THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 VOL. CXXXVII NO. 17
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021
CAPS will offer in-person and remote services this fall Students can walk into the CAPS office during office hours or schedule a virtual or inperson appointment HELEN RUDOLER Staff Reporter
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
Investigation finds Penn profs. demonstrated ‘gross insensitivity’ in handling MOVE remains Two professors retained the remains for decades and used them in an online course CONOR MURRAY News Editor
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Students will have the option to receive both in-person and virtual counseling at CAPS this semester.
As students return to campus for the fall semester, Penn’s Counseling and Psychological Services will offer a variety of in-person and virtual services to support students’ mental wellness. Like previous semesters, CAPS will offer oneon-one counseling services as well as group therapy sessions. This semester, CAPS will operate under a new hybrid model, CAPS Director of Outreach and Prevention Services Batsirai Bvunzawabaya wrote in an email to The Daily Pennsylvanian. When students make an appointment with CAPS this semester, they will have the option to select whether they want to receive care in person or remotely over phone or video. Should students choose in-person care, they will need to wear a mask and show a green PennOpen Pass. CAPS will operate its in-person offices Monday through Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., Thursday and Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Students who do not already have regularly scheduled sessions with a CAPS clinician may drop in to the CAPS office, located at 36th and Market streets, during their office hours or call to speak with a clinician at any time. “Students can also call us 24/7 for urgent or nonurgent needs. No concern is too big or too small,” Bvunzawabaya wrote.
CAPS will continue to offer its Let’s Talk service, featuring informal counseling sessions available to all Penn students. Through Let’s Talk, counselors will be available at several locations around campus including Van Pelt Library, Pottruck Health and Fitness Center, and the LGBT Center. Let’s Talk is not a replacement for formal mental health treatment, but instead is an opportunity for students to voice challenges and concerns they are facing and receive insight and support from counselors. Other mental health resources students can utilize this fall include the Wellnest journaling app, to which Penn provides students free access, as well as group sessions and workshops facilitated by CAPS, where students can find support from peers facing similar challenges. CAPS has not yet released the specific group offerings for the fall semester. In the past, CAPS has offered group sessions including dealing with the loss of a loved one. Bvunzawabaya encouraged students not to hold back from seeking help, and to find time to assess and care for their mental wellness. “Do not be afraid to care for your friends too as you navigate the first few weeks,” Bvunzawabaya wrote. “We like to think of Penn as fostering a community of care, where we look out for each other.”
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Protesters march through Penn’s campus demanding the University return the MOVE victims’ remains to the Africa family on April 28.
A Penn-commissioned investigation into the handling of human remains from the 1985 MOVE bombing concluded that two Penn professors demonstrated “extremely poor judgment and gross insensitivity” for retaining the remains for decades and using them for an online Princeton University course. Released months after widespread demands and protests, the investigation report, authored by The Tucker Law Group, stated that the professors did not violate any legal or ethical standards in their conduct. The report offered a number of recommendations to the Penn Museum — some of which the Museum is already working on — including hiring a chief diversity officer and conducting a review of the Museum’s collection practices. The remains were ultimately returned to the Africa family on July 2. In 1985, the Philadelphia city government bombed a home on Osage Avenue that housed MOVE, a Black liberation advocacy group, killing 11 people, including five children aged seven to 13. Now-retired Penn professor Alan Mann first received the remains in 1985 after the Philadelphia Medical Examiner’s Office asked for assistance in identifying them. Mann later studied the remains with Janet Monge, curator-in-charge of the Penn Museum’s physical anthropology section. The remains, a pelvic bone and a femur, were transferred back and forth between Penn and Princeton for over 35 years. The professors came under fierce condemnation and faced demands and protests in April for the remains to be returned to the Africa family. The Africa family believed the remains to be those of children Tree and Delisha Africa — but the report notes that there is no credible evidence that Mann took the remains concluded to be those of Delisha. Mann and Monge also did not believe that the remains they brought to the Museum could be conclusively identified as those of Tree. The Museum and University administrators previously offered two apologies and committed to a comprehensive review of their handling of the remains. The Aug. 25 report condemned Mann’s possession of the remains from 1985 to 2001 for “gross insensitivity to the human dignity as well as the social and political implications of his conduct.” The report notes that Mann made no effort to return the remains to the Philadelphia Medical Examiner’s Office or contact any MOVE member from while he possessed the remains, which he kept stored in his office. The report similarly condemned Monge for retaining the remains from 2001 to 2021 and for using them in the online Princeton course, “Real Bones: Adventures in Forensic Anthropology,” without the Africa family’s consent. Monge stored the remains in a file cabinet from 2001 to 2014 and in her lab at the Museum from 2014 to 2021. She showed the remains to graduate students, donors, and Museum personnel on at least 10 occasions between 2014 and 2019, the report states.
Monge attempted to contact two members of the MOVE family in 1995 and 2014 — once through a third-party intermediary — to identify and return the remains, but the family declined to help her, the report states. The report recommended that the Museum hire a chief diversity officer; create a full-time position for a bio-anthropologist or archaeologist with a record of advocacy for Black and Indigenous people, who has expertise with repatriating and analyzing human remains; and conduct a comprehensive review of the Museum’s holdings and collection practices for human remains — all three of which the Museum is currently working on. Further recommendations include the formation of a University-funded committee to advise the University on the report’s recommendations and its ongoing relationship with the West Philadelphia community, the permanent installation on the MOVE bombing at a publicly accessible location at Penn, the creation of a joint exhibition with the African American Museum in Philadelphia on the role of university scholars in the development of scientific racism, and the creation of a scholarship program for students from Philadelphia high schools. The report stated that the controversy surrounding the MOVE remains was aided by numerous inaccuracies — including the beliefs that the remains used in Monge’s course were indisputably those of Tree Africa, that the remains of Delisha Africa were housed at the Museum, and that no effort was ever made to return the remains to the Africa family. The report noted that the identity of the remains Mann took to the Museum is a matter of legitimate dispute, and The Tucker Law Group could only conclude that the remains used in Monge’s 2019 course video were of a MOVE member. The report further added that there is no concrete evidence that Delisha’s remains were ever housed at the Museum, and several efforts were made to return the MOVE remains. The Tucker Law Group interviewed more than 40 people, including members of MOVE; current and former Museum employees; Penn faculty, students, and alumni; elected officials; anthropologists; and community members to inform the report. They also reviewed archival records, the 1986 MOVE Commission Report, the 1988 MOVE Grand Jury Report, police records, records from the Philadelphia Medical Examiner’s Office, codes of ethics from professional organizations, and Pennsylvania and New Jersey state law. “This has been a deeply painful experience, most importantly for the Africa Family, and for all of us who are part of a city scarred by a history of violence and racism,” Williams Director of the Penn Museum Christopher Woods said in a press release. “And while the investigation concluded that there was no violation of legal and ethical policies, it’s clear that human dignity was not prioritized across historical institutional practices.”
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Undeterred by COVID-19, students throw themselves back into crowded parties and campus life First years remain unafraid largely due to Penn’s vaccination requirement ELIZABETH MEISENZAHL & DELANEY PARKS Senior Reporters
After over a year of pandemic-induced shutdowns, first year students are excited to navigate a seemingly normal campus environment buzzing with parties and in-person classes. Four first years, who requested anonymity due to possible repercussions, spoke to The Daily Pennsylvanian about their largely positive New Student Orientation experiences during a new wave of the pandemic. Unafraid, students are largely unmasked while outside and many are attending large Greek Life parties and other on-campus social events. While some believe that contracting COVID-19 is inevitable on a full campus, students said they are not worried about experiencing detrimental symptoms from the virus due to Penn’s vaccination requirement for students, faculty, and staff. Over 99.99% of fully vaccinated people have not had a case resulting in hospitalization or death, according to the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A first year international student said that while he and his friends will continue to wear masks when required and follow other safety precautions, they believe they will inevitably contract the virus this
SAC Fair is back on Locust Walk Student groups can participate virtually, in person, or both at the three-day Student Activities Council Fall Activities Fair ELIZABETH MEISENZAHL & MOHAMMAD ABUNIMEH Senior Reporter & Contributing Reporter
Tables of excited students recruiting first years to their clubs lined Locust Walk on the first day of classes Tuesday afternoon, marking the start of the three-day Student Activities Council Fall Activities Fair. The SAC Fall Activities Fair occurs at the beginning of each school year to allow students to learn about various groups on campus. Clubs have the option to recruit new members in person, virtually, or both from Aug. 31 to Sept. 2, College senior and SAC Chair Grayson Peters said. In-person recruiting is scheduled from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. on College Green, while online sessions are scheduled from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.,
Gutmann welcomes Class of 2025 at Convocation Penn celebrated incoming first years and transfer students at an in-person ceremony ENRIQUE ROCES Contributing Reporter
President Amy Gutmann welcomed the Class of 2025 and transfer students to Penn at an in-person Convocation ceremony Monday night. On the eve of the first day of school, Convocation speakers welcomed incoming students with advice about navigating Penn in this moment of transition. This year’s Convocation was markedly
semester because of the large amount of people back on campus. They, however, are not worried about serious consequences like hospitalization or death due to the vaccines. “We all know that Penn has the vaccine mandate, and so pretty much everybody you see has been vaccinated. But nobody’s wearing masks or anything,” the Wharton first year said. A first year in the Engineering School agreed, saying they were not concerned about COVID-19 although they did not see any students wearing masks at the Greek Life parties they had attended during NSO, which took place from Aug. 25 to Aug. 30. “I knew all my friends were vaccinated — everyone I spoke to was. We didn’t meet anyone who wasn’t vaccinated, even with other NSO events,” the Engineering first year said. Last year, Penn’s Campus Compact required students to agree to “congregate only in designated outdoor and indoor areas of campus, wearing a facial covering, maintaining adequate physical distance.” Off-campus Greek life parties nevertheless occurred, prompting Associate Vice Provost for Student Affairs Tamara Greenfield King to warn Greek Life leaders to stop in-person events after a disproportionate number of COVID-19 cases were linked to fraternities. The Campus Compact is not in effect now, although students are now required to wear masks indoors. Penn’s current positivity rate is 0.84% for the week of Aug. 22 to Aug. 28. At other campuses, including Duke University, COVID-19 cases have spiked despite high vaccination rates among their student bodies. King wrote in an emailed statement to the DP on Aug. 26 that “[Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life] groups are held to the same standard as other student groups” this semester. “We are following all of the COVID guidance provided by Penn,” King wrote in an email sent on Sept. 1. In an email sent to the Penn community on Aug. 25, Penn administrators wrote that “special events and large gatherings are strongly recommended
to be held outside and with precautions in place.” Masks or social distancing measures are not required outdoors. A first year in The Wharton School and a first year in the College said the size of all the parties they’ve attended have been filled close to capacity, with students packed into high density fraternity basements, drinking and dancing. The Wharton first year described all of the parties as having “LED lights, bumpin’ bass, and just way too many bodies.” “Of the parties that I’ve been to, unless it’s a select group of people that I already knew, [they] just tend to be packed. And given the summer heat, and the fact that a lot of them are indoors to avoid detection or whatnot, it ends up getting really sweaty and nasty,” the College first year said. The Wharton first year similarly said most parties have been indoors and in basements of fraternities in an attempt to avoid getting shut down by Penn Police. An Engineering first year agreed, alleging that a party they attended was shut down by Penn Police because there were too many people. Of the four par-
ties that the Wharton first year attended during NSO, they said two of them were shut down by the Penn police. Both the College and Wharton first years said that a majority of first years they have met on campus have at least tried going to a party, and added that the isolation first years experienced during the pandemic contributed to the prevalence of partying this year. “People [have been] going out just because like the last year and a half has been pretty lonely, and I definitely hear from a lot of people that they’re just going to parties for the experience and because they hear that that’s the thing to do. So I guess there’s a lot of social pressure to go,” the Wharton first year said. Parties also are a way for first years and sophomores to find connections with upperclassmen, the College first year said. “It’s actually incredible to find people who share my interests and who I just bump into, maybe make a joke, and suddenly, we’re just talking about our majors. And I’m getting advice on stuff I never thought I would at a frat party,” they said.
Peters said. Groups had the option to send representatives to both the in-person and virtual sessions on their assigned day, or one of the two. “We’re planning on having a hybrid combined approach so that people can go to events that they feel comfortable with,” Peters said. “It’s really important that we’re not just making people opt in to go to an in-person fair if they wouldn’t feel comfortable doing that.” The virtual Fall Activities Fair is being held on Penn Clubs. Penn Labs, a student-run software development organization, updated the platform to include access to Zoom meetings for the entirely virtual SAC fairs that ran in the fall 2020 and spring 2021 semesters. Students had the opportunity to meet clubs from distinct categories on each day of the fair. On Thursday, students can meet groups related to community and public service, media and publication, peer education and support, politics and advocacy, and religion and spirituality. College senior Alejandra Bahena, the copresident of Penn Neuroscience Society, said the group planned to use icebreakers, give an overview of their club and calendar events, and sign students up for their newsletter and GroupMe at the SAC fair. Penn Neuroscience Society is dedicated to creating an academic forum and community focused on discussing and
understanding the rapidly developing field of neuroscience. “Our internal and external events chair will be planning virtual events for the first couple of weeks of the semester until we are told — hopefully — it is safe to host in-person events,” Bahena said. She said their events will look similar to those that occurred in the spring semester and include taking advantage of interactive Zoom features such as question and answer chats, breakout rooms, and polls. The group also plans to play virtual games and do interactive activities during general body meetings and social events. It will host virtual speaker events and a virtual physician shadowing program, Bahena said. The Lambda Alliance, an organization dedicated to advancing LGBTQ causes on campus and creating a community for its constituents, also participated in the SAC fair in person on Wednesday, College senior and Lambda Alliance Chair Blake Rubenstein said. “Lambda [Alliance] will be engaging with students about opportunities in Lambda Alliance, as well as within our constituent groups,” Rubenstein said. “We want to make sure LGBTQ+ students know about the various opportunities to get involved in this community on campus and who to reach out to if they have any questions or concerns about LGBTQ+ resources.”
He said the LGBT Center is hosting several events for students over the next few weeks, where Lambda Alliance and other student groups will speak about their organizations while meeting transfer, first-year, and secondyear students. Rubenstein added that Lambda Alliance plans to host both in-person and online events throughout the semester.
different from last year’s virtual ceremony welcoming the Class of 2024, with students seated close together in front of College Hall — some without masks. Gutmann, newly appointed Vice Provost and Dean of Admissions Whitney Soule, and Interim Provost Beth Winkelstein delivered speeches welcoming the incoming students, and Dischord, Penn Glee Club, and the Penn Band performed. Gutmann took the stage, celebrating that students have finally returned to campus, chanting, “We’re back! We’re back!” She told new students that the best way to navigate Penn is to appreciate the diversity of their classmates. “[This is] an impressive crowd — impressive in its talent and its diversity,” Gutmann said. “You are absolutely integral to the global summit that is seated all around you, and you now embark on an exciting journey to make the most of it.” Gutmann’s speech highlighted the importance of the intersection between collaboration and independent thinking, citing the work of Penn profes-
sors Drew Weissman and Katalin Karikó, whose breakthrough mRNA technology and therapy were instrumental to the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccine development. “These very vaccines are what have made it possible for us to gather here today,” Gutmann said. Amy Gutmann also discussed her nomination to serve as the next United States ambassador to Germany, comparing her transition to the new role to the Class of 2025’s transition from high schoolers to Penn students. In her speech, Soule said that this year’s Convocation marks a period of transition for everyone, including herself, as she just started at Penn on July 1. “Like you, I got to know Penn on the other side of the Zoom screen,” Soule said. Winkelstein also implored students to prioritize their well-being, asking that they try “not to stress.” She added that students should embrace the uncertainty of recent months, which could lead them through different and unexpected paths. As the speeches came to a close, students and Penn faculty members sang the University’s an-
them “The Red and Blue.” “[The speeches] just made me so excited and proud to be a Penn student,” College sophomore Paris Rosen said as students walked towards Perelman Quadrangle for refreshments after the event. “I feel so lucky to be on campus and have this be my home for the next three years.” Rosen, who transferred to Penn from Tulane University, said her transition to Penn turned out to be easier than she anticipated. “I already walk through campus and see friendly faces,” Rosen said. “All the people I’ve met have made the transition so easy.” Wharton and Engineering first year Samarth Jain said the event was “really memorable” because it marked the return of an in-person college experience and Gutmann’s final Convocation. “One thing that Amy [Gutmann] said — that your collaboration can change the world — I thought that was really awesome,” Jain said. “What we are trying to do in [New Student Orientation] is make friends, and maybe one day me and my friend might change the world.”
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4 OPINION
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
OPINION Welcome back!
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 VOL. CXXXVII, NO. 17 137th Year of Publication DANE GREISIGER President ASHLEY AHN Executive Editor HADRIANA LOWENKRON DP Editor-in-Chief ISABEL LIANG Design Editor CONOR MURRAY News Editor PIA SINGH News Editor HANNAH GROSS Assignments Editor BRITTANY DARROW Copy Editor KYLIE COOPER Photo Editor ALFREDO PRATICÒ Opinion Editor SUNNY JANG Audience Engagement Editor BRANDON PRIDE Sports Editor LOCHLAHN MARCH Sports Editor SOPHIE HUANG Video Editor QIANA ARTIS Podcast Editor ALESSANDRA PINTADO-URBANC Business Manager JASPER HUANG Analytics Manager GREG FERREY Marketing Manager EMILY CHEN Product Lab Manager ERIC HOANG Consulting Manager
Guest Column by President Amy Gutmann
W
hat does it take to be an Olympic athlete? Among the many qualities required, perseverance, teamwork, and hope are perhaps the most crucial. When the 2021 Summer Olympic Games opened in Tokyo a few weeks ago, the finest athletes in the world gathered in the spirit of global cooperation and peaceful competition. There, shoulder to shoulder with the best of the best, we were so very proud to count not one nor two but nine Penn students and alumni. That they achieved the pinnacle of their sports during the most challenging pandemic in a century makes this honor all the more extraordinary. To persevere, to help and be helped by your team, and to always keep hope kindled: our Penn Olympians exemplify what it takes to rise through adversity and passionately pursue one’s dreams. To all Penn students, whether you have lived and learned on campus before or this is your very first time being here, you have risen through adversity to passionately pursue your dreams, too. When COVID-19 ground our world to a halt, your lives were upended. Yet you persevered. You pursued your studies online, stepped up remotely, and navigated all the challenges that profound shift entailed. From song and dance to athletics and civic engagement, you kept your passions and extracurriculars alive and thriving — even from afar. You went without pivotal milestones and joyful moments so that many others can and will enjoy more life. You persevered, but you didn’t do it alone. United in purposeful solidarity with your classmates, friends, families, and communities, you took teamwork to new heights. Many of you devoted time and energy to helping others in ways great and small. From the student-organized Lockdown Letters and tens of thousands of notes sent in heartfelt support of frontline healthcare workers, to simple acts like helping elderly neighbors in isolation and assisting loved ones in getting their vaccinations, to advocating for social equity and justice, to registering people to vote. These and so many other examples proved your devotion to working as a Penn team to overcome even the greatest of challenges. To do all this amid such uncertainty — as we all faced and continue to face a deadly pandemic — requires the most powerful quality of all, and that is deep and abiding hope. That we can reunite now on campus results in no
ANA GLASSMAN
small part from the hope you, our outstanding and dedicated faculty and staff, and our entire Penn community kept kindled. All the necessary steps we have collectively taken could not succeed without the enduring belief that, together, we can and we will get through this even stronger than before. Perseverance, teamwork, and hope enabled our nine Penn Olympians to reach Tokyo and their dreams. The same qualities have empowered you and our entire Penn community to reach this pivotal moment, at the start of
a brand-new academic year, when we can be together once more on the campus we all love. I could not be prouder of you all. Welcome to a wonderful new year at Penn! AMY GUTMANN is the eighth president of the University of Pennsylvania and Christopher H. Browne distinguished professor of Political Science. Her email is president@upenn.edu.
THIS ISSUE
Dear first years, Penn is not as philanthropic as you think
ALANA KELLY DP Design Editor MAX MESTER News Photo Editor ANA GLASSMAN Opinion Photo Editor SAMANTHA TURNER Sports Photo Editor JONAH CHARLTON Deputy News Editor NICKY BELGRAD Associate Sports Editor AGATHA ADVINCULA Deputy Opinion Editor VARUN SARASWATHULA Deputy Opinion Editor VALERIE WANG Deputy Opinion Editor THOMAS CHEN Copy Associate SOPHIE NADEL Copy Associate NORA YOUN Copy Associate
The Watchdog | Community service is important, but it is equally as important to scrutinize how it’s done
P
enn has declared this upcoming academic year as the year of civic engagement, emphasizing a commitment to our surrounding communities, like West Philadelphia, and the rest of the world. Almost 200 organizations listed on Penn Clubs fall under the umbrella of community service; with such a prevalent culture surrounding civic engagement and specifically community service, it is very easy to want to participate in as many projects and initiatives as possible. I encourage you, of course, to tackle issues you care about and enjoy your volunteering experiences. However, over my time at Penn, I have discovered that much of Penn’s philanthropic culture, whether due to bad faith or inefficacy, is not what it initially seems. The first disheartening trend in many of Penn’s philanthropic ventures is the overabundance of corporate influence. Much of the actions taken by these corporations are to protect their bottom line and are often used to mask the damage that they do in these fields. For example, this past spring, Wharton helped found NinetyToZero, an initiative aiming to close the racial wealth gap in America. Wharton has partnered with countless corporations including McKinsey & Company, Starbucks, and Goldman Sachs, claiming they are committed to closing the racial wealth gap. Yet, their business actions prove this could not be further from the truth. McKinsey has been cited for increased violence in New York City jails, whose inmate population is disproportionately Black, as well as for its role in the opioid epidemic. Starbucks has been accused of contributing to the gentrification of low-income Black neighborhoods and, despite attempts to improve racial bias training, their workers go viral for transgressions
against Black customers and employees. Goldman Sachs profited off of low- and middle-income families during the subprime mortgage crisis in 2008, hurting Black borrowers the most. At the end of the day, these corporations only intend to protect their bottom line, and their philanthropic ventures are just ways to cleanse or mask their reputations. Even if philanthropic ventures are well-intentioned, they can still be quite ineffective. The reason is that charities often only exist to address the failures of the government to regulate corporations and provide an adequate social safety net. As a result, charity has historically not been able to solve systemic issues. During the Progressive Era, private charity did not have the breadth or depth necessary to address skyrocketing wealth inequality. Instead, antitrust laws, establishing a minimum wage, and corporate regulation lifted many Americans out of poverty. The historic inefficacy of charity is usually due to their inefficient allocations of funds or their inability to support a large enough portion of the population. Private philanthropic work often does not have the means to fully address systemic issues, and thus cannot go without political organizing and demanding action from the government to amend those systemic failures. The need for systemic change as opposed to private philanthropy is evident in many of the most popular forms of community service in which Penn students choose to participate. There are countless medical charities that provide various forms of healthcare to underserved Americans, but those charities only need to exist because the cost of healthcare and drugs in the U.S. are so high. There are many food banks and soup
kitchens tackling hunger, but these are only temporary solutions to the broader issue of the current increasing wealth gap. There are plenty of mentorship and tutoring programs in West Philadelphia. However, again, the lack of quality of schools in West Philadelphia is directly correlated to Penn’s exemption from property taxes and a lack of investment from the local Philadelphia government. There are a lot of charities out there, and I am not discouraging you from wanting to serve your community. However, especially at Penn, many philanthropic ventures are ineffective or more interested in protecting reputations. Due to its lack of scope, charity can only alleviate the symptoms of, but cannot solve, systemic issues. In addition, corporations involved in many philanthropic ventures uphold or exacerbate existing systemic problems, and their charitable deeds make it seem as if they are solving them. People donate large sums of money to charity and trust their money is going towards solving the problems charities claim to remedy. So this year, when you’re attending civic engagement programming or deciding which community service organizations to join, ask organizations about their corporate inf luences, how they are measuring their efficacy, and how they are trying to get to the root of the systemic issues they are addressing. Ultimately, scrutinizing how we serve our community and address systemic issues is how we can all do the most good. MATTHEW LIU is a College junior from Allentown, Pa. studying biochemistry, chemistry, and neurobiology. His email is liumatt@sas.upenn.edu.
LETTERS Have your own opinion? Send your letter to the editor or guest column to letters@thedp.com. Editorials represent the majority view of members of The Daily Pennsylvanian, Inc. Editorial Board, which meets regularly to discuss issues relevant to Penn’s campus. Participants in these meetings are not involved in the reporting of articles on related topics.
ALANA KELLY
THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
OPINION 5
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021
EDITORIAL
Why can’t Penn students access Penn Park?
T
his fall, students returned to campus, many experiencing it for the first time. For some, one of the benefits of an in-person learning experience is access to exercise facilities, including Pottruck Health and Fitness Center, Penn’s numerous grassy plains, and Penn Park. However, access to these spaces does not always exist. High demand, cost premiums, and the renting of Penn facilities to third parties all contribute to a lack of student access to facilities at Penn. As such, the University must reduce rentals of outdoor facilities to third parties and prioritize access for Penn students. In May of 2021, Heyday Athletics, a third party intramural service, used Dunning-Cohen Champions Field on six out of the first 13 days of the month, frequently during the evening. In September, the organization is scheduled to use the field one out of every five days, with other days booked for sports camps. Other facilities face their own accessibility challenges. Adams Field, for example, is constantly booked with team practices, games, and tournaments, thus reducing opportunities for students unaffiliated with a team. Some may argue that this is insignificant. After all, the fields are unreserved most of the time. However, this viewpoint disregards the
unfortunate timing of such rentals. Because students have classes and exams throughout the morning and afternoon, the evening is the best option for group exercise. But this is not possible if the venues are unavailable. This is not the first time accessibility issues regarding Penn athletic facilities have come up. In 2019, Ringe Squash Courts came under fire for requiring fees from faculty and students. The University eventually reduced the cost of fees. Still, the incident demonstrates Penn’s dismissal of issues surrounding classism. It would be beneficial to open these areas for exercise. In the age of COVID-19, it is critical that people spend time outdoors to avoid the spread of disease. As such, students should have alternatives to Pottruck and other indoor facilities. Moreover, there are social benefits; team sports allow for students to compete alongside and against one another, creating valuable bonding experiences. Making athletics more accessible isn’t just a matter of student enjoyment; participation in regular exercise can improve physical and mental health. For example, exercise can fuel the growth of nerve cells, which helps combat depression. Regular exercise has also been linked to longer
life expectancies and can decrease risk for cardiac issues. Penn must take steps to widen accessibility of
its facilities. Athletics is necessary for healthy student life, and the University must act for the benefit of its student body.
KYLIE COOPER
Club exclusivity has become too toxic. It’s time we change it. Surayya’s Spice and Everything Nice | Club culture at Penn is needlessly exclusive and makes our community worse
KYLIE COOPER
I
t’s September 2021, we’re still in a pandemic, and Penn’s campus is going through a dynamic reopening. We’re mentally envisioning the transition from Zoom screens to lecture halls, from managing a hectic Google Calendar filled with virtual meetings to monitoring your daily steps. Despite troubling COVID-19 trend lines, we’re eager to return to some sense of normalcy and the lessons of the pandemic remain salient. We’ve learned not to take for granted in-person classes, a world without face masks, or interpersonal contact. If I could summarize the lessons I’ve learned during the pandemic, everything points to this: community is important. Genuine relationships and positive social interaction are important. As a newly-minted senior, I’ve been thinking a lot about the concept of community, especially Penn’s many communities, such as those in performing arts, student government, sports, and journalism. To get into Penn, we were undoubtedly the high schoolers who took extracurricular activities seriously, sought meaning and purpose in the extracurriculars we pursued, and obtained multiple leadership positions for our passion, ingenuity, and courage. However, upon arriving at Penn, we encountered many student leaders who are just as passionate or even more talented than us, and when we compete with each other for limited spots, fierce competition becomes the norm. With such a talented student body, how do club leaders reserve the right to selectivity? That’s why more clubs need general body membership. A structured GBM program will improve the landscape by providing space for student growth and development, greater objectivity and efficiency in club recruitment, and further Penn’s commitment to inclusion and equity. A campus full of ambitious leaders creates
constant momentum. However, there are downsides to the intensity of our student body. Students cite mental health struggles and disappointment when facing club rejections. From the grading curves to our student organizations, we are always competing. We compete with each other for high-status jobs, good grades, and access to peer networks. With some club acceptance rates in the single digits, it’s time we moved towards a more objective way of evaluating candidates. Let’s put the Penn community first by broadly embracing GBM in our student organizations. Intense competition and true community cannot coexist. I cringe when I hear first years discuss the club application process. It all seems toxic to me. I came from a high school where there were no barriers to establishing community. If we compete for everything, including group acceptance, we will never feel happy and accepted. Penn’s current club admissions rely heavily on pursuing students with prior experience and skillsets instead of accepting students who show great potential and capacity for growth. A wellstructured GBM program promotes the idea that skills and talents are developed, fostering a collective growth mindset within Penn’s campus. Club leaders talk about seeking “talented” students and they screen students for “talent” through cases and behavioral questions. This creates an irrationally high standard for who gets in, making it impossible for someone who has the passion but lacks the skills and experiences to succeed. Psychology professor Angela Duckwor th identifies grit as the main predictor of success, defining it as the combination of passion and perseverance. Some students did not intern at hedge funds or gain strategy consulting experience before coming to Penn, and to level the
playing field, clubs can adopt a teaching-based model. They can offer students training over an entire semester and use this time to identify students who demonstrate passion and work ethic, rewarding them with leadership roles and other privileges. When we make decisions based on “talent,” we fail to expand the applicant pool to people who are hungry and willing to learn. A well-designed GBM program provides increased objectivity in selecting students for advancement. Humans are inherently f lawed and subject to many biases. I’ve been privy to decisions made on gut feelings, which were nothing but biases dressed in vague language. Many student organizations have an ideal organizational culture or aesthetic they want, and may judge candidates superficially. The multiple rounds of interviews and behavioral questions we swear by are inaccurate predictors of performance. A thorough GBM program provides all students with the opportunity to showcase their drive before they are subject to biased or discriminatory decision-making. We have spent the past year discussing the importance of diversity, and we need those same conversations to impact how Penn’s student organizations are run. Penn’s club system is also inefficient and poorly regulated. It can result in lopsided results in which some students receive admission to many selective clubs while others get rejected from all the clubs to which they apply. If the goal is for students to find community, then Penn should ensure that everyone receives acceptance into a group of their choosing. If more clubs embrace GBM, students have an increased chance of becoming leaders in the clubs that truly interest them. Club participation could differentiate between experienced students who
are increasing their odds by applying to many clubs and students who are genuinely interested in gaining skills. Even better, similar clubs can bind together and employ a system resembling deferred rush, in which students spend time as members in different clubs and then rank the ones with which they’d like to advance. Penn’s commitment to diversity and inclusion is undermined by some organizations’ inability to effectively recruit diverse candidates. The status quo isn’t working for highly selective clubs. These clubs desire more diversity, but their recruitment of multicultural students can appear tokenistic and insincere. Selective finance or consulting clubs may frantically search for minority candidates, but find themselves unable to attract them. With a GBM program, everyone starts on equal footing. This creates the notion that becoming a club leader is less about your background and more about your desire to grow and lead. It is this equity that will attract a broader array of students. Diversifying your club begins with an open mind and willingness to let others showcase their skills and dedication over time before their candidacy is evaluated. If you surpassed the more than 90% of applicants to be admitted to Penn, you deserve admission into any student organization at Penn. Instead of issuing rejections, clubs can establish their communities by including as many students as possible. As we reopen for the fall, let’s change how we gather and interact with each other. SURAYYA WALTERS is a Wharton senior studying management and marketing from New Rochelle, N.Y. Her email is surayyaw@ wharton.upenn.edu.
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021
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Class of 2025, transfer students kick off their Penn careers at 111th Convocation The Convocation ceremony for Penn’s first post-pandemic class and transfer students celebrated the return of university life and in-person traditions. Over 2,000 Penn community members packed into seats spread across College Green as they were officially welcomed to the University.
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The Penn Band marched down Locust Walk to kick off the ceremony.
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Rev. Chaz Howard delivered an opening prayer.
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Students in the crowd were able to choose if they wore a mask or not.
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The Penn Glee Club performed for the second time since the merger between the Penn Glee Club and Penn Sirens.
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President Amy Gutmann delivered her final convocation speech.
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The official flag for the Class of 2025 was displayed to mark the class’s official welcome to the Penn community.
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NEWS 7
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021
Mailroom delays leave students without essential items
From Perry World House to Annenberg, expect hybrid or virtual speaker events
Some students reported wa t ng weeks for packages conta n ng mportant tems ke sheets and p ows
Wh e c asses are arge y n person some speaker events w cont nue on ne wh e c asses are arge y n person
KOMAL PATEL Sta Repo te
L L ANN ZOU & ARUSH SR VASTAVA Cont but ng Repo te s
S uden s have been back on campus o mo e han a week — bu due o ma oom de ays some s don have shee s o s eep n Campus ma ooms have been ooded w h pack ages p omp ng de ays and eav ng s uden s w hou essen a do m ems Though D ec o o Res den a Se v ces Pa ck K ee w o e n an ema o The Da y Pennsy van an ha he u na ound me om when a package s ece ved and hen made ava ab e o p ckup by he s uden s “cu en y a a day and a ha ” some s uden s sa d hey have been wa ng days o weeks o ece ve he packages Co ege s yea Jacque ne Gomez sa d hey have been wa ng o weeks o a package con a n ng necessa y ems ke shee s and ma ess pads o be
packages were delivered “ My on Tuesday and I still haven t
gotten them because they just can t find them COLLEGE JUN OR RUTHANNE THONGKA
made ava ab e o p ckup The package n a y sup posed o be de ve ed n Augus a ved n Ju y — bu Gomez s hasn been no ed ha he package s eady o p ckup Gomez who ves n he Quad sa d a ma oom emp oyee o d hem o go o he Ha son ma oom s bu hey we e hen e d ec ed o he Quad ma oom n hopes ha he package wou d be he e They s have no been ab e o ece ve he package and hey have had o bo ow a p ow and shee s om he oomma e n he mean me “They us keep e ng me ha hey e ook ng o bu a h s po n us don wan o buy my s u aga n ” Gomez sa d K ee w o e ha he ma ooms have ece ved mo e han 14 000 packages s nce Aug 16 add ng ha move n s one o he bus es pe ods o ma and de ays a e yp ca The ma ooms ece ve and g ve ou abou 1 000 packages a day K ee w o e and many s uden s o de up o 10 15 packages Penn s ma ooms came unde s m a c c sm as semes e when s uden s aced de ays ha as ed mo e han a week A Co ege un o who eques ed o ema n anon ymous has aced a s m a ssue o Gomez — h s m ss ng packages wh ch he schedu ed o be de v e ed when he moved n n Augus nc ude h s shee s k chen supp es and b anke s He has a emp ed mu p e mes o ece ve h s package om he ma oom
bu has had no uck He sa d ha ma oom emp oyees seem o be equa y con used abou whe e h s package s The Co ege un o dec ded o e pu chase he ems om h s o g na o de so he cou d s eep com o ab y n h s bed n Rod n Co ege House “ s no ea y a o coo ha have o pay ex a echn ca y s nce had o go o Ta ge and buy sup p es such as p ows o b anke s o shee s so ha m ab e o s eep s nce had a eady o de ed a hese h ngs ” he Co ege un o sa d The Co ege un o who us ans e ed o Penn h s yea om he Un ve s y o F o da sa d he had neve expe enced de ays be o e even a h s p ev ous much a ge un ve s y “ neve expe enced ha a he Un ve s y o F o da whe e he e we e mo e han 50 000 s uden s h nk ha maybe s nce hey e a b gge campus hey may have be e managemen om whe e eve y pack age comes n so he e s no h s de ay wh ch s ea y bad o us as cus ome s ” K ee w o e ha some de ays may be because s uden s a e en e ng nco ec add ess n o ma on s nce many a e new o he es dences wh ch p omp s ma oom s a o ake add ona me o den y he co ec s uden To accommoda e he a ge numbe s o packages Penn opened sa e e oca ons — nc ud ng one n Rod n Co ege House — o expand he ma de ve y op ons beyond he wo ma oom oca ons n H Co ege House and Ha nwe Co ege House K ee w o e ha a new p ocess o de ve ng s uden ma was n oduced as yea n wh ch ma de ve y was cen a zed o us he H and Ha nwe package cen e s The new a angemen ep aces he p e v ous sys em n wh ch each co ege house had s own ma oom “Once package vo ume dec nes he sa e e s es w be c osed and a packages w be e he n a pack age ocke o n H o Ha nwe ” K ee sa d Co ege un o Ru hanne Thongka sa d she neve expe enced ma oom de ays when she ved n K ngs Cou Eng sh Co ege House du ng he s yea bu now ha she ves n S ou e Co ege House she has been unab e o ece ve he packages desp e hem hav ng been de ve ed ove a week ago “My packages we e de ve ed on Tuesday and s haven go en hem because hey us can nd hem ” she sa d “Las me was he e was he e o 40 m n u es and hey cou dn nd so had o w e down my name and phone numbe so hey wou d ca me when hey ound and hey us haven ca ed me ” she sa d Some s uden s have a so comp a ned abou hou s ong nes when p ck ng up he packages wh ch hey have ound us a ng “You go n o Ha nwe and you see a ne o mo e han wo hou s wh ch ve been s and ng n o a se es o days and have s been unab e o ge my package ” he Co ege un o sa d
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Some campus organizations that host events are opting for hybrid or entirely virtual formats this fall, even as a majority of classes are held in person — as were many New Student Orientation events. Campus organizations from Perry World House to the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics are using outdoor spaces, streaming, and video-conferencing platforms to make sure events are accessible to all members of the Penn community. The Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics will host both in-person and virtual events, including a series of hybrid research seminars and virtual speaker events. The Annenberg School for Communication is hosting their events on Zoom this semester. Kelly Writers House, a center for writers from Penn and Philadelphia, is planning to host outdoor events that will be streamed online, KWH Director Jessica Lowenthal said. “We have a great outdoor space, set up with microphones, lights, a tent, and fans, and we’ve always streamed our events live from the garden,” she said. Lowenthal added that KWH is prepared to host events entirely online if conditions change, building on experience from previous virtual semesters. KWH is hosting one of its first events of the semester, a student-run Open Mic Night, in the 1942 Garden and on YouTube at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 8.
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“I always find the Open Mic Night event to be an amazing event because we get to see so many new students as they come into campus,” Lowenthal said. “It reminds me of why I love being at KWH. It feels really special this year.” Perry World House, a center for global engagement on campus, is hosting in-person events with masks and distancing. Attendees will also have the option to participate virtually or watch recordings of the events. PWH’s first event — “The World Today: COVID19 and the New Normal?” — took place on Aug. 31 with an in-person audience on campus and more viewers watching on Zoom. “I am most looking forward to interacting with students, having the building teeming with them and their energy, and continuing to provide a wealth of opportunities and experiences to globally minded students,” PWH Deputy Director LaShawn Jefferson said. Jefferson said it was important for PWH to resume in-person programming, given Penn’s overall vaccination compliance rates among students, faculty, and staff. “We of course weighed issues of overall safety before making a decision to resume in-person programming, and we consulted widely across Penn with other provost centers, medical officials, and student groups,” he added. While PWH hopes to continue with hybrid events this semester, Jefferson said their current arrangements are subject to change as COVID-19 guidelines evolve.
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SEPT 9TH - HUNTSMAN HALL ROOM & T ME TBD
16 2019
The Daily Pennsylvanian is hiring students to work in its circulation department. Distribute papers, manage the database, check rackboxes, place posters and earn $10 an hour. Contact Alessandra Pintado-Urbanc at: pintado-urbanc@theDP.com to schedule an interview
8 SPORTS
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN | THEDP.COM
PENN ATHLETICS WEEKEND PREVIEW:
SOCCER, VOLLEYBALL, AND FIELD HOCKEY BACK IN ACTION SPORTS | Women’s volleyball head coach Meredith Schamun is set to debut with three weekend games
LOCHLAHN MARCH Senior Sports Editor
SUKHMANI KAUR
The women’s soccer team has a head start on every other fall sport, with two games already under its belt
Fall sports are finally upon us. Here’s a look at what Penn’s soccer, volleyball, and field hockey teams are up against this weekend, as many of them suit up for their first games in almost two years.
FIELD HOCKEY: Penn field hockey will be competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference/Ivy League Conference Crossover in Princeton, N.J., against some stiff competition. The Quakers’ two ACC opponents include No. 5 Louisville (2-0) on Friday and No. 1 UNC (0-2) on Sunday. The Red and Blue will be led by a trio of newly minted captains: Gracyn Banks, Maddy Fagan, and Madison Jiranek. This past summer, Banks was selected to compete in the U-22 Junior Pan American Championship, where she won bronze and qualified for the Junior World Cup. Starting this weekend, the Red and Blue will have the opportunity to improve upon their 2019 The New New York York Times TimesSyndication SalesCorporation Corporation The Sales season, where they lost all six of Syndication their 620 Eighth Eighth Avenue, Newgames York,N.Y. N.Y.10018 10018 620 Avenue, New York, against ranked opponents. For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550
VOLLEYBALL:
SOCCER:
Volleyball will host the Sheraton University City Volleyball Invitational at the Palestra this weekend. First up, the Quakers will take on Bucknell (2-1) on Friday, and then face off against Canisius (0-3) on Saturday morning, followed by Coppin State (1-2) that evening. Although each of their three opponents have already competed in three games this season, the Quakers will be looking to prove themselves on their home court. Penn volleyball has had a longer hiatus than most other Penn sports, after its 2019 season was cut short following the administration’s discovery of “vulgar, offensive, and disrespectful posters” in the team’s locker room. Despite having her position for more than a year, Friday will mark the first official game for head coach Meredith Schamun, who joined the coaching staff in March 2020. Also making their debuts will be assistant coaches Evan Feltz and Trevor Weiskircher.
The women’s soccer team has a head start on every other fall sport, with two games already under its belt. The Quakers (1-0-1) will look to build off their recent 2-1 win over George Mason when they face off at home against the University of Illinois at Chicago (0-2-1) on Thursday and at Hofstra (3-1) on Sunday. Fans who wish to cheer on the Quakers at Rhodes Field must prove their COVID-19 vaccination status, and will be required to wear face coverings. The men’s soccer team will open its season this Friday at Fairleigh Dickinson (1-1). The Knights have already played two matches, dropping their contest to the New Jersey Institute of Technology, 4-1, and besting Army, 1-0. Friday will mark the first game not only for Penn’s 16 new players, but also for the two additions to the coaching staff. Matt Poplawski, who formerly served as captain of Penn men’s soccer, and Ryan Sandell were named assistant coaches last month. The Quakers have several non-conference games in the coming weeks to find their footing before Ivy League play starts in October.
For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550 For 2021 ForRelease ReleaseThursday, Thursday,September August 26, 2, 2021
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THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
SPORTS 9
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021
AFTER ALMOST CALLING IT QUITS, PENN ALUM JAKE COUSINS EXCELLING IN MLB
SPORTS | Cousins is the first Penn grad to pitch in the MLB since 1990 MATTHEW FRANK Deputy Sports Editor
NICK BUCHTA
After graduating from Penn, Cousins was selected by the Washington Nationals in the 20th round of the 2017 MLB Draft.
At about 11 p.m. on June 20, 2021, Nashville Sounds relief pitcher Jake Cousins had just finished a Triple-A game in Gwinnett County, Ga. against the Gwinnett Stripers and was heading to the locker room to use the bathroom. He was quickly interrupted, though, by Sounds pitching coach Jim Henderson, who told him to head to the manager’s office once he was done. So, after using the bathroom, Cousins ventured over to Sounds manager Rick Sweet’s office, where good news was in store. “[He] just said, ‘Hey man, you’re going to the big leagues,’” Cousins said. “I was like, ‘Are you kidding me?’ And he’s like ‘No man, I’m not kidding you.’ So it was him and Jim Henderson, and he just said, ‘Hey, you got a flight tomorrow morning. You’re going to Phoenix.’ And yeah, I mean, I was speechless.” Cousins was off to go play for the Milwaukee Brewers, and after hugging all his teammates and telling his wife and family the good news, he got on a flight the next morning to Phoenix, as the Brewers were facing off against the Arizona Diamondbacks that Monday. Before his call-up to the MLB, however, Cousins was a pitcher for Penn from 2014-2017. During his sophomore season, Cousins earned a second team AllIvy selection, and after a senior season in which he was arguably the best pitcher on the roster, he was unanimously selected first team All-Ivy. He finished his Quaker career with 20 wins, the third most of any pitcher in Penn baseball history. Looking back on his time with the program, Cousins credits the team for unlocking his potential and for even seeing that he had potential in the first place. “I think it’s just a testament to the coaching staff that recruited me to go there in the first place,” Cousins said. “I mean I wasn’t highly sought after by any means, so a coaching staff that’s able to see potential and then able to get that potential out of you says a lot. Josh Schwartz, pitching coach, did a great job, and he and I have a great relationship. “Just having all the experiences and lessons I’ve learned while I was at Penn has definitely helped me out today.” After graduating from Penn, Cousins was selected by the Washington Nationals in the 20th round of the 2017 MLB Draft. His time with the Nationals was fairly short-lived due to a series of arm injuries that caused him to not play as much as he needed to. Cousins was released during
spring training in 2019, and at that point, he thought that that might have been the end of his professional baseball career. “I was pretty close to hanging it up,” Cousins said, “but my family, my wife, just kept telling me, ‘Hey let’s try and play this last year out and at least end on a good note, not hurt.’” Included in that familial chorus of encouragement was someone who’s had professional sports success of his own, his cousin Kirk Cousins, who is a starting NFL quarterback. “In 20 years, when you look back at your life,” Kirk Cousins said to his cousin at the time, “are you gonna wish that you quit baseball earlier?” So, with the support of his family, Cousins gave it another go, playing for the Schaumburg Boomers in the Frontier League and then for Arizona and Wisconsin in the lower levels of the minor leagues. Once COVID-19 hit, Cousins ended up joining the Chicago Dogs in the American Association, which is an independent baseball league. While with the Dogs, he got to play with MLB players for the first time, and his success at that level proved that he could compete against high-level talent. From there, Cousins got a spring training invite from the Brewers and quickly catapulted the ranks of the Brewers’ minor league system. “This year was crazy,” Cousins said. “We were in each spot for about three weeks, and it was a lot of fun. Someone comes and taps on your shoulder and tells you to go to the manager’s office, and then you get on a plane the next day. “So it’s a lot of just enjoying where you’re at and just acting like you’re gonna be there for the full season and anything else is a positive.” On top of injuries being less of a factor, Cousins attributes a freshened perspective to his improvement in play since his time with the Nationals organization. “The thing I learned was that I tried to control a lot of stuff when I was with the Nationals, and trying to control your life through baseball is insane,” Cousins said. “You’re not gonna be able to control anything, so I just learned to kind of let all that go and try to just control what things I can control and be where my feet are and just enjoy the process. “It just made everything a lot lighter, and I started enjoying baseball more and just went along for the ride, and luckily, it worked out.”
All of his success led up to the big moment in late June when he received the news that he’d be pitching in the big leagues. In doing so, Cousins became the first Penn alumnus to play in the MLB since Mark DeRosa in 2013 and the first Penn alumnus to pitch in the MLB since Steven Thomas Adkins in 1990. Going into his first game with the Brewers on June 21, Cousins didn’t expect to see any game action after his new manager Craig Counsell said that they wouldn’t throw him into the fire right away. However, after Brewers’ starting pitcher Brett Anderson went down with a minor knee injury in the second inning, Cousins knew he was going to have to throw that night. “That’s when I really got nervous because you don’t really get nervous up un-
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earned runs during that span. “A hat tip to our pro scouting staff, finding a guy like this,” Counsell said to MLB.com. “He’s had a nice year. He did enough in a short look in ‘19 to get an invite to Major League camp. Then he went out and pitched really well in the Minor League season. We challenged him in Triple-A and he continued to pitch well and earned his shot here. Guys like this, they’ve got to earn it completely. They’ve got to earn everything they get, and that’s what Jake did to get here.” Although he’s surrounded by elite-level talent in the Milwaukee pitching staff, which includes two-time NL Reliever of the Year Josh Hader and 2021 Rookie of the Year Devin Williams, the main advice he’s been given has been fairly simple. “Basically, just everybody’s telling me to stay who you are, you’re here for a reason,
YOU’RE NOT GONNA BE ABLE TO CONTROL ANYTHING, SO I JUST LEARNED TO KIND OF LET ALL THAT GO AND TRY TO JUST CONTROL WHAT THINGS I CAN CONTROL AND BE WHERE MY FEET ARE AND JUST ENJOY THE PROCESS. JAKE COUSINS
til then because you never know if you’re gonna throw or not, but once our starter went down, that’s when the nerves came,” Cousins said. “It’s very surreal. It’s one of those things where it happens so fast that I didn’t really have a chance to think about it, which is a good thing in that scenario.” The rushed entrance into the majors was in fact an effective maneuver, as Cousins entered the game in the sixth inning and pitched two scoreless and hitless innings, striking out five batters. “It was amazing,” Cousins said. “Afterwards, just being able to sit back and think about what just happened was a dream come true.” Since his MLB debut, Cousins has continued to excel, pitching 23 innings in total and only giving up 10 hits and two
you don’t need to try and be different,” Cousins said. “You’ve had success this year for a reason. Keep doing that, and just learn from your mistakes.” Currently, the Brewers sit at first place in the NL Central with a 81-52 record, meaning Cousins and his team will have a strong chance at the playoffs come October. Cousins was recently sidelined from that effort, though, as he was diagnosed with COVID-19 on July 31 despite his being vaccinated. As he rejoins the team after getting out of quarantine, Cousins will take part in the Brewers’ stretch run to try and earn a playoff berth, a far ways away from almost calling it quits back just two years ago. “It’s a lifetime full of work to fulfill a dream, and I wouldn’t change it,” Cousins said. “It’s been a really fun time.”
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 VOL. CXXXVII NO. 17
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PENN WOMEN’S SOCCER NOTCHES A DRAW AND A WIN IN ITS FIRST TWO GAMES SINCE 2019 SUKHMANI KAUR
Since their match against Temple was on the road, Penn’s bout with George Mason also marked the team’s home debut.
SPORTS | The bouts against Temple and George Mason marked new coach Casey Brown’s Penn debut MATTHEW FRANK Deputy Sports Editor
Playing for the first time in almost two years, Penn women’s soccer started the season off strong, finishing its game on Friday against Temple with a draw and winning its game on Sunday against George Mason. In addition to their extended hiatus being a noteworthy factor going into their first games, the Quakers were also playing for the first time under new head coach Casey Brown. After former head coach Nicole Van Dyke resigned from Penn in January of 2020 to take the same job at the University of Washington, Brown — who was awarded 2019 Patriot League Coach of the Year while at Holy Cross — was hired in March of 2020. In her first game, which was against Temple, Penn controlled the pace during the first half, leading the Owls by two in shots on goal and five in corners. However, Temple entered halftime
with a 1-0 lead after midfielder Erin Theiller netted a goal in the 31st minute of play. Despite the deficit, as the Quakers entered halftime, Brown was impressed by the level of mental toughness her team showed. “I think that the team showed great resiliency in terms of going into the locker room and just feeling confident in getting back to what we want to do,” Brown said postgame via Penn Athletics. That mindset paid off when, roughly threefourths of the way through the game, the Quakers tied it up with a goal from sophomore forward Ginger Fontenot. Since there was no soccer play last season, Fontenot was playing in the very first game of her career and, in doing so, scored the goal that prevented Penn from starting its season off with a loss. Additionally, sophomore Lauren Teuschl notched the assist on the crucial goal in what was the first game of her career as well, and sophomore Laurence Gladu held steady in goal, making three saves in her first match. Although Penn finished with a tie, it certainly gave itself plenty of chances to push ahead of Temple, as it finished the game with a 12-4 lead
PENN ATHLETICS OUTLINES FALL SPORT SPECTATOR RULES SPORTS | The updated rules affect mask wearing, ticketing policies, and concession booths JOEY PIATT Sports Associate
in corners and a 16-4 lead in shots on goal. “It’s just a great starting point,” Brown said postgame via Penn Athletics. “I’m really proud of the effort. The girls put in a real shift. We liked the way we were organized, we liked the way we moved the ball, and there’s things to go back and tidy up a little bit, but we felt like it was just a really good starting place for us.” In their second game against George Mason, the Red and Blue were seemingly able to tidy up the areas that they may have struggled with against Temple, as they again fell behind early but were able to capitalize on more of their opportunities, which allowed them to rally back for a 2-1 win. Since its match against Temple was on the road, Penn’s bout with George Mason also marked the team’s home debut, which held particular significance after a long stretch away from the pitch. “For the girls to be able to play back on Rhodes [Field], it just means so much to us, and we wanted to do our part and set it right with a win,” Brown said postgame via Penn Athletics. “That’s huge. We want to make this a difficult place to play, and I think tonight was the first step in the right direction.”
During the 22nd minute of the game, Patriot forward Dacheka Kolcum scored on a header off of a free kick to take the early lead for the visiting team. Then, just two minutes later, Teuschel scored off a cross by junior midfielder/forward Sizzy Lawton to tie the game up at one apiece. For Teuschel, the goal marked the second point of her career, a strong start with having played just two games so far. After her goal, the Patriots and the Quakers went back and forth for the next 46 minutes before Penn jumped ahead to take the decisive lead. The gamewinner came from senior Mia Shenk via a pass by 2019 honorable mention All-Ivy Lawton, who earned her second assist of the game. “[It was] unfortunate to go down early, but [I’m] incredibly proud of the girls’ effort,” Brown said postgame. “Playing a real direct, gritty team like that, we had to fight and find a new way. [I’m] just really impressed with, again, the continued resiliency, but just the overall team fight and mentality to get back in the game and pose our own style. So we’re very pleased with that effort.” Penn women’s soccer will look to keep its positive momentum going on Thursday at 6 p.m. when the Red and Blue host the University of Illinois at Chicago at home.
Penn Athletics’ updated fall sports spectator rules went into effect this past weekend, when Penn women’s soccer kicked off the fall athletics season. The rules include updated guidance on mask wearing, vaccination status, ticketing policies, and concessions. All fans that meet the age eligibility for the COVID-19 vaccine — 12 years and up — must indicate that they have been immunized against the virus. Fans will also be required to wear face coverings at athletics events, regardless of vaccination status. Fans that do not meet the minimum age for receiving the vaccine will also be required to wear a mask, unless under age five. All non-ticketed events will require that fans
RSVP beforehand. On the day of the event as well, spectators will need to conduct a daily symptom check. Once spectators have adhered to RSVP and symptom-checking policies, they will be able to enter the facilities an hour before the start of games. The concessions policy has also been updated, as only individually wrapped containers will be for sale. Since full-scale concessions will not be available, fans may also bring their own food and beverages to the events, so long as they remain socially distant while they remove their mask to eat. The spectator guidelines are a part of the University’s larger overarching guidance for all on-campus events and gatherings.
CHASE SUTTON
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