he said investigators are not aware of any problems with the brakes during the nine stops the train made before the derailment. The wreck came two years before the federal government's deadline for Metro-North and other railroads to install automat- ic-slowdown technology designed to prevent catastrophes caused by human error. Metro-North's parent agency and other railroads hake pressed the government to extend Con- gress' 2015 deadline a few years because of the cost and complex- ity of the Positive Train Control system, which uses GPS, wireless radio and computers to monitor trains and stop them from collid- ing, derailing or going the wrong way. Man reportedly used stolen syringes to infect patients with hepatitis C CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - A traveling medical techni- cian who stole painkillers and infected dozens of patients in multiple states with hepatitis C through tainted syringes was sentenced Monday to 39 years in prison. "I don't blame the families for hating me," David Kwiat- kowski said after hearing about 20 statements from people he infected and their relatives. "I hate myself." Kwiatkowski, 34, was a car- diac technologist in 18 hospi- tals in seven states before being hired at New Hampshire's Exeter Hospital in 2011. He had moved from job to job despite being fired at least four times over allegations of drug use and theft. Since his arrest last year, 46 people have been diagnosed with the same strain of hepatitis C he carries. U.S. Attorney John Kacavas said the sentence "ensures that this serial infector no longer is in a position to do harm to inno- cent and vulnerable;people." Kwiatkowski admitted steal- ing painkillers and replacing them with saline-filled syring- es tainted with his blood. He pleaded guilty in August to 16 federal drug charges. Before he was sentenced, Kwiatkowski stood and faced his victims, saying he was very sorry and that his crimes were caused by an addiction to pain- killers and alcohol. He told investigators he had been steal- ing drugs since at least 2003 and swapping syringes since at least 2008. "There's no excuse for what I've done," he said. "I know the pain and suffering I have caused." Prosecutors asked for a 40-year sentence. Judge Joseph Laplante said he cut the last year as a reminder that some people have the capacity for mercy and compassion. "It's important for you to recognize and remember as you spend the next 39 years in prison to focus on the one year you didn't get and try to devel- op that capacity in yourself," Laplante said. The victims spoke angrily and tearfully of the pain that Kwiatkowski had inflicted by giving them hepatitis C, a blood-borne virus that can cause liver disease and chronic health problems. Authorities say the disease played a role in one woman's death. "You may only be facing drug charges, but make no mistake, you are a serial killer," said Kathleen Murray of Elmira, N.Y., whose mother was infect- ed in Baltimore and was too ill to travel to New Hampshire for the sentencing. Linda Ficken, 71, said she is haunted by the memory of Kwi- atkowski standing at her hospi- tal bedside in Kansas for more than an hour applying pressure to the catheter's entry site in her leg to control bleeding. "On one hand, you were sav- ing my life, and on the other hand, your acts are a death sen- tence for me," Ficken, of Ando- ver, Kan., told him. "Do I thank you for what you did to help me? Do I despise you for what your actions did and will continue to do for the rest of my life? Or do I simply just feel sorry-for you being the pathetic individual you are?" Prosecutors said Kwiatkows- ki deserved 40 years for creat- ing a "national public health crisis," putting a significant number of people at risk and caused substantial physical and emotional harm to a large num- ber of victims. Assistant U.S. Attorney John Farley called Kwiatkowski's actions "exceedingly cal- lous" and "unbelievably cruel" and noted that Kwiatkowski could've .stolen painkillers without exposing his patients to hepatitis C. Defense lawyers argued that a 30-year sentence would better balance the seriousness of the crimes against Kwiatkowski's mental and emotional problems and his addiction to drugs and alcohol, which they said cloud- ed his judgment. "David Kwiatkowski is not a monster," said attorney Bjorn Lange. "He didn't set out to infect himself or anyone else with the hepatitis C virus." In all, 32 patients were infected in New Hampshire, seven in Maryland, six in Kan- sas and one in Pennsylvania. Though prosecutors have not included the Pennsylvania case in their count, a spokeswoman for the Usiversity of Pittsburgh Medical Center has repeatedly said the hospital had one con- firmed case. Kwiatkowski also worked in Michigan, New York, Arizona and Georgia. Two of the 16 charges stem from the case of Eleanor Mur- phy, a Kansas woman who has since died. Authorities say hepa- titis C playeda contributingrole. "You ultimately gave my mother a death sentence," Mur- phy's son, Ronnie, told Kwiat- kowski. Murphy said he would have preferred a life sentence for Kwiatkowski and didn't under- stand how he had been able to continue working after his repeated firings. "His path and my moth- er's path never should have crossed," he said. The judge noted that while Kwiatkowski's lack of a crimi- nal record kept his sentence from going even higher, he said that was only because Kwiat- kowski's employers handled his behavior as personnel matters instead of crimes. And Kacavas said his office has begun work- ing with other agencies to draft policy recommendations to pre- vent future incidents. I V