March 24, 2016

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THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

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Fling concert ticket confusion Floor passes falsely confirmed after tech issues CHERRY ZHI Staff Reporter

On Wednesday, some students received false confirmation of floor passes for the Spring Fling concert, resulting from a technical

BOWMAN COOPER Staff Reporter

Pennsylvania could potentially become the 25th state to legalize medical marijuana, thanks to the passage of Senate Bill 3 in the state House of Representatives this month. Governor Tom Wolf has agreed to sign the bill if

it passes through the Senate. The bill, which was supported by Democrats and Republicans alike, will make legal the purchase of marijuana for the treatment of serious medical conditions. With doctor recommendation, patients will be able to acquire a special ID card, which will allow them to purchase strains of cannabis that are deemed appropriate for their diagnoses. This legislation follows former mayor of Philadelphia Michael Nutter’s

pass forms every day this week. For the past three days, tickets have sold out almost immediately upon release. This morning, however, many excited students received confirmation emails saying that they had won floor passes only to receive an email later saying that “unfortunately, we had some

technical difficulties with the floor pass form.” College junior and SPEC Concerts Co-Director Paul DiNapoli wrote in the to students email that, despite the confirmation email, these students had not actually won because the Google Forms did not SEE TICKETS PAGE 3

COURTESY OF TORBEN HANSEN/WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

Pennsylvania could soon legalize medical marijuana

issue. At 10 a.m., the Social Planning and Events Committee posted the Spring Fling floor pass sale form on its Facebook event page but mistakenly sent out confirmation emails to some students, saying that they had won floor passes even though they were not among the first 50 to fill out the form and win. SPEC has been posting floor

decriminalization of small-scale marijuana possession in 2014. As a result of the decriminalization, those caught in possession of less than 30 grams of marijuana are merely fined $25 and given a citation. Anyone caught smoking in public is either fined $100 or required to complete nine hours of community service. Mayor Jim Kenney also supports this decriminalization as he spearheaded SEE MARIJUANA PAGE 5

Paul Farmer says Penn can play part in global health

Supporting John Kasich essentially ensures that Donald Trump will win a majority of delegates before the convention.” - Louis Capozzi

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Farmer appealed to research universities to do more GENEVIEVE GLATSKY Contributing Reporter

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GREG BOYEK | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Paul Farmer discussed the potential for universities to make a difference in global health systems by boosting local capacity for research.

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Physician and anthropologist Paul Farmer called on American research universities to do more to support global health equity on Wednesday. His talk, entitled “Global Health vs. Global Health Equity: Health, Social Justice and the Research University,” was hosted by the Center for Global Health at the Perelman School of Medicine. Farmer, the co-founder of the nonprofit organization, Partners in Health, said what distinguished global health equity from international health is the emphasis on delivering care to patients, as opposed to just research and training. Farmer said both academic

medical centers and PIH use a model that links medical care, the training of doctors and nurses and research. “There needs to be a research and training component, but also a service delivery piece,” he said. One example he brought up was Sierra Leone, a country with an advanced research laboratory but lacking in medical care at the district hospital. “If there’s only a focus on research and not on care delivery, well, we saw what happened,” he said. The nursing schools and medical schools were shut down in Liberia following the Ebola crisis. The role of research universities could be to reopen these schools, Farmer said. “Our universities have these resources,” he said. SEE FARMER PAGE 3

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