January 25, 2024

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THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA • FOUNDED 1885

PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 2024

VOL. CXL

NO. 2

House committee demands documents from Penn on antisemitism response by Feb. 7

Larry Jameson Can the caretaker president unite Penn?

Information requested included communications by the Board of Trustees and other Penn affiliates, as well as Sidechat posts and text messages DIAMY WANG Senior Reporter

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, completed clinician training at Massachusetts General Hospital, and became chief of the thyroid unit and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School before leaving in 1993. Rubenstein — who was familiar with Jameson and his research while Jameson worked in Massachussetts — told the DP that “[Jameson] was well known as an outstanding researcher” at the time. He specialized in endocrinology. Jameson spent the next 18 years at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University, where he served as chair of the department of medicine and eventually medical school dean in 2007. His former colleagues at Northwestern made a point to highlight his measured leadership and personal involvement both inside and outside of the lab during this time. Feinberg School professor of urology and biochemistry and molecular genetics Joshua Meeks — who was one of Jameson’s Ph.D. mentees — told the DP that he was impressed with Jameson’s work ethic and care for others’

The United States House Committee on Education and the Workforce requested a plethora of documents from Penn on Wednesday, citing “grave concerns” about the University’s response to antisemitism on campus. Committee Chair Rep. Virginia Foxx (RN.C.) sent a letter to Interim Penn President Larry Jameson and University Board of Trustees Chair Ramanan Raghavendran detailing “deeply troubling” actions on campus in regards to antisemitism and free speech. She requested that the University submit documents and information by Feb. 7 as part of the committee’s ongoing investigation. Foxx wrote that “mere warnings are insufficient,” adding that students feel “threatened by the explosion of antisemetic incidents on campus.” “We have received the request from the House Committee on Education & the Workforce and will respond after we complete a review of the request,” a University spokesperson told The Daily Pennsylvanian. Foxx claimed that Penn had an “environment of pervasive antisemitism,” referencing not only campus events since the Palestine Writes Literature Festival in September 2023, but also the decline of Penn’s Jewish undergraduate population since 2013 and the Penn Middle East Center’s affiliation with the Middle East Studies Association — which supports the boycott, divestment, and sanctions movement. “Penn has demonstrated a clea r double standard by tolerating antisemitic vandalism, harassment, and intimidation, but suppressing and penalizing other expression it deemed problematic,” Foxx wrote. The letter cited multiple examples as “cases

See PRESIDENT, page 2

See HOUSE, page 3

DEREK WONG | VIDEO EDITOR

Interim Penn President Larry Jameson delivers an introductory speech at the 23rd Annual MLK Social Justice Lecture & Award event on Jan. 24.

Jameson’s rise from physician to leading a University in crisis BEN BINDAY AND NEEMA BADDAM Senior Reporters

Larry Jameson, a clinician turned University administrator, has been interim president for just over a month — and there is perhaps no Penn leader to have taken office amid so much turmoil on campus. Penn is the subject of two congressional investigations, placing scrutiny on its tax-exempt status and its response to antisemitism in recent months. The University is also battling student and faculty concerns about free speech and donor influence, while welcoming a new University Board of Trustees chair and anticipating another presidential search following former Penn President Liz Magill’s unprecedented resignation. All of this and more is expected to be confronted by Jameson, who ascended to the Penn presidency on Dec. 12, 2023 — three days after Magill stepped down from the presidency amid national controversy. A request for comment on how long Jameson will serve was left with a University spokesperson, though an Undergraduate Assembly meeting recording and comments by its president suggest he will “reasonably” remain president for the rest of the academic year and into 2025.

Jameson — a physician who insists that his department chairs refer to him as Larry — comes to College Hall after spending over a decade as executive vice president of the University of Pennsylvania Health System and dean of the Perelman School of Medicine. Penn Med was highly successful under his leadership — prompting Arthur Rubenstein, Jameson’s predecessor as executive vice president and dean, to call him the “obvious choice” for the interim presidency. “He brings people together,” Perelman School of Medicine Chair of Radiation Oncology James Metz told The Daily Pennsylvanian of Jameson. “And that’s what we need right now — as an institution, as a country, we need unifiers.” The DP spoke with 22 current and former colleagues of Jameson to hear about Jameson’s history, accomplishments, and leadership ability. All of those interviewed spoke highly of his qualifications for the interim presidency. An early career as an ‘outstanding researcher’ Prior to working at Penn, Jameson graduated from the

Around 800 Penn students waitlisted for on-campus housing, up from last year Of the students placed on the waitlist, approximately 500 are rising juniors and 300 are rising seniors NICOLE MURAVSKY Staff Reporter

Approximately 800 students were placed on the Penn Residential Services waitlist for on-campus housing for the 2024-2025 academic year — an increase from last year. Penn allocates 900 spots for on-campus housing for juniors and seniors, with first-year students and sophomores required to live on campus under a policy that went into effect in fall 2021. Of the students placed on the waitlist — which means that they were not originally selected for on-campus housing — approximately 500 are rising juniors and 300 are rising seniors. Last year, 720 rising juniors and seniors were placed on the waitlist, and the University said it allocated around 950 spots for on-campus housing to rising juniors and seniors. Applicants are randomly selected to be either given a room selection slot or placed on the housing waitlist. An automated system then goes through the student housing database and picks applicants at random to assign timeslots, according to Associate Director of Housing Occupancy Melissa Dunlap. Many students who applied for on-campus housing initially received an email on Dec. 15 from Residential Services informing them that they had been placed on the waitlist, with a follow-up email sent on Jan. 12, and another scheduled for Jan. 23, according to the Jan. 12 email. The emails also contained the next steps for students to take if they wish to remain on the waitlist. Director of Residential Services Pat Killilee told The Daily Pennsylvanian that Residential Services is open to meeting and connecting students with helpful resources — particularly in the case of extenuating circumstances that have not yet been shared. Killilee also suggested that students who are currently on the waitlist reach out to Off-Campus Services, a resource for both Penn undergraduates and graduates. SEND STORY IDEAS TO NEWSTIP@THEDP.COM

Off-Campus Services will sponsor a virtual housing fair on March 21, at which students can speak with local landlords and explore off-campus housing options. Associate Director for Off-Campus Services Linda Kromer will also lead five housing information sessions in February. “We go over understanding your lease, knowing the differences in leases, and pointing out some very important components of a lease,” Kromer wrote in a statement to the DP. “I do a demonstration of how to search the database, and there is a Q&A.” Despite the concerns that students may have, Killilee insisted that there are attractive housing options near campus that will be available heading into the summer. “A lot of students will hear that if they don’t sign the lease for the next year by October, there won’t be any housing, and that’s just not true,” Killilee said. Several students told the DP that they are stressed about being placed on the waitlist, and are feeling uncertain about where they will live for the next academic year. “[L]iving off campus isn’t always a guarantee,” Engineering sophomore Kayla Bleier said. “Finding houses that are in my price range and finding people that I want to live with aren’t a guarantee, so it kind of feels like there is this threat — or this looming fear — of being homeless.” College sophomore Keanu Natan similarly shared his frustration with finding off-campus housing. “The process was long and tedious [to find off-campus housing],” Natan said. “Most of the people I knew got waitlisted, so planning with roommates was difficult. I wish they’d run the lottery earlier in the year so See WAITLIST, page 2

ABHIRAM JUVVADI | PHOTO EDITOR

Penn faculty sent a letter to University admin. alleging a violation of Open Expression Guidelines.

Letter to admin. from Penn faculty alleges policy violation with student discipline case

The student confirmed that the investigation pertains to the placement of stickers relating to the Freedom School for Palestine ETHAN YOUNG Staff Reporter

More than 80 Penn faculty members sent a letter to University administrators alleging that the summons of a Penn student by the Center for Community Standards and Accountability violates University guidelines on open expression. The letter — which was sent on Jan. 2 — expresses concern about about a Office of Com munity Sta nda rds meeting with college senior Katie Francis, who was called for

ONLINE AT THEDP.COM

“adher[ing] stickers to campus signs and light poles,” according to the letter. The signatories allege that the meeting violates Penn’s Guidelines on Open Expression. “We cannot comment on student disciplinary matters,” a University spokesman told The Daily Pennsylvanian. In the letter, which was obtained by The See LETTER, page 3

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