MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018 VOL. CXXXIV NO. 16
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
FOUNDED 1885
CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
M. HOOPS | Quakers win first Ivy title in 11 years COLE JACOBSON Sports Editor
M. BASKETBALL
68 65
PENN HARVARD
It had three scoring runs of double-digit points. It had a firsthalf scoring explosion for the ages. It had the Ivy League’s two co-champions playing a rubber match for the ages in their best game of the year yet. And it has Penn men’s basketball going to March Madness for the first time in 11 years. In an incredibly anticipated Ivy League tournament champion-
Experts, students worry about longterm effects of Penn’s tuition hike
Cost of attendance will exceed $70,000 for first time next academic year YONI GUTENMACHER Staff Reporter
The announcement that Penn’s cost of attendance will increase by 3.8 percent has members of Penn’s community and admissions experts divided on the implications of the recent price hike. Many say that while increasing cost of attendance and tuition is standard practice and likely will not have immediate repercussions, the constant increase in price could result in long term consequences. On March 2, Penn’s Board of Trustees voted to increase under-
graduate tuition by 3.8 percent for the upcoming academic year. The total cost of attendance now will exceed $70,000 for the first time, increasing to $71,200 for the 2018-2019 academic year from the $68,600 for the 2017-2018 academic year. Included in the cost of attendance, tuition will increase from $47,416 to $49,220, room and board from $15,066 to $15,616, and fees from $6,118 to $6,364. The budget for financial aid will also increase by 5.25 percent, with Penn allocating a total of $237 million for financial aid purposes in the upcoming school year. College junior and secretary of SEE TUITION PAGE 2
ship game, both teams more than lived up to the hype in what will go down as an instant classic in Penn basketball history. Using a 24-0 run spanning both halves, the No. 2 Quakers overcame a 13-point first-half deficit and held on by the skin of their teeth to knock off No. 1 Harvard, 68-65, to clinch the conference’s automatic NCAA Tournament spot for the first time since 2007.
“That’s an unreal feeling, and I don’t think I’ve ever experienced anything like that before,” said sophomore forward AJ Brodeur, who finished with 16 points and 10 rebounds. “Being in the Palestra, with such an outstanding and amazing arena, winning an Ivy League Championship and having all these fans here to support you — the whole thing, it’s crazy, and we’re still in awe.”
Though he was held scoreless in the final 20 minutes, the first half was all about Penn senior guard Darnell Foreman, who single-handedly lit the Palestra to life with a superb individual effort in what could’ve been his final collegiate game. Getting to the rim at will time and time again, Foreman scored 11 of Penn’s first 13 points, helping the Quakers to an early 13-10 edge.
Soon after that came a 16-0 run from Harvard (18-13, 12-2 Ivy) over the span of seven minutes, one where the Quakers were as aggressive as usual attacking the rim but couldn’t get anything to fall. Harvard went up 26-13 at that point, but instead of crumbling after the Crimson pulled off their SEE MBB PAGE 12
Amy Wax’s comments spur petition
Petition criticizes her comments on black students MADELEINE NGO Staff Reporter
An online petition has surfaced calling on Penn Law Dean Ted Ruger to take action against Professor Amy Wax for making derogatory comments about black students in a video lecture that surfaced from last fall. In the video, Wax, who has been known to make controversial remarks in the past, said that she had never seen a black student graduate in the top quarter of the Penn Law class. “Here’s a very inconvenient fact Glenn,” Wax said in the lecture titled ‘The Downside to Social Uplift,’ which was part of the series hosted by Brown University professor Glenn Loury. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a black student graduate in the top quarter of the [Penn Law School] class and rarely, rarely in the top half,” Wax said of her belief of the downside of affirmative action in universities. “I can think of one or two stu-
OPINION | Wax-Gelbach Feud is Unbecoming
“For our Law School to be true to its principles, all professors and lecturers, must be free to express their views without intimidation or fear of retribution.” -Daniel Markind PAGE 11
SPORTS | Falling Short of the Title
Playing for a chance to compete in the NCAA Tournament, Penn women’s basketball fell to Princeton 63-34 at the Palestra in the Ivy League Championship BACKPAGE FOLLOW US @DAILYPENN FOR THE LATEST UPDATES ONLINE AT THEDP.COM
CHRISTINE LAM | DESIGN EDITOR
dents who’ve graduated in the top half of my required first year course.” Wax added that she teaches a course of “89 to 95 students” each year, “so I’m going on that because a lot of this data is a closely guarded secret.”
NEWS MBA student’s startup assists the blind with live interpreters PAGE 9
Created by Penn Law students and alumni, the petition demands that Ruger take action against Wax’s “false and deeply offensive claims.” It calls for Ruger to dismiss Wax’s claims, state a course of action, ideally including the
removal of Wax from teaching first year courses and from committees involving the direction of the Law school. The Black Law Student Association declined to comment SEE WAX PAGE 3
NEWS First-gen students divided over legacy admissions PAGE 10
SEND NEWS TIPS TO NEWSTIP@THEDP.COM CONTACT US: 215-422-4640
2 NEWS
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
Penn Police discrimination case faces jury trial Officer says his race factored into his dismissal JAMES MEADOWS Staff Reporter
An ongoing discrimination lawsuit between a former police officer and the University has been allowed to continue to a jury trial, despite Penn’s efforts to dismiss the charges. On Jan. 29, presiding Judge Gene Pratter of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania ruled in favor of some of Joseph Lewis’s claims allowing them to proceed to a jury trial. Pratter allowed half of the claims to move forward and granted summary judgement on the other half for the University. The claims that will be pursued in front of a jury include one of discrimination in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Lewis, a six-year veteran of the force, first sued the University in 2016 for racial discrimination. He claimed his ultimate dismissal from the police force was motivated by his refusal to shave his facial hair, a task that is painful to do when suffering from a skin condition known as Pseudofolliculitis Barbae. The condition predominantly affects black men, including Lewis. Penn Police, like other police organizations, regulates various
aspects of employee appearance including facial hair. Directive 45 requires that beyond mustaches or side-burns, all 120 Penn officers be clean-shaven, unless they are given a special dispensation for a beard due to a special assignment or a medical concern. Lewis claimed that he suffered various “adverse employment actions” due to his PFB including the department’s investigation into his license. Penn Police countered that none of these incidents constituted an ‘adverse employment action’ on their own. “Penn Police is correct that none of these actions on its own is an adverse employment action; however, a reasonable jury could conclude that Penn Police took these actions for discriminatory reasons and, when viewed in the aggregate, that they affected the terms and conditions of Mr. Lewis’s employment,” Pratter wrote in her ruling. “Penn Police only began disciplining Mr. Lewis after he grew a beard and, subsequently, requested a waiver from shaving.” Pratter noted that the best evidence for the link came from the second deposition of Maureen Rush, the vice president of the division of public safety and the superintendant of Penn Police, when she admitted that she began the department’s investigation into Lewis. “Here’s the deal. He had facial hair that I observed, which started
CARSON KAHOE | SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
According to Lewis, other officers aside from supervisors started “making jokes like calling [him] Taliban and things like that.”
off this whole disciplinary process, right,” Rush said during a deposition on Sept. 12, 2017. In August 2015, Lewis requested a medical waiver to the requirement. Lewis’s lawyer, Timothy Creech, told The Daily Pennsylvanian in 2015, that at the time, his record had been exemplary. Officers who request to sport a beard for medical reasons must present an updated certificate every 60 days for authorization and, if approved, must keep their facial hair trimmed to a quarter-inch in length. “He complied with the requirements of the school and that just wasn’t good enough for them,”
Creech said in a recent interview with The Daily Pennsylvanian. “I was well-respected, everyone in the community knew me, I had numerous awards, I was a training officer and elevated amongst my peers,” Lewis said. This new legal decision comes after two years of legal struggles. Lewis alleged that in early January 2016, his senior officers began to pressure him to shave and that his supervisors began to check his beard on a daily basis. “[The harassment] was mainly from the supervisors and the chain of command under Rush’s control; she kind of coordinated that with them,” Lewis said. “But some them also got some of other
officer’s involved, you know, and started making jokes like calling me Taliban and things like that.” The Division of Public Safety said they could not comment on ongoing litigation. At the time, according to court documents, Lewis was the only officer with an approved waiver. However, two other officers had requested it in the past. Craig Everage and Dwight Archer had previously each requested at least one waiver to Directive 45. Eventually, both officers said in separate depositions that they chose to shave their facial hair due to the inconvenience and cost of continually certifying a chronic condition and due to the perceived negative reception from colleagues. According to court documents, Lewis visited Captain Joseph Fischer on Jan. 20 to complain about his commanders mistreating him due to his beard. Fischer accused him of lying about the harassment. About a month later, officers gave Lewis written warnings stemming from three incidents, namely that he failed to get a new driver’s license within 60 days of moving to Delaware, that he improperly responded to an elevator entrapment call, and that he lied about being ordered to “shave or go home” by a commanding officer. Lewis disagreed with the department’s version of these events.
The situation culminated in a meeting on March 11, 2016, after Lewis submitted paperwork requesting medical leave from Mar. 14 to May 2. He was then summoned to a meeting with various superior officers including Rush. “It was kind of like a lose-lose for both of us. You are losing this officer that you have all this time and money that you have invested into, and I am losing my seniority, my salary, they way I feed my family, all at one time.” According to court documents, the details of the meeting are disputed by the two parties. Lewis alleged that at some point, Rush yelled at him and ultimately said, “I’m tired of this, take his gun,” and ordered him to be escorted out of the building. Lewis said he interpreted these events as the end of his employment at Penn and handed in his resignation 11 days later. “We can’t explain their motives,” Creech said. “I can’t answer why they would allow something like this to toss out with all of the experience that Officer Lewis has is inexplicable.” On Nov. 14, 2016, Lewis filed a legal complaint against the department. Various hearings and depositions took place over the following months until June 30, 2017 when the University filed for a summary judgement. Creech said a court date has yet to be set.
Penn launches LGBTQ group for first-generation students
No such student group exists at undergrad level GIANNA FERRARIN Staff Reporter
Currently, no student group exists solely for LGBTQ first-generation, low-income students at Penn. Now, however, one student from the Graduate School of Edu-
cation is trying to change that. First-year GSE student Sarah Simi Cohen is working with Erin Cross, the director of the LGBT Center, to create a group for “FGLI-Q” undergraduates, graduates, and alumni. “There is a clear need to talk more about first-generation, lowincome students, but oftentimes queer students are always left out
of that conversation completely,” Cohen said. “You have to pick and choose which identity is more pertinent at that time.” The group’s creation connects to Cohen’s research thesis, which explores impact of higher education on the wellbeing of firstgeneration low-income “queer students.” Cohen said the group will provide a space for students
to talk about their experiences as well as access networking and job resources. Erin Cross did not respond to request for comment. “Typically, graduate students have forms of capital, like cultural or whatever it is, that undergrads do not,” Cohen said. “And then alums — even further. It’s sadly about the people that you
New College House presents the annual Global Citizenship Forum:
Universities in Cities:
Responsibilities, Opportunities, and Challenges
Saturday, March 17 3:00-4:30 PM •
with reception to follow
New College House Dining Pavilion (3335 Woodland Walk)
Featured Speakers:
Caroline Watts
Director of School and Community Engagement in Penn’s Graduate School of Education
Mark Frazier Lloyd University Archivist and co-author of “Becoming Penn”
Moderator: Cam Grey
SEM
A PER A D MELIOR
Associate Professor, Department of Classical Studies; Faculty Director, New College House
know and the things that you have access to.” Though no such student group exists at the undergraduate level, some student leaders say the financial policies of the 5B, a coalition of Penn’s largest diverse student groups on campus, make their events accessible for FGLI students in the LGBT community. “That’s a huge contrast between 5B groups versus other organizations because we are funded by the various cultural centers while versus other organizations mostly their revenue stream comes from the members themselves,” Chair of the Lambda Alliance Julia Pan, a College junior, said. College freshman Fisher Taylor, the vice chair of finance & development for the Lambda Alliance, said the group is able to secure funding because of the kind of events it organizes. A FGLI student himself, Taylor noted many typical social events can place financial burden on some students who want to attend. He said Lambda Alliance uses funding sources such as the Intercultural Fund and T-Change so that everybody can attend. “We always use the phrase ‘if you can’t afford it, come and talk
to me,’ but coming and talking to people is hard for students in that position,” Taylor said. “I guess that’s why Lambda has decided to upfront provide everybody with subsidization so everybody is on a fair playing field.” Taylor, who is a general board member with the Intercultural Fund and T-Change, added that these funding groups have seen an increase in demand for funds, but that the budget has not changed significantly. “But now, with an increase in interest, I would love to see an increase in the budget on the ICF and T-Change board,” Taylor said. College sophomore Kamal Gill, vice chair of Penn’s Asian Pacific Student Coalition, said that APSC as a 5B group is “more conscious” of serving students with specific financial needs since many of the leaders “already have a marginalized identity.” “Every event should have subsidization for first-generation college students,” Gill said. “If it’s not accessible by first-generation college students then they’re really picking and choosing who gets to participate and who doesn’t get to participate.
TUITION
Laurie Kopp Weingarten, CoFounder and director of One-Stop College Counseling, agreed that Penn’s planned tuition increase is standard practice in the Ivy League, but still expressed worry over the continued rate of tuition hikes. “It looks like in the next five years it’s gonna be over almost $86,000 based on the traditional trajectories of these increases and then in ten years its gonna be over 100,000 - that is really scary,” Weingarten said. Weingarten also said that the yearly increase of tuition by 3 to 4 percent ultimately harms applicants from one set of society-economic backgrounds. According to Weingarten, upper-middle class students who, although eligible for little financial aid, come from families who aren’t capable of paying for full tuition, suffer the most from these changes. “The ‘super rich’ groan about but can afford it - it’s the upper-middle class that really gets squeezed with this stuff,” Weingarten said. “The ones who really don’t think they can afford it but, according to Penn’s formula, they can afford it so they have to eat the entire tuition increase.” Weingarten added that she wants to see tuition increases that simply match the inflation rates. “This is real money to real people. It’s not theoretical. I think the fair thing would be to go up at the cost of inflation,” Weingarten said.
>> FRONT PAGE
Penn First Lyndsi Burcham said she does not expect the increase to have any impact on the first-generation low-income community at Penn right now. According to Burcham, since Penn’s financial aid is needbased, most FGLI students will be expected to pay the same amount next year as they do now. Despite not directly affecting the college price-tag for FGLI students, the tuition increase could have long-term impacts on the FGLI community. “It’s not really gonna hurt current or continuing Penn students but that raising number is probably gonna prevent FGLI high school students from applying to Penn or schools like it.” Brian Taylor, director of the college counseling practice Ivy Coach, said that the yearly tuition increases are standard practice and normal procedures for any business. Noting that the cost of attending Penn has increased by similar rates for the past several years, Taylor said that it is unlikely that next year’s increase will significantly affect students. “The University of Pennsylvania, just like every other highlyselective college, is a business,” Taylor said. “When inflation is 2.8 percent, and there’s a tuition hike of 3.8 percent, that’s just not that consequential.”
THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
NEWS 3
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
Penn profs sign letter against sexual assault policies Two profs denounce ‘believe the victim’ mentality MADELEINE NGO & SOPHIE XI Staff Reporter & Contributing Reporter
Two Penn professors signed a letter openly denouncing victimcentered approaches to university sexual assault and harassment investigations. The letter argues that the “believe the victim” approach endangers the accused’s rights to due process, or fair treatment in determining the person’s guilt. “The undersigned professors and legal experts write regarding the use of investigative ‘victim-centered’ practices that threaten to subvert the objective collection and presentation of evidence in administrative, civil, and criminal sexual assault proceedings,” the letter reads. “These guilt-presuming methods include ‘victim-centered’ investigations, ‘trauma-informed’ theories, and the admonition to always ‘believe the victim.’” The document is sponsored by
Stop Abusive and Violent Environments, also known as SAVE, a Maryland-based group. A total of 137 attorneys and professors signed the letter, including Penn Law School professor David Rudovsky and Alan Charles Kors, an emeritus Penn history professor. “It’s outrageous to me that a charge so serious as rape or assault should be heard in a biased university hearing rather than in a court of law that provides people with protections of fairness and due process,” Kors said. Rudovsky declined to comment. The letter voiced its objection towards the credibility of traumainformed approach in sexual assault investigations, or the “believe the victim” approach. The approach has traditionally been an attempt to encourage victims of sexual assault to step forward. Kors said he believes the University should not have a separate procedure for handling accusations of sexual assault and rape, and that students reporting sexual assault should have to press formal criminal charges.
Kors added that it was “absurd” for universities to handle cases surrounding sexual assault, comparing them to “witchcraft trials.” “As you know, this University believes women,” Kors said. “The Office of Student Conduct is as feminist, as friendly to women, [and] as prepared to believe anything of which a man is accused.” “Of course women are taken serious when they make rape accusations at a place like the University of Pennsylvania,” he continued. Rudovsky is a well-known civil rights and criminal defense attorney. He has been a Senior Fellow at Penn Law and taught several courses concerning criminal law since 1998. Rudovsky won the University’s Lindback Award for Teaching Excellence in 1996. Kors was awarded the National Humanities Medal at the White House in 2005 and served as a Penn faculty member since 1968 before retiring last June. Even without a criminal trial filed through the District Attorney’s office, many universities like Penn have implemented policies expelling students that have been found
guilty by an internal investigation of sexual assault or rape, without formal criminal proceedings. Yet College sophomore Tanya Jain, the Programming Chair of the Penn Association for Gender Equality, said she thinks Penn has a responsibility to expel those found guilty of sexual assault. “A lot of students don’t feel comfortable going through our justice system. I definitely think the University does have a place,” Jain said. “Students should feel like they can rely on the University to make sure they feel safe on campus.” ANGEL FAN | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Some Penn Law professors also Two Penn Law professors worry that alleged assaulters are not disagreed with the letter’s contents. “I would like to switch the dia- being given due process rights or fair treatment in determining guilt logue around ‘believe the victim’ to ‘let’s not shame the victim.’ I think report such incidents. al “imbalance” in which there were that’s really what is meant here,” Finkelstein previously helped high levels of skepticism concernPenn Law professor Claire Finkel- • revise the University’s current sexing the Flexible Leasing Single and Double Rooms •allegations made by victims stein said. ual assault and harassment policies of sexual violence. Leases Amenities and Utilities SheIndividual added that since university• All along with General Counsel Wendy Included “I think there is room for converprocedures are separate from courts White and former Provost Vincent sation about what these processes of law and do not result in prison Price. should look like,” Carr said. “But I sentences, universities have the Penn Law professor Cathy Carr, don’t think anyone should be shutCall responsibility to institute “believe a 1979 Penn Law graduate, said the ting down the conversation, and to a the victim” approaches to combat current University protocols had degree, that’s what the SAVE letter 215.662.0802 stigma and to encourage victims to been instituted to correct a tradition- seems to do.”
Now Leasing!
Email WAX
>> FRONT PAGE
on the petition until they have “achieved victory.” “I do not wish to paint a victim narrative of black students anymore than Amy Wax has already done,” BLSA President and third-year Law student Nick Hall wrote in an email to the Daily Pennsylvanian. “We’ll talk to you once we’ve achieved victory.” The petition also states that Wax’s comments “compromise” the Law school’s assurance that students’ grades are kept private by the Registrar’s office. The students also call for Ruger to answer whether the school collects race-based data and to reveal the data Wax is basing her statements on. Wax continues to stand by the statements she made in the video.
“I would emphasize that student performance is a matter of fact, not opinion. It is what it is,” Wax wrote in an email to The Daily Pennsylvanian. Ruger and Penn Law Associate Dean and Registrar Claire Wallace were not immediately available for comment. Haley Pilgrim, co-president of the Black Graduate and Professional Student Assembly and third-year Ph.D. student in Sociology, signed the petition. Pilgrim said she was “extremely disappointed” when she heard about Wax’s comments. “We know Wax is liable to behave in racist ways and say racist things and the University didn’t do anything about it before,” Pilgrim said. Wax is no stranger to controversy. In August 2017, Wax coauthored an op-ed arguing for
the return to 1950s American cultural norms. In a subsequent interview with the DP, she said Anglo-Protestant cultural norms are superior. After receiving wide spread backlash from students and faculty, Wax spoke at an event sponsored by Penn’s Federalist Society in October to criticize much of the reaction to her editorial. Last month, Wax published another op-ed bashing the lack of “civil discourse” on campus and claiming that Ruger asked her to step aside from her position. A Penn spokesperson said Wax is still a member of Penn Law faculty “Penn Law desperately needs to convince its students that [they are] taking this seriously,” Pilgrim added. “I hope they explicitly speak against the lies and show that there is no proof to them.”
AxisLeasing@AltmanCo.com
Stop in
NOW LEASING
20 South 36th Street
Now Leasing!
ThetoAxis on 36th Street Today learn how to make The AxisUniversity your home away City Call from home! Furnished Rooms • Flexible Leases 215.662.0802 Email• Utilities and Great Amenities AxisLeasing@AltmanCo.com Housekeeping included
Flexible Leasing • Single and Double Rooms • Individual Leases • All Amenities and Utilities Included
Stop in
South 36th (9am Street – 5pm) Monday20 – Saturday 215.662.0802 Today to learn how to make www.universitycityaxis.com The Axis your home away 20 S. 36th Street Philadelphia PA 19104 from home!
OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING FAIR YO U R K E Y TO O F F C A M P U S L I V I N G
THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 2018 11:00am - 2:00pm Hall of Flags – Houston Hall - Schedule viewings with property managers - Schedule tours of apartment communities - Meet with local apartment community reps - Meet with city businesses and vendors like SEPTA, PECO and University departments - Free food, raffle prizes and giveaways!
Open to all Penn students, faculty and staff
Off-Campus Services www.upenn.edu/offcampusservices
4 NEWS
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
Phila. solicitor joins Penn Law as full-time lecturer Sozi Tulante has taught at Penn part time since 2012 KATIE STEELE Contributing Reporter
Philadelphia’s former chief lawyer will start working full time at Penn Law School this month. Sozi Tulante has served for two years as city solicitor, a position that represents the city
in lawsuits and advises every department, agency, and commission of the city on legal matters. Tulante left his post on March 9 and is joining Penn Law as a full-time advisor and lecturer on March 19. Tulante has been a part-time adjunct lecturer in prosecutorial ethics at the law school since 2012, teaching late classes that wouldn’t conflict with his “day
job.” As the Philadelphia Inquirer reported, Tulante led the city in filing lawsuits against prescription opioid manufacturers accused of fueling Philadelphia’s opioid epidemic and Wells Fargo for discriminatory lending practices. He also successfully sued the United States Department of Justice for its decision to withhold funds from Philadelphia because of its “sanctu-
ary city” status. Tulante said that the highstress and hectic environment causes a high turnover rate for city solicitors. “There’s no typical day,” he said. “You’re essentially acting as a lawyer/firefighter on behalf of the city.” Tulante’s path to the city solicitorship — and now to Penn Law — has been a winding one, which is something he hopes to emphasize to students he advises. “I’ve been a prosecutor, I’ve been a defense attorney, and I’ve been solicitor,” Tulante said. “So I’ve worn many hats, and now I hope to use my experiences to educate and empower my students.” Tulante grew up in Philadelphia as a first-generation American and political refugee born in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo), according to a Penn Law press release. After graduating from Harvard Law School in 2001, Tulante worked in private practice before moving to the public sector. “There isn’t any one way to be a public service lawyer,” he said. “And in addition to that, you can do some of this work even if you’re in the private sector.” At Penn, Tulante said he plans to continue teaching his upper-level prosecutorial ethics class, in which he uses current events and cases he finds in the news to “tease out some of the principles of prosecutorial discretion.” The curriculum has examined cases like the State of Florida v. George Zimmerman trial and now U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the
SOZI TULANTE
2016 U.S. elections. Tulante also brings in federal judges, former district attorneys, and defense attorneys to speak to his students. Many of his students remember Tulante fondly and are eager for him to join Penn full time. 2017 School of Arts and Sciences and Penn Law graduate Jamil Favors, Penn Law Class of 2017’s president, took Tulante’s class and said he benefited from Tulante’s personal advice. “While he was the city solicitor, he took the time out of his busy schedule to let me come down to his office and just like kind of run down my life plan with him for about 45 minutes to an hour,” Favors said. “He allowed me to ask a lot of really candid questions about why he made decisions in his career, and he’s very open about his answers. There are not a lot of people who do that.” 2015 Penn Law graduate Sophie Reid said she remembers Tulante as an incredible communicator and his class as “a schedule highlight.” “He was teaching ... to a bunch of pretty cynical, exhausted law students on a Wednesday evening, [which] is an insanely tough gig for even the most agile, experienced faculty member,” Reid said. “Sozi was just an adjunct and
he would just sort of breeze into class and make it look insanely easy.” Tulante expressed enthusiasm about coming to Penn fulltime, and said that he thinks the current political climate in America is an “exciting time” for lawyers. “We’re thinking through… how to divorce the political debates from the legal issues,” Tulante said. “I’m excited because people are more interested in those issues than they ever have been before.” Though Tulante has not served in any official capacity as an advisor at Penn, he’s been mentoring prospective lawyers for years. Geneva Brown, who received a juris doctor degree from Penn Law in 2013, met Tulante in 2006, when she was considering attending law school. “He volunteered to serve as a mentor,” she said. “So in that capacity, even before he was my professor, he shared a lot with me about his job as a lawyer and his path up until that point.” Favors was also president of Penn’s Black Law Student Association and said that a group chat of alumni reacted positively when Tulante announced his move to work at Penn fulltime. “I can speak for a ton of [alumni] that say he’s going to be a great addition to Penn,” Favors said. “For any student that wants to go into law, for any student that’s a first-generation American, for any student that didn’t come from a traditional background, his story is one that motivates and shows that no matter where you come from, these are things you can accomplish.”
34ST.COM
pennlets.com POWERED BY THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
highbrow ego food & drink film feature music arts lowb highbrow ego food & drink film feature music arts lowb highbrow ego food & drink film feature music arts lowb
FILM FILM FILM
ST STST
DO DO DOYOU YOU YOU PAY PAY PAY PER PER PERVIEW? VIEW? VIEW? THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
How How How Penn Penn Penn Students Students Students Watch Watch Watch Movies Movies Movies Borrow Borrow Borrow from from from Library Library Library
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
24.6% 24.6% 24.6%
NEWS 5
Don't Don't Don't Watch Watch Watch Movies Movies Movies
Three Wharton students create seminar on design
Film Film Film polled polled polled you you you totofitond fifind nd out out out how how how you you you are are are getting getting getting your your your Sunday Sunday Sunday afternoon afternoon afternoon BYBY ANTHONY BYANTHONY ANTHONY KHAYKIN KHAYKIN KHAYKIN movie movie movie fixes. fifixes. xes. Here’s Here’s Here’s what what what wewe we learned. learned. learned.
Theaters Theaters Theaters
TT T
Free Free Free Streaming Streaming Streaming hough hough hough wewe all weall know allknow know thethe thewatch watch watch Hugo Hugo Hugo in in theaters. intheaters. theaters. And And And weweweyou you you guess guess guess then then then that that that Penn Penn Penn stustustu47.7% 47.7% 47.7% 16.9% 16.9% 16.9% Paid Paid Paid Online Online Online Services Services Services Internet Internet Internet is isfor is forfor porn porn pornfit fithis tfithis t this mold mold mold of of overworked ofoverworked overworked IvyIvy Ivydents dents dents would would would prefer prefer prefer to to get toget their gettheir their (thanks (thanks (thanks Avenue Avenue Avenue Q),Q), Q), thethe theLeague League League students students students well, well, well, with with with only only only RomCom RomCom RomCom fi x fi online x fi x online online with with with free free free Gao said that she was motivated deals with conceptual understand- meant to be complementary to exThe course is part ofthe bedroom bedroom bedroom is no isisno longer nolonger longer thethe only only onlyabout about about 17% 17% 17% of of Penn ofPenn Penn undergrads undergrads undergrads streaming streaming websites websites websites likelike like SideReel SideReel SideReel to create the course because she streaming ing, while the rest involves app isting course offerings.” WAB’s seminar series 9.2% 9.2% 9.2% area area area being being being ceded ceded ceded to to digital todigital digital territerriterri-watching watching watching movies movies movies at the at at the Rave the Rave Rave evevevand and and Ch131 Ch131 Ch131 rather rather rather than than than pay pay forforfor Vallurupalli added that did not find an outlet for her inter- building and prototyping. pay the deciinsemester. product design at Wharton. services Theprovided course is by offby ered as of tory. tory. tory. ForFor For every every every girlgirl with girlwith with daddy’s daddy’s daddy’seryest ery semester. ery semester. services services provided provided Netfl byNetfl Netfl ix part and ixixand and sion not to offer the seminars for DEENA ELUL Staff Reporter “When Iabout got to the Wharton, Isteguess the Wharton Dean’s Undergradu- credit is intentional, as this creates AmEx, AmEx, AmEx, window window window browsing browsing browsing ononon But But But how how how about about the other theother other steste-Redbox? Redbox? Redbox? 1.5% 1.5% 1.5% Ireotype, was kind ofone disappointed in how Advisory Board (WAB) semiFifth Fifth Fifth Avenue Avenue Avenue hashas been hasbeen been replaced replaced replacedreotype, reotype, thethe one the one that that that says says says all all colall colcol- ate While While While 75% 75% 75% of of usofus watch us watch watch movmovmov- a friendly and low-pressure learnThree Wharton students have little design and business combina- nar series. This program, started ing environment. with with with online online online shopping. shopping. shopping. And And Andlege lege lege students students students areare poor? arepoor? poor? The The The freefree freeiesies online, iesonline, online, nearly nearly nearly 50% 50% 50% paypay pay forforfor created a student-taught seminar tion classes there were,” she said. in 2016, allows Wharton students “We found that if students were FYEs FYEs FYEs everywhere everywhere everywhere have have have virtuvirtuvirtumovement movement movement of of information of information information made made made it. it. I it. hear I I hear hear Horrible Horrible Horrible Bosses Bosses Bosses — —a— Why Why Why dododo you you you gogogo toto the tolearn the the movies? movies? movies? to fill the gap in product design “Designing products is something to teach not-for-credit seminars ona a just curious and wanted to allyally ally been been been rendered rendered rendered useless useless useless (pun (pun (pun possible possible possible by by the by the interweb the interweb interweb makes makes makes new new new release release release on on iTunes on iTunes iTunes — — is — hysis is hyshyscourses at Penn. that a lot of Wharton students had topics that are not currently part for3.1% the sake of learning,6.3% this format 3.1% 3.1% 6.3% 6.3% intended) intended) intended) with with with thethe the existence existence existence ofof a huge interest in same as me, but of the curriculum.terical, terical, terical, butbut is butisis was perfect,” she said. Other Other Other Wharton senior Laura Gaoofand Other seminars Whose Whose Whose recommendations recommendations recommendations do do you doyou take? youtake? take? Wharton juniors Tiff any Chang couldn’t find the school and off ered this semester inthethe multifarious themultifarious multifarious iTunes iTunes iTunes store. store. store. they it it worth itinclude worth worth thethe the Vallurupalli, however, added It'sIt's a It's way a way atoway hang to to hang hang outout with out with friends with friends friends andThings Duong Nguyen were the here at Wharton to 47.7% sat-47.7% troduction to coding, Excel, she25% hopes 25% students will be able 50 50 50 Things Things areare no are no different nodifferent different here here here education 1.51.5 1.5 salads salads salads atand atat that 25% 47.7% Other Other Otherbasics. a It's good a good a good study study study break break break 40.6% 40.6% 40.6% minds behind Design ofRave Mobile blockchain in WAB It'sIt's at at Penn, atPenn, Penn, where where where thethe the Rave Rave gets gets gets isfy that.” 40% Sweetgreen Sweetgreen Sweetgreen to record participation 40% 40% 40 Gao 40 40 added that while the course Products — a seminar consisting Wharton seminars on their transcripts in the It makes A Friend A Friend A Friendsenior Jyothi ValluIt makes It makes youyou feel you feel relaxed feel relaxed relaxed andand happy and happy happy nearly nearly nearly half half half thethe the traffi traffi traffi c for c cforfor thethe the it it it would would would of six 90-minute sessions that in- focuses on mobile app design, her rupalli, aStudies member future. Cinema Cinema Cinema Studies Studies of WAB, said 25% 25% 25% midnight midnight midnight screenings screenings screenings of of blockof blockblockhave have have cost cost cost if if if Required Required Required for for Class for Class Class 30 30 30 Major Majorstudent-taught courses troduce students to the basics of team still wants 25% “to make sure thatMajor these Currently, approximately 50 un26.2% 26.2% 26.2% 25% 25% 25% 25% 25% buster buster buster hitshits hits like like like Twilight Twilight Twilight as Hulu asas Hulu I undergraduIhad had seen seen seen it it it dergraduates from all four schools Professor Professor ortoTAorprovide or TA TA I had designing and prototyping aHulu mo- [they] teach students how to design are Professor meant 20 20 20 does does does the the the day day day after after after thethe the newest newest newest anything in theaters? theaters? theaters? bile app. Topics include “Smart well.” atesStreet the opportunityintoinstudy topics attend the Design of Mobile ProdStreet Street PHOTO FROM LAURA GAO Design: to Rock (Not) Make the To this end, the course curricuthey are passionate about. episode episode episode ofHow of30 of30Rock 30 Rock airs. airs. airs. This This This Ramen Ramen Ramen noonoonoo- ucts seminar, and the instructors 10 10 10 *Students *Students *Students surveyed surveyed surveyed werewere were The seminar, called “Design of Mobile Products,” aims to teach allowed allowed allowed to choose to choose to more choose more moredles Next WhartonConnect” and “Ide- lum seeks to teach students basic “We think there are some conare open tomovies, new arrivals. makes makes makes sense. sense. sense. WeWe We Penn Penn Penn students students students dles dles aren’t aren’t aren’t es es seven es seven seven movies, movies, more more more or or less, or less, less, thanthan onethan option. oneone option. option. ation Processes: Getting Started design cepts that students arethat interested “We’re always looking for any- basic design concepts by having students create their own products 0 0 0 concepts by having them areare are tootoo too busy busy busy procrastinating procrastinating procrastinating that that bad, bad, bad, I inI Ievery every every semester. semester. semester. Simple Simple Simple arithmearithmearithmeWith Your First App.” create their own products. like basic coding or basic Excel or one who’s passionate about this onon Penn onPenn Penn InTouch InTouch InTouch and and and designdesigndesignguess. guess. guess. tictic proves ticproves proves that that that it’sit’s $40 it’s$40 $40 cheaper cheaper cheaper The course, which is not offered “Every single class you’re build- basic design that aren’t necessar- and wants to learn,” Gao said, in- Thursday. “Design is not something that’s inging ing funny funny funny lacrosse lacrosse lacrosse pinnies pinnies pinnies for for for entertainment entertainment entertainment accessible accessible accessible and and and The The The average average average Penn Penn Penn student student student to to watch to watch watch said said said movies movies movies on on Netfl on Netfl ix ixix “We want to make this as ac- far-fetched. It can be for anyone for credit, is taught by Guo, Chang, ing something,” Chang said, add- ily taught in classes,” Vallurupalli viting interested students toNetfl join thethe the clubs clubs clubs we’re we’re we’re involved involved involved in in tointotoinexpensive inexpensive inexpensive to anyone toanyone anyone with ananan(who (who (who is “These anything isisanything anything butbut but average, average, average, than than at at the atthe the Rave, Rave, Rave, and and and anan addianaddiaddi- cessible as possible,” Chang said. and should be for everyone.” and Nguyen. ing that 40topercent of with thewith course said. courses are kindif ofif ifthan the course for its third session this leave leave leave thethe comfort thecomfort comfort of of our ofour our beds beds beds to totoAirPennNet AirPennNet AirPennNet account. account. account. Wouldn’t Wouldn’t Wouldn’tyou you you askask Amy askAmy Amy Gutmann) Gutmann) Gutmann) watchwatchwatch-tional tional tional $20 $20 $20 lessless less onon iTunes oniTunes iTunes (cost (cost (cost of of popcorn ofpopcorn popcorn and and and Mike Mike Mike and and and Ikes Ikes Ikes notnot not included included included in inthese inthese these calculacalculacalculations). tions). tions). The The The lowlow low cost cost cost of of watchofwatchwatchinging seven ingseven seven movies movies movies onon iTunes oniTunes iTunes forforfor >>>> >> Total Total Total amount amount amount of ofof lessless less than than than 3030 bucks 30bucks bucks is worth isisworth worth thethe the money money money spent spent spent in in movie inmovie movie many many many conveniences conveniences conveniences that that that online online online theaters* theaters* theaters* byby Penn byPenn Penn paid paid paid services services services afford afford afford us:us: not us:not not be-bebestudents students students each each each semester semester semester inging ing interrupted interrupted interrupted bybyby incessant incessant incessant Affordable Housing Available: buffering buffering buffering and and and commercials, commercials, commercials, the the the immunity immunity immunity to to computer tocomputer computer viruses viruses viruses 3929 Pine Street 2F (6 BR apt) and and and most most most importantly, importantly, importantly, notnot not havhavhavinging ing to towait towait wait 545454 minutes minutes minutes after after after 3929 Pine Street 3F (6 BR apt) >> Total Total Total amount amount amount of ofof watching watching watching 7272 minutes 72minutes minutes of of a of movie a amovie movie >>>> 3930 Pine Street (6 BR house) money money money spent spent spent watching watching watching onon Megavideo. onMegavideo. Megavideo. 3929 Pine 1F (5 BR online, online, online, ifStreet all if ifall people allpeople people who who whoapt) Not Not Not to to mention, tomention, mention, it’sit’s ait’ssmall a asmall small paid paid for for online for online online services services services price price price to to pay topay pay when when when you you you look look look at 3927 atat paid Pine Street 3F (4 BR apt) Dine-In, Dine-In, Dine-In, Catering Catering Catering &&Delivery &Delivery Delivery used used iTunes* iTunes* iTunes* thethe big thebig picture bigpicture picture —— the —the combined thecombined combined used 3931 Pine Street 1R (4 BR apt) savings savings savings of of the ofthe the 47.7% 47.7% 47.7% of of Penn ofPenn Penn Happy Happy Happy Hour: Hour: Hour: Mon-Fri Mon-Fri Mon-Fri 5-7 5-7 5-7 3927 Pine Street 1R (5 BR apt – available Aug 1) students students students who who who paypay for payfor their fortheir their online online online services services services rather rather rather than than than going going going to to the tothe the Lunch Lunch Lunch Special: Special: Special: Mon-Fri Mon-Fri Mon-Fri $8.95 $8.95 $8.95 movie movie movie theater theater theater is somewhere isissomewhere somewhere be-bebetween tween tween $196,136 $196,136 $196,136 and and and $295,344, $295,344, $295,344, >>>> >> Total Total Total amount amount amount of ofof Early Early Early Bird: Bird: Bird: Sun-Thur Sun-Thur Sun-Thur $10.95 $10.95 $10.95 depending depending depending onon whether onwhether whether they they they useuse use money money money spent spent spent watching watching watching Netfl Netfl Netfl ix ix orixor iTunes, oriTunes, iTunes, respectively. respectively. respectively. online, online, online, if all if ifall people allpeople people who who who Moral Moral Moral of of the ofthe story thestory story is: is: we is:we won't wewon't won't paid paid paid forfor online foronline online services services services judge judge judge if you if ifyou you justjust just stay stay stay in in bed. inbed. bed. used used used Netflix* Netflix* Netflix*
BY BY BYTHE THE THE NUMBERS NUMBERS NUMBERS
34TH STREET Magazine December 1, 2011 34TH STREET Magazine December 1, 2011 34TH STREET Magazine December 1, 2011
$153,701 $153,701 $153,701 Still need a place to live next year?
8 88
$196,136 $196,136 $196,136
$295,344 $295,344 $295,344
• 215.387.8533 • •215.387.8533 PattayaRestaurant.com PattayaRestaurant.com PattayaRestaurant.com 215.387.8533 • University • •University 4006 4006 4006 Chestnut Chestnut Chestnut Street Street Street University City City City
*A*A*A simple simple simple random random random sample sample sample *$12.50/ticket *$12.50/ticket at the atatthe Rave theRave Rave of of 100 of100 100 Penn Penn Penn undergrads undergrads undergrads were were were *$12.50/ticket *$3.99 *$3.99 *$3.99 to rent totorent arent movie a amovie movie on on iTunes oniTunes iTunes surveyed surveyed surveyed to to collect to collect collect data data data about about about www.ConstellarCorporation.com |*$7.99/month Emily@constellarcorporation.com | 215.387.2712 ext. 101 *$7.99/month *$7.99/month on on Netflix onNetflix Netflix their their their film film fiviewing lmviewing viewing habits. habits. habits.
2018 LEVIN FAMILY DEAN’S FORUM
Featuring MUGAMBI JOUET
Wednesday, March 21, 2018 | 4:30 p.m. Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts 3680 Walnut Street, Philadelphia
Mugambi Jouet’s thought-provoking 2017 book, Exceptional America: What Divides Americans From the World and From Each Other, connects social changes and increasing polarization to American exceptionalism—the idea that American society is an exception compared to other nations due to its history, politics, law, religious beliefs, economic attitudes, and race relations. Courtesy of Marco Image Center
Mugambi Jouet
Thomas C. Grey Fellow at Stanford Law School
Jouet has written for Slate, Salon, The New Republic, The Hill, and Le Monde and has been interviewed for National Public Radio. He served as a public defender in Manhattan and a judicial clerk at the U.N. war crimes tribunal for Yugoslavia.
This event is free and open to the public. Doors open at 4:00 p.m. For information and to register, visit: sas.upenn.edu/2018deansforum
6 NEWS
- 7 Bedroom Apartments StudioAd v2- Studio 7 Bedroom Apartments
THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
NEWS 7
Ad v2
Furniture Campus Living
® campus ® campus apartments apartments smart. living.
smart. living.
The only place on campus to get
EVERYTHING YOU NEED campus apartments Ad v2
NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2018!
THE OFF-CAMPUS EXPERIENCE
NOW LEASING p: 215.839.3562
Studio 7 Bedroom Houses & Apartments
FOR FALL 2018!
4043 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104 Mon -Sat 10:30 -7:30pm p: 215.839.3562 LiveCampusApts.com Sun 12 -6pm 4043 Walnut Studio -7 Bedroom Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104
215.839.3518 liveatuca.com
ORDER ONLINE
• Indoor facilities • climate controlled units available
• enclosed loading dock • boxes & packing supplies • Safe and Secure Rooms
HAND-TOSSED, STONE-FIRED PIZZAS ARE JUST THE BEGINNING.
EAT IN, TAKE OUT, & FAST DELIVERY
Located on the corner of 20th & Hamilton, one block south of 20th & Spring Garden, and two blocks north of the parkway.
with 3 months pre-paid rent
BUY A MILLER LITE OR COORS LITE PITCHER AND GAIN AN ENTRY INTO OUR BRACKET. FILL IT OUT AND TURN IT IN BY THURSDAY, MARCH 15TH @ NOON. PRIZES AWARDED TO 3 ENTRIES ON THURSDAY, APRIL 5TH. 3942 Spruce St. | 215.382.8158 www.allegropizza.com
Open 9 AM - 12 AM, Sun - WED Open 9 AM - 4 AM, Thurs - Sat
+
+
$20 To enter Show penncard & Pay in cash for 8% off Big Parties up to 300 People No corking Fee Room Rentals Available
a grain of salt
a slice of lime
and a shot of tequila
Vietnamese Students Assc.
Onda Latina PIPAC
THEFRESHGROCER.COM IS NOW EVEN BETTER THEFRESHGROCER.COM IS NOW EVEN BETTER THEFRESHGROCER.COM IS NOW EVEN BETTER
Humans of UPenn
Penn Dems
Cultural
Fashion Collective
Women's Rowing
Women's Bball Club Swimming Ski Club Men's Club Bball
Alpha Iota Gamma
Women's Volleyball
Sigma Kappa Alpha Kappa Psi
United Minorities Council
DELIVERY To Your Door
DELIVERY To Your INTRODUCING AN EASIER Door WAY TO SHOP FOR GROCERIES AT THEFRESHGROCER.COM DELIVERY INTRODUCING AN EASIER Your Fresh Grocer of Walnut Street | 4001ToWalnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19104 | (215) 222-9200 Door WAY TO SHOPTheFOR GROCERIES AT THEFRESHGROCER.COM OPEN 24 HOURS, 7 DAYS A WEEK! INTRODUCINGThe ANFresh EASIER Grocer of Walnut Street | 4001 Walnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19104 | (215) 222-9200 WAY TO SHOP FOR GROCERIES AT THEFRESHGROCER.COM OPEN 24 HOURS, 7 DAYS A WEEK!
The Fresh Grocer of Walnut Street | 4001 Walnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19104 | (215) 222-9200
OPEN 24 HOURS, 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Men's Bball
Debate Society Kite and Key Gov. & Politics Youth Debate
Shabbatones Bloomers West Philly Swingers
Mask & Wig Penny Loafers
West Philly Tutoring
Soundworks Tap Factory
Penn Sirens
Educational
Performance
College Dean's Advisory Board
Watch all the NCAA Tournament Games on our TV’s
Hillel Globemed
Phi Gamma Nu Sigma Nu
Wharton Europe MUSE WQHS The UA Active Minds Sports Biz Club
(215) 467-1005 • 1122 S. 8th St. www.phillyiztaccihuatl.com
(at Walnut, across from Fresh Grocer)
Kappa Alpha Theta
FREE
take life with:
125 S 40th Street
2018 PENN BRACKET CHALLENGE
Social
Month
www.upenn.edu/computerstore/tradein
Authentic Mexican BYOB
bananaleafphilly.com
2000 Hamilton St., Philadelphia, PA 19130 Tel: (215) 569-0732 Fax: (215 972-7040 www.philastorage.com manager@philastorage.com
SEE WHAT YOUR TRADE IS WORTH!
iztaccihuatl
Chi Omega Alpha Sig 4043 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104 Alpha Phi 4043 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104 Delta Sigma Pi p: 215.839.3562 LiveCampusApts.com p: Nu 215.839.3562 LiveCampusApts.com Phi Gamma 4043 Walnut Philadelphia, PA Tri-Delt 19104 B.Y.O.B. NOStreet, CORK FEES! Zeta Tau Alpha p: 215.839.3562 LiveCampusApts.com 1009 ARCH STREET, 19107 The Punch Bowl Penn Records 215-592-8288 Penn Appetit
NEED STORAGE? One
Save on the latest technology products when you trade in your older devices.
Prices, products, specifications and availability subject to change without notice. Valid PennCard required to determine purchasing eligibility. Printing errors/omissions are subject to our correction without notice. Call or visit the “About Us” portion of our webpage for other store policy & information. All pictured products, company names, brand names, trademarks, and logos are property of their respective owners. 02/22/2018
SUN-THURS 11AM - 10PM | FRI & SAT 11AM - 11PM
Find us on
DEVICE TRADE-IN PROGRAM
LiveCampusApts.com
Join ZESTO PIZZA CLUB Ask for details at the restaurant!
We Deliver! (215)546-7301
Only One 6 Bedroom Apartment Left!
Studio - 7 Bedroom Apartments Apartments
FOR FALL 2018! Springfield Beer Studio - 7 Bedroom Apartments Distributor
2206 Washington Ave.
Studio - 3 Bedroom Apartments Available
THE OFF-CAMPUS EXPERIENCE THE OFF-CAMPUS EXPERIENCE
® for your dorm & apartment smart. living.
20 South 38th Street Next to Sitar
Now Leasing fall 2018
Wharton Energy Group
Aerospace Club
Theater Arts Committee
Opening August 2018
Penn Dance Co. Penn Masala Penn Hype Strictly Funk
lunaonpine.com
MERT
Pennaach
Round 1 {64 groups} Monday, March 12 - Thursday, March 15 Voting opens at 2:00pm on Monday and closes at 11:59pm on Thursday
Round 3 {16 groups} Wednesday, March 21 - Thursday, March 22 Voting opens at 2:00pm on Wednesday and closes at 11:59pm on Thursday
Round 5 {4 groups} Wednesday, March 28 - Thursday, March 29 Voting opens at 2:00pm on Wednesday and closes at 11:59pm on Thursday
Round 2 {32 groups} Monday, March 19 - Tuesday, March 20 Voting opens at 2:00pm on Monday and closes at 5:00pm on Tuesday
Round 4 {8 groups} Monday, March 26 - Tuesday, March 27 Voting opens at 2:00pm on Monday and closes at 11:59pm on Tuesday
Round 6 {2 groups} Monday, April 2 - Tuesday, April 3 Voting opens at 2:00pm on Monday and closes at 5:00pm on Tuesday
Vote for your favorite at: theDP.com/Penn-Bracket-2018 What is the Penn Bracket Challenge? Every year The Daily Pennsylvanian puts 64 student groups against each other in a March-Madness-Style competition.
Winner announced Thursday, April 5th Daily Pennsylvanian
Brand new studio, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom apartments at 40th & Pine.
Keynotes A Capella
Penn Dhamaka V-Day
Wharton Data Analytics
APARTMENTS
4000 Spruce St. (215) 382-1330
Best Margaritas, Burger, and Spanish Fries Since 1978
Make Copa Your Home for...
MARCH MADNESS
“Geeks Who Drink Leads the Pub Trivia Nerd Pack”
Tuesdays at 9pm
Watch on 8 HDTVs
Best Hap py Hour at Penn
Really good beer
Delicious Apps
A GREAT PLACE TO WATCH THE GAME 1511 Locust Street Philadelphia, PA 19102
www.misconducttavern.com
1801 JFK Blvd. Philadelphia, PA 19103
Really good food and an even better
Atmosphere Heated patio
Come for our
atch n w e Com ames o the gr 12 TVs! ou
ONLY ONE 3BR AND 4BR APARTMENTS AVAILABLE ON PINE STREET LIMITED 1BR AND 2BR APARTMENTS STILL AVAILABLE PET FRIENDLY! NO ADDITIONAL CHARGE
Happy Hour
or a late night snack
& drink special
Open daily 11am-2am
CALL TODAY TO SCHEDULE A TOUR! 215.388.4600 | newdecktavern.com| 3408 Sansom St.
apartmentsatpenn.com
215-222-0222
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
Penn invests $5 million in biotech startup
CARL JUNE
Penn Medicine has provided $5 million in seed funding for Tmunity Therapeutics, an emerging biotherapeutics company spearheaded by Penn faculty. This contribution marks the first time the institution has ever invested in a company. Senior Vice President and
Now that the company has completed a successful round of financing, it’s poised to continue developing its landmark gene therapies and strengthen its company building activities. Specifically, it will continue clinical trials as it develops new treatments and staffs its management positions. Carl June, one of Tmunity’s scientific founders who advised the company while also working to maintain a full-time faculty position at the Perelman School of Medicine, led a team that developed a cancer gene therapy that received FDA approval last year. June said the funding would allow them to work on two current clinical trials that also make use of gene editing and a new biotechnological tool called CRISPR. Scientific founder and Penn
professor in cancer gene therapy Bruce Levine said that his research background translated to his work at Tmunity. “What we are is a company based on technology, but also based on experience,” said Levine. Tmunity’s scientific founders and senior faculty members have worked together for at least a decade, researching how to best engineer cells to serve as treatments for diseases like cancers and HIV. Tmunity’s success in the biotech sphere isn’t entirely unique in Philadelphia. Several life science companies have sprung up in recent years, including Spark Therapeutics, which recently developed a drug that cures a rare form of blindness. “Tmunity is an example of a homegrown that is Penn-grown, cell therapy company, and it goes
along with Spark and other companies in the area,” Levine said. “We have a huge amount of intellectual capital here that is being developed into companies.” Tmunity was valued at an estimated $100 million before Series A financing. Mahoney expects that investments could grow by an additional $25 million by June, bringing the company’s valuation near a quarter of a billion dollars. Penn Medicine does not expect to increase its investment in Tmunity, and the University remains cautious in its approach to sponsoring other ventures, said Mahoney. “We have an ongoing conversation with the University on whether we should do more,” Mahoney said, but he also added that Penn Medicine has no current plans to invest in other companies.
OVER 80 APARTMENT LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT UNIVERSITY CITY all within 1-8 blocks of campus
Friday 10 am - 12 am Saturday 11 am - 12 am Sunday 11 am - 10 pm
newstylepizza.com 4060 Chestnut St. • (215) 222-3663 Order Online
S IT Y
H
OU
IT Y
Monday - Thursday 10 am - 11 pm
V
ER
C
newstylepizzeria E YOUR PLAC HERE Hours
#ucityyourplace
I
FERNANDO BONILLA Staff Reporter
Chief Administrative Officer for the University of Pennsylvania Health System Kevin Mahoney explained the University’s multimillion dollar decision. According to Mahoney, the investment “was intended to accelerate our best faculty’s ideas towards commercialization,” and to bring Tmunity’s novel treatments to patients “safely and quickly.” In return for Penn Medicine’s investment, Tmunity will conduct a minimum of $30 million of sponsored research at Penn, Mahoney said. In a financing round this year, Tmunity Therapeutics raised $100 million from a variety of investors, many of which were from the biotech sphere, including the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, Gilead Sciences, Be The Match BioTherapies, and Chinese investor Ping An Ventures.
UN
This is the first time Penn has invested in a company
@DAILYPENN
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM
8 NEWS
SIN
@universitycityhousing
G 215.222.2000
THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE HOME COURT universitycityhousing.com
ucity@uchweb.com
THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
NEWS 9
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
MBA student’s startup provides assistance to blind Yuja Chang started Aira as a side project in 2013 CHAE HAHN Staff Reporter
Wharton MBA student Yuja Chang co-founded a startup that connects blind or low-vision individuals to live-trained professionals to provide hands-free assistance to blind individuals. By wearing camera-equipped glasses, users share what they see with human “visual interpreters” who are connected through a built-in wireless connection. The sighted person then describes the users’ surroundings and guides them through various tasks, however complicated. The service, lauded by The New York Times as a “godsend” for visually impaired people, has received nearly $15 million in venture capital funding since its official launch in 2014. Aira began as a side project between Chang, a 2017 Forbes 30 Under 30 finalist, and Suman Kanuganti in 2013. Together, they used Google Glass technology, which had just been released at the time. With the help of a friend and blind communications professional Matt Brock, the two began
to brainstorm how the technology could be utilized to best serve blind individuals. “There were already a lot of mobile apps that leverage artificial intelligence to support blind people,” Chang said. “So we thought, what if we add a human element to this? Instead of having a computer give directions, actual human beings could assist them.” After trying out the technology with Brock, Chang realized the benefits of having human agents went beyond helping users become more mobile and independent. “Blind individuals have relatively small social circles due to a lack of opportunities to meet new people,” Chang said. “By connecting them to human assistants, we would also be giving them a chance to interact with more people.” He pointed out that a major part of the interactions between the user and the agent involves conversations about their daily lives, even picking up on previous chats. The service currently has more than a thousand users who are assisted by about 60 agents. It is available in three packages: $300 for 750 minutes, $1,000 for 3,000 minutes and $2,500 for 10,000 minutes.
The process of becoming an agent is “pretty rigorous” due to liability issues, according to Chang. It involves a pre-screening, a phone interview, and a three-week training period. Increasing accessibility to the service by partnering with various organizations is currently a priority for Aira, he said. Aira is also partnering with major corporations. It is now an official partner of AT&T, which powers the hotspot network for users. It has also partnered with multiple U.S airports, including in Seattle, San Diego, Boston, and Houston. Recently, Aira partnered with Lyft to make transportation more accessible for visually impaired people. Moving forward, Aira hopes to work with more public entities to support the service for even more blind individuals. Aira also works with schools like Harvard and Stanford to allow users to access the service for free within a given geo-fence. Penn is an organization Aira hopes to work with in the future as well. “We are planning to reach out to the school, perhaps run a pilot and help create a more accessible campus for visually impaired students,” Chang said.
SUDOKUPUZZLE
6 7 3 6 8 4 8 1 5 9 5 4 6 7
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. Solution to Previous Puzzle:
NEWYORKTIMESCROSSWORDPUZZLE Crossword
ACROSS Possesses 4 Grape-Nuts or Apple Jacks 10 Ewe’s offspring 14 Man’s name that’s an investment spelled backward 15 Pumpkin color 16 Revered one 17 Pot’s cover 18 Traditional night for partying 20 Side of a diamond 22 Thomas ___, “Rule, Britannia” composer 23 Bowling target 24 Texas landmark to “remember” 27 Sampled 29 Curved Pillsbury item 33 Misplace 1
ANSWER
© Puzzles provided by sudokusolver.com
9
8 7 5 3 4 9 8 4 8 9 2 9 5 7 1
Skill Level:
The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation JULIO SOSA | SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
620 Eighth30 Avenue, York, N.Y. MBA Student Yuja Chang, a 2017 Frobes UnderNew 30 Finalist, and10018 Siman Kanuganti also hope to For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550 expand the social circles of blind individuals by connecting them to human assistants through Aira For Release Monday, March 12, 2018
Check back for answers in Thursday’s paper! Create and solve your Sudoku puzzles for FREE.
Play Sudoku and win prizes
at:
prizesudoku.com
The Sudoku Source of
Follow us.
“Daily Pennsylvanian”.
H O P I S
A L I C E F N A E Y W E
L I B E R A T E S
O C T A D
B O A R D
L G B T R I G H T S
34 35 39 40 42
43 45
“The Way We ___” “Yeah, right!” Pie ___ mode Detectives Batman portrayer Kilmer Deserve ___-Pacific (geopolitical region) Something to click online Ones calling the plays Teeter-totter Walk with a swagger Every last drop Parade spoiler “Piece of cake” or “easy as pie” 40-hour-a-week work Guadalajara gold Actress Falco of “Nurse Jackie”
67 68 69 70 71
“Hot” Mexican dish Prefix with natal or classical Clarinet or sax Crossed home plate, say One who might follow into a family business
Edited by Will Shortz 1
2
3
4
14
8
@dailypenn
/dailypenn
10
11
12
13
37
38
19 22 25
30
23
26
27 31
28
32
34 40
35 41
36 42
50% 43 44 45 46 Song for a diva 47 3 Early TV comic 47 48 49 known for “Your 50 Show of Shows” 50 51 52 53 53 4 Popular cold and flu 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 medicine 54 61 62 63 64 65 5 “But I heard 55 him exclaim, 58 66 67 68 ___ he drove out of sight …” 69 70 71 61 6 Uncooked 7 One-named 65 Irish singer PUZZLE BY ALAN ARBESFELD 8 Ending with 59 Nabisco snack 66 golden or teen 31 Be confident in 48 Hangs around since 1912 for 32 Fixes, as 9 Makeshift shoelaces 49 Gave some shelter 60 It has phases TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE money under 36 Forcible that are 10 Fleur-de-___ the table removals, as of represented P A S S G A P P Y 11 Highly capable tenants by the starts of 50 More secure A R C H S O I R E E 12 Multiplex 18-, 29-, 4737 Pull hard X T R A P A N E R A offering 51 Give the slip and 61-Across 38 Civic-minded S O B S I S T E R S 13 Mix … and by 52 Actress Kemper group 1-Down A D B A C K N Y T 19 Kingdoms of “Unbreakable 40 Fictional mouse R S A T E A T Kimmy 21 “Anything ___?” 62 Was in front ___ Little Schmidt” E O T U R N R I P E 25 Whimper like a 41 Male deer A N D P A Y A F E E 56 Apple on a desk baby 63 Pickle holder C O R K C O V E N S 44 Mensa stats 26 Like most 57 Pixar’s “Finding O F I A K N E E S Bluetooth ___” 46 Lavish praise on 64 Bullfight cheer D A N Z A E L L I E headsets E D K A L E B L O W 28 Underhanded Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past M A K E T E L O N E puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 29 Tight-lipped A M H U N G O V E R sort Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. P S T A G G E R S 30 Part to play 46
1 2
For answers to today’s puzzle check out Thursday’s paper! T O R I I
K U D U
Podcasts Available at thedp.com, iTunes, and Soundcloud
@dailypenn
9
16
21 24
39
7
18
20
33
DOWN
6
15
17
29
5
No. 0205
10 NEWS
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
Penn First votes not to condemn legacy admissions Another Penn FGLI group voted differently YONI GUTENMACHER Staff Reporter
Penn First, Penn’s largest first-generation, low-income student group voted against signing a letter denouncing legacy-based admissions policies while Seven|Eight, Penn’s FGLI group for Asian Americans made the decision to sign it. Members within both organizations diverge over the merits of the letter and the implications of endorsing it. FGLI organizations at 12 other top-tier universities, including the Harvard Legacy Project, Yale Students Unite Now, Princeton Hidden Minority Council, and the Socioeconomic Diversity Alliance at the University of Chicago signed the letter. Penn First voted on the decision late November, but the letter was only publicly released on Feb. 14. The topic of legacy admissions is particularly relevant at Penn, where 16 percent of undergraduate students are considered legacy students. In 2017, The New York Times
published an interactive data set that revealed 71 percent of Penn students came from families that are financially in the top 20 percent, while only 3.3 percent came from the bottom 20 percent. Penn Admissions Office spokesperson Kathryn Bezella wrote in a written statement that they became aware of the letter when it was released, “but haven’t yet had time to respond given that we’re in the height of our admissions selection process.” The letter entitled “#FullDisclosure Letter” is a google document created by EdMobilizer Coalition that calls for colleges to “reevalute the purpose behind as well as the extent to which legacy preferences play a role in the college admissions process.” “At this time, Penn First does not have a comment to share regarding this topic. We realize this is a contentious topic with various valid points in opposition and support of legacy admissions, and we do not wish to ignore or isolate students that may not share the same views as board members of Penn First,” the organization wrote in an emailed statement to The Daily Pennsylvanian.
College junior and Penn First Secretary Lyndsi Burcham said she supported the decision not to sign and that, to her, it seemed like the wrong move for the FGLI community at Penn to sign the #FullDisclosure letter. Burcham said she had two main concerns with the #FullDisclosure letter. First, she worried that eliminating legacy consideration might lead to an admission system that is completely merit-based, which could potentially be harmful to the admissions of FGLI students. Burcham also mentioned that there is value to legacy policies, even for FGLI students. “Why would I have gone through all of this and made the step to change the position of my family within the socioeconomic ladder if my kids won’t get to benefit from this someday,” Burcham said. “At some point somebody did a lot of work to get your family to where it’s at.” Unlike Penn First, Seven|Eight did sign the letter. College senior David Thai, one of the founders of Seven|Eight, said he decided to sign the letter on behalf of the club because they agree that legacy admissions hurt FGLI applicants.
“Legacy admissions hinders social mobility for students who don’t come from those types of background,” Thai said. As Penn First acknowledged, the issue of legacy admissions and the decision not to sign is a contentious one, and even members of Penn First and others in the FGLI community at Penn support the letter’s written goals and disagree with Penn First’s decision not to sign. College junior Alexandra Tolhurst, an active member of Penn First and of Quest Scholars at Penn, said that while the administration has been working hard to enhance the lifestyles of FGLI students, they need to remove the “final barrier,” referring to legacy admissions. “We go to a school that is supposed to be a bastion in coming out and helping first generation students be the ones to break through — even our president is a first-generation student,” Tolhurst said. “But then the policy is allowing us to not make the number as high as it should be.” College freshman Ricky Ayala, a member of Questbridge Scholars at Penn — a
LULU WANG | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The letter by EdMobilizer Coalition calls for colleges to “reevaluate the purpose” of legacy preferences in the college admissions process.
club of undergraduate students awarded the Questbridge scholarships — said he recognized every point in the letter to be valid. Ayala also said that he wants to see more transparency in the way legacy admissions functions at Penn. “It’s a very interesting dynamic because you have complete polar opposites in terms of admissions, social stand-
ing, and wealth,” Ayala said. “Legacy students have the road paved for them. FGLI students — there’s like a dirt trail or something.” The Atlantic and US News also reported on the letter when it was released, noting the shift of conversation in the admissions world from focusing on affirmative action policies to focusing on legacy-based policies.
Following Parkland shooting, Cinemark restricts bag size
Phila. named one of ‘coolest cities to visit’ by Forbes
Theater chain reserves right to inspect all bags
Forbes highlights the Eagles’ Super Bowl win
ALBERT CHOU Contributing Reporter
ZACHARY CHIN Contributing Reporter
Cinemark movie theaters nationwide have implemented new policies that restrict bag sizes allowed into movie theaters, just one week after the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting on Feb. 14. The policy has been implemented at Penn’s local Cinemark movie theater as well. Cinemark 6 on 40th and Walnut streets now posted a sign on its doors that states this new policy and adds that “the company reserves the right to inspect all bags and packages entering its theaters.” The policy has been enforced since Feb. 22, which states that bags larger than 12”x12”x6” will no longer be permitted into theaters, “in an effort to enhance the safety and security of our guests and employees,” Cinemark announced on its official website. This announcement from
Philadelphia was named one of the ten “places to go now,” according to the recent Forbes’ list of ‘must-see cities’ published on Feb. 26. Forbes compiled a list of ten cities based on reviews from “high-end travel designers.” The list includes Louisville, Philadelphia, Detroit, Savannah, Portland, Columbus, Richmond, Lancaster, Baltimore, and San Antonio. For Philadelphia, the magazine highlights museums, restaurants, the opening of a new Four Seasons hotel as well as the recent Eagles’ Super Bowl win as reasons to visit the city. According to Forbes, the list for 2018 comprises cities that are now being recognized “thanks to grassroots and civic revitalization projects, creative types taking advantage of cheap real estate, and the realization that small can be beautiful.”
YOSEF ROBELE | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Penn’s local Cinemark theater on 40th and Walnut streets posted a sign informing moviegoers of its stricter bag and parcel policies.
Cinemark comes six years after the Cinemark shooting in Aurora, Ohio, which took twelve lives. Penn’s own public safety policies state that visitors and members of the University community may not possess
or use dangerous articles such as “air rifles, pistols, firearms, weapons, ammunition, gunpowder, fireworks, explosives, gasoline and other dangerous articles and substances in University buildings or on University property.”
VARUN SUDUNAGUNTA | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Philadelphia was named alongside Detroit, Portland, and Baltimore based on the reviews from “high-end travel designers.”
The city hasn’t always been known to be ‘cool’. As recent as 2016, Philadelphia was described as “a city that sleeps.” As opposed to cities with the opposing reputation like New York City, Philadelphia has few restaurants open 24-hours, Wawa being a main exception, and is largely a 9 a.m to 5 p.m city, due in part to the small population, as a large majority of workers commute back to their suburban home instead of living in the city.
More recently, Philadelphia was declared the second smoggiest city in the Northeast, by environmental advocacy group PennEnvironment at a press conference in 2017. The city has received positive recognition lately. Earlier this month, Philadelphia was rated the fourth most romantic city in the country by Instacart. Philadelphia has not been in previous Forbes’ lists, but this year the magazine says the city “should be on everyone’s radar.”
Sudden winter storm uproots students’ spring break plans Students were left waiting for trains and flights MADELEINE NGO Staff Reporter
The intense storm that took over Philadelphia and the Northeast region left students leaving for spring break with disrupted trip plans and flight delays. While the worst of the storm had passed by the morning of March 3, many Penn students continued to grapple with the repercussions of the heavy precipitation and unfortunate conditions. Many scrambled to sort out their travel plans while others got stuck on commutes home. Over 540 flights departing from and arriving to Philadelphia International Airport were canceled on that Friday, March 2. All Amtrak service between Washington, D.C. and Boston was also shut down that same day, along with most SEPTA Regional Rail lines, reported The Philadelphia Inquirer. The storm also wreaked havoc across the city as travelers were left stranded at terminals and train stations. Wharton junior Michael Li was about to catch a train to John F. Kennedy International Airport from Penn Station when he received an email from American Airlines that his flight to London
was canceled. Because the airline did not give him any additional details on alternative plans, Li said that he had to stay up all night calling customer service and was put on hold for 50 minutes at one point. While Li was able to reschedule his flight to Sunday morning, he said that the delay disrupted the rest of his travel plans. “I had a connecting flight to Amsterdam before London and was planning on staying there for the weekend,” Li said. “I felt kind of helpless because there was a lack of communication and sometimes the only person you could get a hold of couldn’t even help you.” College juniors Brendan Lilley, Tom Console, and Sam Smallzman planned to fly to Nassau, Bahamas Saturday morning when their flight from New York City was also canceled. Lilley said the airline agency JetBlue notified them of the cancellation while they were on the way to JFK. “They didn’t give us any notification or warning that the flight might get canceled until an hour before,” Console said. While the group had originally planned to arrive in the Bahamas on Saturday with a group of 20 students in their fraternity, Delta Kappa Epsilon, they were left to
find an alternative route to get to their destination. Because their original flight was rescheduled to Tuesday, Lilley, Console, and Smallzman decided to leave for Boston on Saturday morning and then get on a plane to Orlando, Fla., in order to take connecting flight there to the Bahamas the next day. Students traveling internationally were not the only ones affected. Returning home to New Jersey, College sophomore Michelle Lu had planned to take the SEPTA Trenton line late in the afternoon of March 2 when she was told the train was shut down. She waited for another 40 minutes until she realized the line would likely be closed for the entire night and returned to campus. Lu chose to take a bus instead the next morning, allowing her to return home. In hindsight, Lu said that the train delay did not affect the rest of her Spring Break, saying that she “was just going for fun before [her] flight out of Philadelphia,” and calling the delay “a minor inconvenience.” Late Friday afternoon, the Division of Public Safety sent a weather alert informing students that the University was still open and operating on a normal schedule.
JULIO SOSA | SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
On March 2, over 540 domestic and international flights departing from and arriving to Philadelphia International Airport were canceled due to extreme winter weather conditions, leaving some students stranded.
While Friday morning only showed light winds, the weather quickly intensified in the afternoon, reaching sustained winds up to 35 mph and gusts past 60 mph. Conditions also mirrored blizzard-like visibility levels, with two to four inches of wet snow and roads filled with slush. Although most transportation services were shut down across Philadelphia, Boltbus only canceled buses departing from and arriving to Boston, where the nor’easter storm hit particularly hard. Amtrak trains north of Boston continued normal operations. According to the Inquirer, all
the seats in the restaurants at 30th Street Station were filled by travelers, leaving some commuters to sit on the floor on March 2. After learning their trains were canceled, people searching for Ubers were reportedly met with increased surge prices. Power outages and multiple accidents also struck across the city. A tree reportedly fell on a SEPTA bus along the Schuylkill Expressway during the afternoon on March 2, according to NBC. “We see widespread, extensive damage throughout the area,” PECO energy spokeswoman Liz Williamson told the Inquirer.
Ahead of Saturday, Amtrak announced on Twitter that due to “severe weather,” they would resume modified operations, canceling 12 train lines and adjusting the departure station for several trains. Several PHL flights have also been canceled, primarily in the early morning. Most SEPTA trains are expected to resume, with only the West Trenton Line being suspended. Weather forecasters are reporting that Philadelphia residents may have to face the effects of another winter storm starting on Monday night moving into Tuesday.
OPINION
11
The Amy Wax and Jonah Gelbach feud is unbecoming GUEST COLUMN BY PENN LAW SCHOOL ALUMNUS DANIEL MARKIND The intellectual “blood feud” between Penn Law School professors Amy Wax and Jonah Gelbach erupted again, to the detriment of everyone concerned. As a Penn Law alumnus, a member of the Law Alumni Society, and the Reunion Chair for my class, I claim a vested interest in this and strive to keep our class informed. However, I speak entirely for myself. Without rehashing the controversy (which you can review for yourselves), I find the actions of both Professor Wax and Professor Gelbach to be disingenuous and beneath the conduct we should expect from professors at our school. Professor Wax’s initial piece in the Philadelphia Inquirer was
quite provocative. That’s not unusual for law professors. I feel she went beyond the bounds on Feb. 16, however, when without substantiation, she accused Dean of Penn Law Ted Ruger in the Wall Street Journal of asking her to take a leave of absence. She also claimed that Dean Ruger told her that he was getting “pressure” to banish her for her unpopular views. Dean Ruger denied both and said his conversation with Professor Wax was about a routine sabbatical that she was entitled to take. I have never met either professor so I have no stake in that sense. If Amy Wax did misrepresent her private conversations with Dean Ruger, then shame on her. A dean must be able to
JULIO SOSA | SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
have private conversations with professors without these finding their way into the press. Otherwise, we lower ourselves to the same level as our broken political environment. Professor
institution. Professor Gelbach’s article on Friday, Feb. 22 in The Daily Pennsylvanian on Friday marks the second time he has responded to Professor Wax via a personal attack. That is both
All professors and lecturers, especially those without tenure, must be free to express their views without intimidation or fear of retribution.” Wax certainly got press mileage out of her claims. If, and I say if, Professor Wax used those private conversations to score political points and raise her national stature, then this is not conduct befitting our faculty. Regardless of what you may feel about Professor Wax, I find Professor Gelbach’s conduct to be disturbing. He directed the open letter against her that was signed by 33 members of the Penn Law faculty. Reading that open letter was the first time in the nearly 40 years I have been involved with Penn Law that I truly felt embarrassed for the
his choice and, I believe, unacceptable. Back in August, Professor Gelbach had numerous ways to respond to views with which he disagreed that would have been beneficial to all and helpful to the students. He could have written a rebuttal. Better yet, he could have organized a symposium with Professor Wax to publically debate the pluses and minuses of the “bourgeois values” Professor Wax admires. He chose neither course. The language of the open letter, in which all 33 professors stated they “categorically reject Wax’s
claims,” was facile. Professor Gelbach’s actions needlessly split the faculty. Professor Gelbach subsequently wrote a long critique of Professor Wax’s article in Heterodox, but only after organizing the open letter and gaining his own headlines. Professor Gelbach claims that Professor Wax cannot be trusted. He should examine his own actions. For our Law School to be true to its principles, all professors and lecturers, especially those without tenure, must be free to express their views without intimidation or fear of retribution. If Dean Ruger has not made that absolutely clear, he needs to do so. The cause of academic freedom, which I believe to be at the heart of the Law School’s mission, is harmed when a self-appointed professorial constabulary attempts to enforce its own political orthodoxy. Our faculty members can argue with and detest one another, but they must respect each other. Each has been given the honor of joining the faculty at one of the world’s great law schools. Start acting like it. DANIEL B. MARKIND is a partner at the Philadelphia law firm of Weir & Partners LLP and is an alumnus of the Law School.
MONDAY MARCH 12, 2018 VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 16 134th Year of Publication DAVID AKST President REBECCA TAN Executive Editor CHRIS MURACCA Print Director JULIA SCHORR Digital Director HARRY TRUSTMAN Opinion Editor SARAH FORTINSKY Senior News Editor JONATHAN POLLACK Senior Sports Editor LUCY FERRY Senior Design Editor GILLIAN DIEBOLD Design Editor CHRISTINE LAM Design Editor ALANA SHUKOVSKY Design Editor BEN ZHAO Design Editor KELLY HEINZERLING News Editor MADELEINE LAMON News Editor HALEY SUH News Editor MICHEL LIU Assignments Editor COLE JACOBSON Sports Editor THEODOROS PAPAZEKOS Sports Editor YOSEF WEITZMAN Sports Editor
CARTOON
ALISA BHAKTA Copy Editor ALEX GRAVES Director of Web Development BROOKE KRANCER Social Media Editor SAM HOLLAND Senior Photo Editor MONA LEE News Photo Editor CHASE SUTTON Sports Photo Editor CAMILLE RAPAY Video Producer LAUREN SORANTINO Podcasts Producer
DEANNA TAYLOR Business Manager ANDREW FISCHER Innovation Manager DAVID FIGURELLI Analytics Director JOY EKASI-OTU Circulation Manager REMI GOLDEN Marketing Manager
CASSANDRA JOBMAN is a College freshman from Garland, Texas. Her email address is cassiejobman@gmail.com.
What designer threads and Penn Crushes reveal about our desire to be seen THE WALLFLOWER | Seeing and being seen is a staple of the Penn experience If I had a dollar for every Canada Goose, Burberry trench, or Moncler puffer jacket I see at Penn, I could probably buy Amy Gutmann’s blazer collection two times over. Penn students love designer names — the more 0s and French written on the price tag, the better. But I’m not writing today to discuss Penn’s love for luxury — there have already been more than enough memes and DP features thoroughly dissecting this phenomenon. Their choices in attire likely aren’t for warmth, as the first confirmed sighting of Canada Goose was reported in mid-October. They also probably aren’t fashion either, as most of the items are not exceptionally unique in de-
sign (See the HuffPost article, “17 coats that look exactly like Canada Goose parkas”). I believe that many Penn students’ fixation on fashion is due to the simple fact that we know people will be watching. It is SABSing semester-in, semesterout. And there is no other Penn quirk that better attests to the SABS phenomenon than the Penn Crushes page on Facebook. Although the page recently has not been active for unknown reasons, Penn Crushes churned out large volumes of content on a daily basis during its prime. The page features anonymous submissions largely from the undergraduate population — from posts blatantly calling out the attractiveness of
GLORIA YUEN | ILLUSTRATOR
specific students and faculty on a particular day, to exclamations of love for the community-at-large, there has been an endless stream of submissions. I have person-
THIS ISSUE ZOE BRACCIA Deputy Copy Editor GRACE WU Deputy Copy Editor NADIA GOLDMAN Copy Associate SAM MITCHELL Copy Associate FRED LU Copy Associate
Penn and other college campuses? At Penn, the influx of anonymous submissions isn’t just limited to Penn Crushes — a whopping 493 love notes were received for 34th
SUNNY CHEN Copy Associate RYAN DOUGLAS Copy Associate MARGARET BADDING Copy Associate CARSON KAHOE Photo Associate
Many Penn students’ fixation on fashion is due to the simple fact that we know people will be watching.” ally found some of the anonymous contributors to be alarmingly keen, leading me to dread the many mornings I rolled into class wearing free IT T-shirts and mismatched socks. While many anonymous postings are unique to Penn’s community and culture, we are not alone in having an unofficial “crushes” page where undergraduate students submit anonymous professions of love. Just to name a few, Georgetown University, the University of Chicago, the University of Virginia, Duke University, and Cornell University all have relatively active pages of their own that feature similarly provocative content. So why are anonymous crush submission pages so popular at
Street’s Valentine’s Day special, indicating that, despite the apparent end of Penn Crushes, submission opportunities are still actively pursued by Penn students. Other than notable restlessness of the 18 to 22-year-old demographic, the popularity of anonymous crush postings may be due to colleges being enormous institutions with countless people. One may never see passersby again, so such posts become a last-resort mating call. While most propositions on Penn Crushes do not come to fruition, it is a tested method to catch someone’s attention. I also admit that as long as the post is appropriate, it is a nice feeling to receive a tailored crush note every once in a blue moon. Receiving such crushes is remi-
JULIO SOSA Photo Associate
JENNIFER LEE niscent of middle school and high school days, when one may have found surprises in their lockers from secret admirers (or adversaries). Nonetheless, it is understandably frustrating that the posts are anonymous, and so there is really no other way to find out the sender other than the interested party contacting the lucky person directly. But I suppose there is no helping the anonymity of Penn Crushes, as it would be inappropriate to compliment someone’s hair on Locust. While the future of Penn Crushes is unknown at present, what’s for sure is that people at Penn are always watching. I, for sure, will think twice the next time I am tempted to wear my middle school band shirt to morning Econ. JENNIFER LEE is a C ollege sophomore from Fair fax, Va . s t u d y i n g i n t e r n a t i o n a l relations. Her email is leej@ dailypennsylvanian.com.
LIZZY MACHIELSE Photo Associate EVAN BATOV Photo Associate
LETTERS Have your own opinion? Send your letter to the editor or guest column to letters@thedp.com. Unsigned editorials appearing on this page represent the opinion of The Daily Pennsylvanian as determined by the majority of the Editorial Board. All other columns, letters and artwork represent the opinion of their authors and are not necessarily representative of the DP’s position.
12 SPORTS
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
A look at the rest of the action in Penn Athletics Women’s lacrosse stands out with unbeaten mark BREVIN FLEISCHER Associate Sports Editor
Although the men’s and women’s basketball Ivy League Championships may have dominated the Penn athletics landscape this weekend, Penn’s many other teams were also quite productive over spring break in their own right. For instance, the women’s lacrosse team swept its three matches over break, defeating No. 18 Cornell, Drexel, and No. 25 Georgetown. The No. 11 Quakers (6-0, 1-0 Ivy) who were the visitors in all three games, dominated the competition each time, proving emphatically that they will be a force this year, both in the Ivy League and on that national
stage. The men’s lacrosse team was unable to match this success, however. The No. 19 Red and Blue (3-3) had an inconsistent week. Their 11-3 win over Navy was sandwiched between losses to rivals No. 20 Penn State and No. 5 Villanova. As their respective rankings would indicate, both in-state foes were strong opponents, but if the Quakers want to live up to their lofty schedule and to assert themselves nationally, they need to string together multiple victories in a row, something they haven’t been able to do this season. On the diamond, the Penn baseball team demonstrated similar inconsistencies. The Quakers (2-9) were swept by both Wofford and Furman before losing two of three to USC Upstate in South Carolina. In the lone win, junior third base-
man Matt McGeagh was the most productive Quaker with three hits, a walk, and two RBI. Penn softball replicated baseball’s struggles, finishing break with a 1-10 record at the USF Under Armor Invitational in Clearwater, Florida. Faced with strong competition such as Florida State, the Red and Blue were largely unable to halt the high-octane offenses of their opponents, although they did split a two-game series with Niagara. Women’s tennis also exhibited early-season rust, falling to Loyola Marymount, Long Beach State, and No. 2 Pepperdine over the course of the break. The first two losses were tightly contested 3-4 affairs, while the match against juggernaut Pepperdine was a more decisive 1-6 defeat. Meanwhile, men’s tennis had a much more successful break.
The Quakers (8-9) won three of their five contests, defeating UNC Charlotte, Drexel, and UT Arlington. Their two losses came against No. 10 Texas and TCU. Neither the losses nor the wins were very close, as the Red and Blue won by scores of 7-0, 6-1, and 5-2 and lost 0-7 and 1-6. Unfortunately for the Quakers, that success did not carry over to Penn gymnastics, as the Red and Blue finished behind Maryland and Yale on March 2 and behind Temple and Maryland again on March 9. However, the matches resulted in many positive takeaways. For example, the Quakers, against Temple and Maryland, posted a season-best score on the bars and on the vault. On the beam, junior Nicole Swirbalus posted her best score of the year, placing her third in the entire competition.
NICOLE FRIDLING | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
After topping No. 1 Duke, Penn men’s lacrosse and senior attack Kevin McGeary couldn’t keep up the hot streak, going 1-2 over break.
MBB
WBB
burst, Penn (24-8, 12-2) came back with one that was even better. The end of the first half was yet again the Foreman show, with the senior scoring eight points in the final three minutes of the half to give Penn a lead that seemed impossible only minutes prior. Hitting an NBA-range threepointer with only two seconds left, Foreman sent the Palestra into complete mayhem, memorably sprinting into the locker room as soon as the shot fell and sending the Red and Blue into the locker room with a 3432 lead. “[I was] trying to be a leader, just finding some way to spark us, and I take pride in that; that’s one thing that my teammates need from me,” Foreman said. “Walking in this building every day, you wanna be on that wall, you wanna be in the Palestra. You want to have that history, and now that team has it. This team is gonna be remembered.” Coming out of the break, the names changed, but Penn’s dominance remained the same. Led by Brodeur, the Quakers scored the first 11 points of the second half to stretch their lead to a game-high 10 points. But the see-saw would only continue from there, with the Crimson quickly clawing back into things. Trailing 55-45 midway through the half, Ivy League Player of the Year Seth Towns finally began to get going, catalyzing a 13-0 Harvard run to put his team on top yet again. As the passionate Palestra
Whitlatch, and Beth Brzozowski sat out the final few minutes on the bench, wiping tears and consoling each other as the clock wound down to end their careers. “Just disappointment,” Nwokedi said. “And the realization that they were going to be celebrating on our court, is what hit us.” Over their four years, the quartet won two Ivy League championships, the program’s first two ever Big 5 championships, one Ivy League Tournament title — its inaugural last year — and 88 games, including the Quakers’ firstever postseason win at the NIT their freshman year. Ross started every single game in her career and holds Penn’s all-time record for assists, while Nwokedi won Ivy League Player of the Year honors last season and recently became the first and only player in league history
>> BACKPAGE
>> FRONT PAGE
CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
After senior guard Darnel Foreman carried the team with 19 points in the first half, sophomore forward AJ Brodeur helped lead the charge in the final minutes, scoring eight of his 16 points.
crowd began to heat up in the final minutes, though, Penn gave it what it wanted with clutch late play. And as has been the theme all season, it was someone new stepping up when called upon — after Foreman dominated the first half and Brodeur excelled early in the second, Caleb Wood hit back-to-back three-pointers in the final four minutes, giving the Quakers a lead they wouldn’t relinquish the rest of the way. Even playing without Towns, who injured his knee with just over eight minutes left and didn’t see the floor the rest of the way, the Crimson were able
to cut the lead to as little as one point with under a minute left. But unlike last year’s Ivy semifinal loss to Princeton, the Quakers closed out. Ryan Betley hit two clutch free throws, Harvard couldn’t connect from downtown on its last possession, and chaos ensued in the Palestra as players and fans celebrated the school’s first March Madness appearance in 11 years. “Honestly I didn’t even dream about this, I didn’t think we could do it. I drove home last night saying, ‘I gotta get that out of my head, I gotta show some confidence,’” third-
year coach Steve Donahue said. “I didn’t it was possible for us to get to the NCAA Tournament until that horn went off. In a building I grew up in, and watching the kids storm the floor for our guys, it’s magic.” Penn’s next task will be the most difficult the program has seen in a long time: the Quakers will attempt to become the firstever No. 16 seed to take down a No. 1 seed on Thursday, in the form of Kansas (27-7, 13-5 Big 12). But no matter the result of the Quakers’ next attempt at glory, one thing is undeniable — Penn men’s basketball is in the history books.
to record 1,000 points, 1,000 rebounds, and 300 blocks. When Penn’s sharpshooter, Whitlatch, went down with a season-ending knee injury last January, it was Brzozowski who stepped in and played her significant part in the team’s title-winning campaign. “This team is my family,” Ross said. “[Nwokedi]’s an amazing player, [McLaughlin]’s an amazing coach, and I’m just so grateful for this opportunity.” The Quakers stand a strong chance of receiving an invitation to the NIT, though an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament looks far less likely. While Sunday might not have been the final game of their careers, their future lies at the hands of selection committees. McLaughlin remained adamant that this wouldn’t be the last the world saw of Penn this year. “Oh yeah, there will be postseason,” McLaughlin said. “We’ll be in the NIT for sure, and I’d love to see us get two bids in the Ivy again. This team is an NCAA Tournament team. Not so much today, but they are over the course of the season.”
CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
Senior forward Michelle Nwokedi may have played her final game for Penn, unless the Quakers get a postseason bid.
Reeham Sedky wins national title, finishes perfect season SQUASH | Sedky becomes Penn’s first champ since ‘96 WILLIAM SNOW Former Senior Sports Editor
It took her three years, but she finally got the championship she wanted. Penn women’s squash star Reeham Sedky won the CSA Individual National Championship on Sunday, completing a perfect season in which she dropped just two games in 20 matches. To win the championship, Sedky, a junior, defeated Harvard’s Georgina Kennedy — a rematch of last year’s final — in a 3-1 contest that was heated and testy throughout. It didn’t take long for No. 1 Sedky to assert her mark on the match. With her trademark hammer blows and long-winded rallies, Sedky flew out of the gates to run up a 7-1 lead on Kennedy in the first game. By the time Harvard’s star woman from England had recovered, the game was almost out of reach. Sedky finished strong with an 11-5 win in the first game. Kennedy came out stronger in the second to take a quick 6-1 lead, leaving Sedky frustrated as she didn’t get the calls she wanted from the referee. Playing angry, the Seattle native pulled the game
back to 9-7, but her comeback fell short and she lost just her second game of the entire season, 11-8. If the game seemed tense then, it was only about to get worse. Neither player scored a point in the first three minutes of the third game. Two long rallies and a pair of lets — each of which one player angrily contested — meant that the game prolonged as tensions flared. Kennedy was furious at Sedky’s playing style, which rides a fine line between playing the space effectively and interfering with her opponent, denying full access to the ball. With Sedky up 7-3, the referee issued her a warning that she would be penalized for continuing to ride that line. “Her swing and her movement is a little bit unorthodox,” coach Jack Wyant explained, “and if you have a referee that goes by the letter of the law, then she can get herself into trouble. And that’s what she was doing today.” Perhaps unsettled, she fell victim to a quick surge from Kennedy, holding onto a slim 8-7 lead as each player fought for the crucial third game. On the next point, however, Kennedy took a tumble after bumping into Sedky, appearing to roll her ankle in the process. Sedky used it as a turning point to take the next three
points and finish the game, up 2-1 and 11 points away from a national championship. The fourth and final game saw tensions rise high above the center court. Sedky and Kennedy traded points — and barbs — throughout much of the game, until Sedky appeared on the verge of victory after winning five of six points to move up to 9-5. Once again, however, the referee stepped in. Three straight strokes to Kennedy, after ruling Sedky was denying her access to the ball, pulled the game back into contention at 9-8. The following play was piece of vintage Sedky play. She played the space of the court after settling into a rally, sending Kennedy flying all over the floor. Kennedy ultimately crashed into the wall several hits in a row, leaving her unable to recover for one final save. Sedky took the point and the game to 10-8, leaving her one winner away from a championship. When she forced an error out of Kennedy on the ensuing play, she became Penn squash’s first individual national championship since 1996 — the year before she was born. “What she did to win the match was allow her opponent access [to the ball],” Wyant said. “That actually is to her benefit. When
the rallies go longer, it’s better for her, because no one can keep up with her pace. There’s probably 10 people in the whole world who can keep up with her pace.” “I’m extremely happy for Reeham,” Wyant continued. “She has worked so hard — not just her three years here, but her entire life. She has scratched and clawed for everything she’s ever accomplished, and I’m overjoyed for her. I’m indebted to her for everything she’s done.” The road to the final wasn’t easy for Sedky. In the semis, she faced another one of Harvard’s finest and her oldest rival, Sabrina Sobhy. As with their previous meeting this season, the decadelong foes duked it out, but Sedky came out on top after just three games. In the previous round, Sedky had to face her teammate and captain, Melissa Alves. The two had a light-hearted match, featuring a pair of instances in which Alves was gifted a point by the referee, but disagreed with the call and so denied the reward. Their friendly rivalry was also over after just three games. Sedky wasn’t the only member of Penn squash to walk away with some hardware on Sunday. Women’s sophomore Lindsay Stanley won the consolation bracket for
WILLIAM SNOW | FORMER SENIOR SPORTS EDITOR
Losing no matches and only two single games all season, junior Reeham Sedky finished off the best season in school history.
her draw, while men’s sophomore David Yacobucci made it to the final of the Molloy North Division draw and finished runner-up after falling in five games. Men’s senior James Watson also made it to the consolation final of his bracket, though he lost in four games. Senior Marie
Stephan’s women’s consolation final appearance rounded out the Quakers’ representation in championship finals for the weekend. The tournament concluded every player’s season — but for one. Sedky will continue on for one more week to compete at the US Squash National Championships.
THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
SPORTS 13
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018
PHOTO FEATURE
BANNER SEASON: PENN’S HISTORIC WIN
CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
ANANYA CHANDRA | SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
It’s not too late to hop on the bandwagon YOSEF WEITZMAN
ANANYA CHANDRA | SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
For many Penn students, Sunday’s Ivy League Championship was the first Penn men’s basketball game they’ve ever been to. As disappointing as that is, I’m not writing this to shame all the bandwagoners. I’m writing this to welcome everyone aboard. Don’t get me wrong — making it to March Madness is 100 percent the team’s accomplishment, and the team’s accomplishment only. But there’s also no denying the impact of Penn’s student section. From the opening tip until the nets were cut down, we made ourselves heard. The Quakers’ 24-0
run to end the first half and start the second certainly would not have happened on the road. Even coach Steve Donahue agrees. “The fans have an impact on the outcome,” Donahue said after the game. “When [the Palestra]’s like this and it rocks, there’s nothing like it. It was definitely a factor today.” The fans were loud all game and turned the Cathedral of College Basketball into the most hostile “sanctuary” in the nation. Here’s just a few of the best chants and one-liners I heard (and may or may not have said a couple of myself): About Darnell Foreman: “Build that man a statue outside the Palestra.” To Harvard’s Seth Towns who had scholarship offers from multiple Big 10 schools: “Should’ve gone to Michigan.”
“Trust the process.” “Harvard was my safety school.” And what makes all of this even sweeter is that Sunday’s game against Harvard — and Penn’s entire season — was a total team effort. For the first half, senior captain Darnell Foreman couldn’t be stopped. He singlehandedly kept the Quakers in the game with his 19 points. And then how many points did Foreman score in the second half? Zero. But it didn’t matter, because his teammates were there to pick him up. Penn’s super sophomores — AJ Brodeur and Ryan Betley — finished the game with 33 combined points, and when Harvard made one last run to take the lead with just minutes remaining, senior Caleb Wood responded with back-to-back threes to put the Red
and Blue back on top. In a few days, the Red and Blue will play again in March Madness for the first time in over a decade. It’s crazy to think that the last time Penn went dancing occurred before iPhones existed, when George W. Bush was president, and when most of Penn’s current players were still in the second or third grade. Let’s watch our Ivy League school upset a national powerhouse. It could happen: Ivy teams have won five NCAA Tournament games since 2010. This weekend could see a sixth. You won’t want to miss watching Penn men’s basketball now that it’s great again. YOSEF WEITZMAN is a College sophomore from Lower Merion, Pa. and is a sports editor of The Daily Pennsylvanian. He can be reached at weitzman@thedp.com.
OPEN LATE & LATE NITE DELIVERY
Domino’s
TM
SUN-THURS: 10AM - 2AM • FRI-SAT: 10AM - 4AM WE MAKE ORDERING EASY!
CALL DIRECT OR CHOOSE YOUR ONLINE OR MOBILE DEVICE
215-662-1400
4438 Chestnut St.
Smart Phones
Tablets
215-557-0940 401 N. 21st St.
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 2018 VOL. CXXXIV NO. 16
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
W. HOOPS PRINCETON PENN
63 34
W. HOOPS | Quakers fall to Tigers for third time this year
I
n the end, they were second best. Penn women’s basketball lost to Princeton, 63-34, in the Ivy League Tournament championship on Sunday afternoon. The Quakers missed their chance to make it to the NCAA Tournament for a third straight year and join the men in the Big Dance, falling instead to a rampant Princeton team for the third time this season. The Tigers (24-5, 12-2 Ivy) stood with their feet on the Quakers’ throat from the get-go. Penn (21-8, 11-3) scored just three points in the first quarter for
FOUNDED 1885
WILLIAM SNOW Former Senior Sports Editor
their tied-worst ten-minute performance in years — tied, of course, with its fourth quarter at Princeton earlier this season. Senior forward Michelle Nwokedi was the only Penn player to make it on the scoreboard in the opening frame, draining a three from distance four minutes in to make it 8-3. The quarter ended with the Tigers running up 11 more points unanswered. “I think if one or two [shots] fall, then maybe we’d have a different first quarter, we’d feel a little better going into the second quarter. But it just never hap-
pened,” Penn coach Mike McLaughlin said. That trend continued for most of the game. Penn’s next basket came courtesy of a dish from Ivy League Rookie of the Year Eleah Parker to a cutting Tori Crawford two and a half minutes into the second quarter. Senior guard Anna Ross followed that up with a layup of her own soon after, but the margin by then was still 17 points. By the end of the half, the Quakers had found their footing offensively to an extent, but still had found no answers for the tenacious Tigers. Penn never cut
the margin down below 14, heading into the locker room for halftime down 35-16. The underdogs never threatened to mount a comeback. Princeton’s hot shooting and lockdown defense simply made for a deadly concoction that the Quakers had no choice but to drink. It went down like a tough pill, with the Tigers’ supremacy in the league asserted once and for all. Seniors Anna Ross, Michelle Nwokedi, Lauren SEE WBB PAGE 12 CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
No. 16 Quakers to face No. 1 Kansas
Foreman, Penn to go down in history THEODOROS PAPAZEKOS
M. HOOPS | Quakers receive surprisingly low seed after Ivy League tournament victory DANNY CHIARODIT Associate Sports Editor
Bring on the Jayhawks. Just hours after Penn men’s basketball’s 68-65 victory over Harvard in the Ivy League Championship game, the NCAA tournament selection committee announced that the Quakers will be taking on Kansas in the Round of 64. Penn, which received a 16 seed in the Midwest Region, will travel to Wichita, Kansas to take on the oneseeded Jayhawks on Thursday. The Red and Blue, receiving an automatic bid to the tournament, will make their first appearance in the dance since 2007.
ALANA SHUKOVSKY | DESIGN EDITOR
Glory. It isn’t a feeling you get often. Penn men’s basketball won the Ivy League Tournament, securing a ticket to the NCAA tournament for the first time in 11 years. And it was glorious. The Palestra crowd — overwhelmingly in support of the “away” team — erupted with each Penn bucket. I have no idea how the science of this works, but you could literally feel the ghosts of the Cathedral come to life in the game’s final moments. Old-timers always wonder what it would be like if these walls could talk. Today, they did. Those same old-timers drone about how sacrilegious the mere idea of an Ivy Tournament is. Enough of that. Today, the Quakers added enough history to the building to last a lifetime. “This was incredible … I’ve never experienced anything like that in my coaching career. It was just so much fun. I took a moment a couple of times and thought, ‘I can’t believe I’m in this. This is incredible — this environment, this high-level play, it was just amazing,” coach Steve Donahue said. As amazing as the paranormal activity was, the physical activity on the court matched it every bit. It all started with Darnell Foreman. When Penn went down by 13 early in the first half, it was Fore-
FOLLOW US @DAILYPENN FOR THE LATEST UPDATES ONLINE AT THEDP.COM
man who had an answer. The senior scored 19 points on seven field goal attempts, missing only one shot in the entire half. Foreman’s performance spawned a 24-0 Penn run that eventually won the Quakers the game. Foreman supplied one of the big, legendary moments as a part of that run. Down by one, in the dying moments of the first half, Foreman drilled an NBA-range three-pointer to beat the buzzer. While being double-teamed. His reaction was to sprint down the runway to the locker room Bo Jackson style. The senior guard is the most knowledgeable of the history of the program among the current crop of Quakers. He has waited four years to be a part of a winning team, and when it finally came together, he knew exactly what to do. In a recreation of one of the Palestra’s most iconic moments, Mike Jordan sitting on the hoop after the victory, Foreman climbed onto the rim and waved the liberated net over his head. “Especially being a guard, you look at the past history of guards that played, the great guards — the Ibby Jaabers, the Jerome Allens, even going back to ‘Booney’ Salters — you want to be those guys,” Foreman said. “You want to be on the wall, you want to be in the Palestra, you want to be in the new atrium. You want to have that history, and now, the team has it. “I wanted to be like Mike Jordan. You walk in the gym every day, and you walk past Mike Jordan and other guys who have done that. You just think to yourself like, ‘Man, I want that opportunity’. I just took advan-
CHASE SUTTON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR
Hitting a long three-pointer with only two seconds left in the first half, senior guard Darnell Foreman sent the Palestra crowd into a frenzy.
tage of it.” The jubilation of the moment is not lost on anyone affiliated with these Quakers. They’ve worked too hard not to enjoy this moment. During the post-game festivities, and at the press conference, Foreman could be seen cradling the Ivy League trophy in his arms. He didn’t stop caressing his newest friend until he left it for his coach — but was later seen leaving the Palestra and walking down Walnut with it firmly in tow. At one point during the postgame press conference Foreman interrupted his teammates with an important question of his own. “Hey, don’t that sound good?” He asked. “Ivy League Champions. Say
it again. Say it one more time. Ivy Champions.” “I honestly thought — I didn’t think we could do it,” Donahue said. This moment will not be forgotten for a long, long time. It will be up on the walls in the museum-like hallways of the Cathedral before long. “This team is going to be remembered as the team that stopped the drought,” Foreman said. Stopped. That means there’s more to come. THEODOROS PAPAZEKOS is a College sophomore from Pittsburgh, Pa, and is a sports editor of The Daily Pennsylvanian. He can be reached at papazekos@thedp.com.
SEND STORY IDEAS TO DPSPORTS@THEDP.COM CONTACT US: 215-422-4640