to analyzing Wharton’s position as a global leader in business education. He wants to build on the school’s 130-year heri- tage to make it “more powerful in the next century than it was in the last century.” Garrett has yet to implement any significant changes at Wharton, but has so far focused on evaluating what he can add to the school. And Garrett already has a slogan in mind for his tenure at Wharton. Citing his desire to pre- serve and leverage the school’s long history, he believes that the term “built to last” is most ap- “Just landed in Seoul to visit fantastic @Wharton alums. #Eb- ola precautions very visible,” Wharton Dean Geoffrey Garrett tweeted from his account on Sun- day. Whether he’s tweeting selfies with students from Philadelphia, open shots with Penn alumni from New York or musings on econom- ics from Hong Kong, Garrett’s tweets — like the man himself — have a global character. “I get to lead an unbelievably blessed life that I hope is also rea- sonably interesting,” Garrett said of his Twitter presence. “If I can give it some real local flavor of the day, I hope that’s of interest to peo- ple who are interested in and sup- portive of the Wharton School.” Garrett, who marked his first 100 days at the helm of Wharton on Oct. 9 — Wharton did not grant interviews with Garrett about his deanship until earlier this week — has dedicated his time so far SEE GARRETT PAGE 6 Spotify last month ranked Penn its top college for EDM music. And with EDM comes Molly, a purer form of ec- stasy that releases serotonin in the brain, lifting the users’ moods. While Penn students might listen to Calvin Harris more than peers at other schools, their Molly use seems to be in line with the national trend. Director of the Office of Alcohol and Other Drugs Julie Lyzinski Nettleton has observed an uptick in Mol- ly use on campus in recent years, but so have her coun- terparts at other schools, she said. In addition to serotonin, the drug also triggers the re- lease of the hormones oxyto- cin and vasopressin, which play a role in increasing feelings of love and sexual arousal. Studies have shown that long-term MDMA use can lead to long-lasting con- fusion, depression and prob- lems with memory and atten- tion. “It is a powerful drug — EMILY OFFIT Staff Writer SEE MOLLY PAGE 5 READING TERMINAL HARVEST FESTIVAL Reading Terminal welcomed fall with a harvest festival complete with hay rides, a pumpkin batch, live music and a large selection of seasonal treats to delight and entertain visitors to the public market on Saturday. The festival is an annual event that was created 14 years ago. PHOTO FEATURE MARCUS KATZ/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Winning the ‘war for talent’ When participants in on-campus recruiting are presented with ex- ploding offers and bonuses — em- ployment offers that are retracted if not accepted within a short amount of time — Career Services wants them to know that they have re- course. “There’s a war for talent,” Direc- tor of Career Services Patricia Rose said. “Our students have a lot of opportunities, and they don’t real- ize that they have some control and some power and we can help them exercise that.” In response to an Oct. 7 article in The Daily Pennsylvanian in which students testified that they had been pressured, sometimes in “underhanded” ways, to respond quickly to employment offers ob- tained through OCR, Rose said that her department has mechanisms in place to help students push back. Rose explained that an offer let- ter asking for a response before Oct. 28, the date set by Career Services as the earliest an employer can de- mand a commitment, is permissible if the offer will not be rescinded pre- maturely. She did still call that prac- tice “unfair” to students and noted that if the employer is aware that the student has until Oct. 28 to respond but calls the student frequently, then the student needs to resist. Career Services will help stu- dents respond to pressure from firms by helping them with the lan- guage they should use in conversa- tion with recruiters, as well as by contacting firms directly. She noted that Career Services call firms ev- ery week to remind them of OCR policies. “If students don’t make contact Career Services wants to help students resist pres- sure to accept offers early ESTHER YOON Staff Writer SEE OCR PAGE 3 AMANDA SUAREZ/MANAGING EDITOR COREY STERN Staff Writer Wharton’s new dean, an Australian with an affinity for Twitter, says he’s hit the ceiling of business academia. He wants to see more of a focus on internationalism and using business as a force for change. INSIDE FOOTBALL GETS FIRST WIN BACK PAGE SPORTS OPINION CORE VALUES A MEN’S SOCCER COME BACK Think twice next time you complain about the College’s sector requirements Down 1-0 early, goals from two freshmen give Quakers key win PAGE 4 BACK PAGE ONLINE THEDP.COM See exclusive video interview SEE HARVEST PAGE 7 The First 100 Days Geoffrey Garrett Gutmann to announce sustainability plan on Tues. Penn will announce a plan this week to increase the University’s sustainability efforts in several areas, including academics, waste minimi- zation and transportation. Penn President Amy Gutmann SEE CLIMATE ACTION PLAN PAGE 2 JESSICA WASHINGTON Staff Writer NEWS UNIVERSITY CITY ON THE RISE Over the past five years, more than $4.6 billion has been invested in real estate development PAGE 3 Penn’s Molly use rolls with national trend THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2014 CONTACT US: 215-422-4646 SEND STORY IDEAS TO [email protected]ONLINE AT THEDP.COM
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Transcript
to analyzing Wharton’s position as a global leader in business education. He wants to build on the school’s 130-year heri-tage to make it “more powerful in the next century than it was in the last century.” Garrett has yet to implement any signifi cant changes at Wharton, but has so far focused on evaluating what he can add to the school.
And Garrett already has a slogan in mind for his tenure at Wharton. Citing his desire to pre-serve and leverage the school’s long history, he believes that the term “built to last” is most ap-
Front1
“Just landed in Seoul to visit fantastic @Wharton alums. #Eb-ola precautions very visible,” Wharton Dean Geoff rey Garrett tweeted from his account on Sun-day. Whether he’s tweeting selfi es with students from Philadelphia, open shots with Penn alumni from New York or musings on econom-ics from Hong Kong, Garrett’s tweets — like the man himself — have a global character.
“I get to lead an unbelievably blessed life that I hope is also rea-sonably interesting,” Garrett said of his Twitter presence. “If I can give it some real local fl avor of the day, I hope that’s of interest to peo-ple who are interested in and sup-portive of the Wharton School.”
Garrett, who marked his fi rst 100 days at the helm of Wharton on Oct. 9 — Wharton did not grant interviews with Garrett about his deanship until earlier this week — has dedicated his time so far
SEE GARRETT PAGE 6
Spotify last month ranked Penn its top college for EDM music. And with EDM comes Molly, a purer form of ec-stasy that releases serotonin in the brain, lifting the users’ moods.
While Penn students might listen to Calvin Harris more than peers at other schools, their Molly use seems to be in line with the national trend. Director of the Offi ce of Alcohol and Other Drugs Julie Lyzinski Nettleton has observed an uptick in Mol-
ly use on campus in recent years, but so have her coun-terparts at other schools, she said.
In addition to serotonin, the drug also triggers the re-lease of the hormones oxyto-cin and vasopressin, which play a role in increasing feelings of love and sexual arousal. Studies have shown that long-term MDMA use can lead to long-lasting con-fusion, depression and prob-lems with memory and atten-tion.
“It is a powerful drug —
EMILY OFFIT Staff Writer
SEE MOLLY PAGE 5
READING TERMINAL HARVEST FESTIVALReading Terminal welcomed fall with a harvest festival complete with hay rides, a pumpkin batch, live music and a large selection of seasonal treats to delight and entertain visitors to the public market on Saturday. The festival is an annual event that was created 14 years ago.
PHOTO FEATURE
MARCUS KATZ/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Winning the ‘war for talent’
When participants in on-campus recruiting are presented with ex-ploding off ers and bonuses — em-ployment off ers that are retracted if not accepted within a short amount of time — Career Services wants
them to know that they have re-course.
“There’s a war for talent,” Direc-tor of Career Services Patricia Rose said. “Our students have a lot of opportunities, and they don’t real-ize that they have some control and some power and we can help them exercise that.”
In response to an Oct. 7 article in The Daily Pennsylvanian in which students testifi ed that they had been pressured, sometimes in “underhanded” ways, to respond
quickly to employment off ers ob-tained through OCR, Rose said that her department has mechanisms in place to help students push back.
Rose explained that an off er let-ter asking for a response before Oct. 28, the date set by Career Services as the earliest an employer can de-mand a commitment, is permissible if the off er will not be rescinded pre-maturely. She did still call that prac-tice “unfair” to students and noted that if the employer is aware that the student has until Oct. 28 to respond
but calls the student frequently, then the student needs to resist.
Career Services will help stu-dents respond to pressure from fi rms by helping them with the lan-guage they should use in conversa-tion with recruiters, as well as by contacting fi rms directly. She noted that Career Services call fi rms ev-ery week to remind them of OCR policies.
“If students don’t make contact
Career Services wants to help students resist pres-sure to accept off ers early
ESTHER YOONStaff Writer
SEE OCR PAGE 3
AMANDA SUAREZ/MANAGING EDITOR
COREY STERNStaff Writer
Wharton’s new dean, an Australian with an affi nity for Twitter, says he’s hit the ceiling of business academia. He wants to see more of a focus on internationalism and using business as a force for change.
INSIDE
FOOTBALL GETS FIRST WIN
BACK PAGE
SPORTS
OPINION
CORE VALUES
A MEN’S SOCCER COME BACK
Think twice next time you complain about the College’s sector requirements
Down 1-0 early, goals from two freshmen give Quakers key win
PAGE 4
BACK PAGE
ONLINETHEDP.COM
See exclusive video interview
SEE HARVEST PAGE 7
The First 100 DaysGeoffrey Garrett Gutmann
to announce sustainability plan on Tues.
Penn will announce a plan this week to increase the University’s sustainability eff orts in several areas, including academics, waste minimi-zation and transportation.
Penn President Amy Gutmann
SEE CLIMATE ACTION PLAN PAGE 2
JESSICA WASHINGTONStaff Writer
NEWS
UNIVERSITY CITY ON THE RISEOver the past fi ve years, more than $4.6 billion has been invested in real estate development
PAGE 3
Penn’s Molly use rolls with
national trend
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2014
CONTACT US: 215-422-4646SEND STORY IDEAS TO [email protected] ONLINE AT THEDP.COM
College sophomore Natalie Hernandez resigned from her position as Undergraduate As-sembly secretary on Sunday afternoon. Hernandez will still serve as a College representa-tive.
Hernandez said she is step-ping down to focus on academ-ics. In an email to the UA in-forming them of her decision, she stated that acting as UA secretary has been a rewarding experience but that her fi rst pri-ority is academics.
The UA will hold internal elections at its Oct. 26 meeting to fi ll the position, with Nomi-nations and Elections Commit-tee Chair and Wharton junior Devin Grossman overseeing the process. For a new secre-tary to be elected, a majority of the UA general body must vote for that person.
UA Communications Direc-tor and College junior Robyn Saad said that the UA “[prais-es] members ... who choose to give up positions in order to benefi t the student body by providing the opportunity to someone who will better suit the job.”
As secretary, Hernandez was expected to oversee ad-ministrative duties for the UA’s weekly general body and Steer-ing meetings, as well as attend executive board and Cabinet
meetings, serve as a liaison from one of the UA’s four com-mittees to the executive board and plan bonding events for the UA general body.
UA President and College senior Joyce Kim estimated that the UA secretary position required nine to 11 hours in ad-dition to general body member commitments.
“It’s hard because you run in the spring and come fall, your perception of time changes so much in terms of what you can do,” Kim said. “What is good this time around is because we are in the middle of the semes-ter people know exactly what their commitments are.”
In an email to the UA gen-eral body on Sunday afternoon, UA speaker and College junior Andrew Robertson said that he will miss Hernandez but knows that she is making “the right decision for [her] and for the body.”
UA Representative and Col-lege sophomore Daniel Kahana said that he and Hernandez are close friends and he respects her decision to step down.
“She always give 100 per-cent to her commitments, and she should be proud of the fact that she was brave enough to step down and give the posi-tion to someone who could give the 100 percent,” Kahana said. “This also shows that she is about the purpose, not the position.”
When the Philadelphia Ron-ald McDonald House opened 40 years ago last week, it only had seven rooms.
Since then, the fi rst Ronald McDonald House in the country has grown into two houses, one on 39th and Chestnut streets with 45 rooms and one on Front and Erie with 18 rooms. Each serves as a “home away from home” for families of terminally ill children who are being treated at local hospitals, according to the pro-gram’s website.
But now, there isn’t enough space in the house to accommo-date families seeking treatment. In 2013, the house served 2,379 families from 46 states and 20 countries but turned away 2,888 families due to lack of space and resources.
“This devastating statistic highlights both the demand for our services and the need to in-crease capacity,” Susan Camp-bell, executive director of the Philadelphia House, said in an email statement provided by a spokesperson.
That’s why on Friday, at the 40th anniversary celebration of Philadelphia’s Ronald McDonald House, Campbell announced the launch of a fundraising campaign to expand the house’s capacity .
“Because we are always full and there is always a waiting list,
we are looking to expand for the future,” said Jennifer Shipman, director of marketing and com-munications for the Philadelphia House. “The 40th anniversary was a pivotal turning point, be-cause we recognized the need and kicked off the fundraising to grow the house.”
For those who are able to use the house, it has been immensely benefi cial.
The family of Emily White-head, a six-year old girl in 2012 who had acute lymphoblastic leukemia, benefi ted from the Philadelphia Ronald McDonald House by staying there when she was successfully treated by Penn professor Carl June’s experimen-tal immune therapy treatment.
The Ronald McDonald House only charges $15 per night. But for the nearly 55 percent of fami-lies who are unable to stay at
the house due to capacity limits, there could be extra costs.
“Right now, only about 20 percent of our patients benefi t from the house because capacity is limited,” June said. “The Ron-ald McDonald House is impor-tant because our hospital system doesn’t provide infrastructure to take care of out-of-town pediatric cases, and it needs more space.”
Friday’s gala was the fi rst step toward increasing space at the Philadelphia house. Over 1,000 supporters attended the anniver-sary gala, emceed by CBS3 per-sonalities Chris May and Kathy Orr. The largest sponsor at the gala was the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, which donated $50,000 to secure two tables for twenty people.
Four Penn doctors — June and his colleagues Stephan Grupp, Bruce Levine and David L. Por-
ter — were also honored at the gala with the Dr. Audrey E. Evans Award of Excellence for their im-mune therapy work using geneti-cally modifi ed HIV cells to treat children, like Whitehead, with acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
The anniversary gala cul-minated with a live auction, in which the emcees auctioned off contributions to the future of the Ronald McDonald House and raised over $200,000 to contrib-ute to future construction and expansion of the house and its services.
“Families travel from all over the world to Philadelphia be-cause some diseases can only be treated here, and the Children’s Hospital especially is the gold standard,” Shipman said. “So, there’s always going to be a high need for the Ronald McDonald House.”
2PageTwo
SONIA SIDHUStaff Writer
plans to announce Penn’s Cli-mate Action Plan 2.0 on Tuesday, which will build on the progress Penn has made after its fi rst Cli-mate Action Plan was announced in 2009.
In 2007, Gutmann became the fi rst Ivy League president to sign the American College and University President’s Climate Commitment, which committed Penn to both develop plans for signifi cant reductions of green-house gasses and promote general sustainability on campus. As a
part of this pledge, Penn created the Environmental Sustainabil-ity Advisory Committee, which drafted the fi rst Climate Action Plan, a comprehensive list of the strategies the University would undertake to accomplish its sus-tainability and emission goals.
As of 2011, when Penn re-
leased a progress report on the fi rst Climate Action Plan, the University had increased academ-ic awareness of greenhouse gas-ses through 160 classes related to environmental sustainability. The campus recycling rate had also in-creased from 21 percent in 2008 to 31 percent in 2011. However,
the report indicated that Penn had not reached its goal of reducing carbon emissions: In the 2011 fi s-cal year, which lasted from July 1, 2010 to June 30, 2011, Penn’s carbon emissions were 1.4 per-cent higher than in FY 2007, a fact the report attributed to recent building additions.
As of early October 2014, 11 buildings or areas at Penn — the most recent of which are Krishna P. Singh Center for Nanotechnol-ogy and the Wharton School’s Steinberg-Dietrich Hall West Tower Entrance addition — have received LEED Certifi cation for emphasizing sustainability.
CLIMATE ACTION PLAN>> PAGE 1
Ronald McDonald House launches campaign to add rooms
The fi rst Ronald Mc-Donald House in the
U.S. turned 40 last week
EUNICE LIMStaff Writer
YOLANDA CHEN/NEWS PHOTO EDITOR
UA secretary steps down from role on
executive board
2 NEWS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2014 | THEDP.COMTHE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
October 22, 2014Come experience the excitement of nano-scale science!NanoDay has activities for everyone. All events are open to the public.
www.nanotech.upenn.edu/nano_day.html
PennNanoDayNANO / BIO INTERFACE CENTER
October 22, 2014Come experience the excitement of nano-scale science!NanoDay has activities for everyone. All events are open to the public.
High School Student Research Projects Levine Lobby, 9:30 AM - 2:00 PM
Exhibits and Demonstrations 1st Floor Towne Building, 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Poster Session and Reception Singh Center Lobby, 5:30 - 7:00 PM
NBIC Award for ResearchExcellence in Nanotechnology4:00 PM Glandt Forum, Singh Center
Charles MarcusCenter for Quantum DevicesNiels Bohr Institute, University of CopenhagenControl Without Measurement:The Profound Challenge ofQuantum Information
While construction and over-head cranes have taken over cam-pus this past year, a University City District report says this means that the neighborhood is thriving more than ever.
Over the past five years, more than $4.6 billion has been invested in real estate development, with over 2,000 new housing units an-ticipated by the end of 2016, ac-cording to UCD’s “State of Uni-versity City” report released on Wednesday. As the office occu-pancy rate rose to 96 percent this year, University City is expected to have over 7,000 new jobs by 2016. The number of restaurants — up by 17 percent since 2009 — has also increased with the residential and office growth.
The recent wave of investment has created “an unprecedented feeling of momentum for the neighborhood,” UCD’s Policy and Research Manager Seth Budick said. “We hope to create a qual-ity of life that supports the invest-ments that are coming in.”
The recent cycle of investment and growth is linked to the inno-vative environment that local in-stitutions like Penn have fostered. Especially as projects on Penn property are being developed — like the Hub3939 and FMC Tower — and as Drexel plans for the In-novation Neighborhood, Universi-ty City is increasingly stimulating commerce.
“Everyone wants to be near re-search and progress,” Budick said.
The report itself adds to the neighborhood’s economic devel-opment since “it is used as a tool for selling the neighborhood,” UCD spokesperson Lori Brennan said.
UCD partners, including Penn, distribute the report as a way to
attract business, restaurants and re-tail to the area. Other local organi-zations often include the report in grant applications since the back-drop of a promising neighborhood improves their chances of winning investment dollars.
While the report’s data high-lights how far University City has come, UCD representatives admit there is still work to be done. With 31 percent of West Philadelphians living below the poverty level, about 15 percent of West Philadelphia residents are unemployed.
“It’s easy to gloss over our re-lationship with some parts of the neighborhood, but we can’t talk about all this good without ad-dressing issues of unemployment, education and other problems that still exist here,” Brennan said.
Beyond supporting business and innovation, UCD is working to re-duce unemployment through the West Philadelphia Skills Initiative, which connects unemployed resi-dents to local employers.
UCD is also working to enhance the vibrancy of public spaces around the neighborhood’s west-
ern and eastern edges. UCD is re-vitalizing the Porch at 30th Street Station and the 40th Street trolley portal — potential centers of bus-
tling activity — as a way to make University City an anchor between Center City and other adjacent ar-eas, Budick said.
News3
Report highlights University City as neighborhood on the rise
Source: University City District’s “State of University City 2014/15 Report”
State of University City
$ $4.5 billion in real estate development over the past five years
Office occupancy rate of 96 percent
Number of jobs in University City rose to
nearly 73,000
Number of restaurants increased by 17 percent
since 2009
2,090 new housing units anticipated by the end of 2016
Estimated 10 percent population increase over the next 3 years
with us we can’t do anything,” she added. “If we don’t know that [ex-ploding offers] are happening, we can’t monitor them. The most im-portant thing is for students to make us aware.” Career Services will only call firms that are reported to them if they have permission from the stu-dent to call about a particular case.
If firms refuse to give students more time after being contacted by Career Services, the firm’s op-portunities to recruit on campus become restricted. Career Ser-vices generally pushes informa-tion sessions and interview times for insubordinate firms until later in the OCR process. “And believe me,” Rose said, “Employers do not want to have their access to Penn students restricted.”
Although companies have been banned because they have not fol-lowed Career Services’ policies, Rose is “reluctant” to ban them from recruiting at Penn because she does not want to take opportunities away from students.
“I feel that the better approach ... is to say we’re going to make [com-panies] come later in the process when it’s closer to our deadlines so [they’re] not taking advantage of our students. That usually does the trick,” she said.
For their part, firms are pretty qui-et on the topic of exploding offers. The recruiting web pages of sev-eral major players in OCR, including Bain & Company, The Boston Con-sulting Group and Ernst & Young, do not mention expiring offers at all. McKinsey & Company tells students seeking a position at McKinsey that they can contact their McKinsey re-cruiter should they receive an expir-ing offer from a different firm.
Students sometimes take advan-tage of policies like McKinsey’s, Rose said. Students tell firms that a competitor is pressuring them with an exploding offer just to claim an earlier interview. Students should be discouraged from using that tactic, she added.
“If we don’t provide an even play-ing field for employers they might not come back next year and that will hurt future Penn students. We want the employers to feel like ... ev-eryone is playing by the same rules,” Rose said.
OCR>> PAGE 1
3NEWSTUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
University City District predicts 7,000 new jobs
by 2016SOPHIA WITTE
Staff Writer
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Meeting at:First District Plaza
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CONTACT: Steve (aforementioned nice guy) 609.501.5311 or [email protected]
MONDAY, OCT. 20 - FRIDAY, OCT. 24
Family Weekend Children’s Event!Saturday, October 25, at 1:30 PM
Jessica DiMuzio, “Bark! Bark! Bark for My Park!” Cindy Lipton, “Ruth and Leonard.”
Join us for crafts and snacks as Penn Alumnae Jessica DiMuzio and Cindy Lipton read their newest children’s books!
Wednesday, October 22, at 5:30 PM, Penn Chaplain Rev. Charles Howard, “Black Theology as Mass Movement.” Howard calls upon current and future theologians to stretch the boundaries of Black Liberation Theology from what has become an academic sub-field into a full fledge liberation movement. This event is held in conjunction with Penn’s Center for Africana Studies.
Monday, October 20, at 5:30 PM, Daniel Campo, “The Accidental Playground: Brooklyn Waterfront Narratives of the Undesigned and Unplanned.” Campo draws readers into the remarkable landscape created by individuals and small groups who occupied and rebuilt an abandoned Brooklyn waterfront. This event is part of the Penn IUR Urban Book Talk series.
D I S T I N G U I S H E D A W A R D F O R
S C H O L A R L Y P R A C T I C E A N D P O L I C Y
�e Penn Community Is Invited to Attend the 3rd Annual Norma M. Lang Lecture
�e Faces of Inspiration Shaping Pain Science, Practice and Policy
Given by Honoree
Rosemary C. PolomanoGNu’79, PhD, RN, FAAN
Tuesday, October 21, 20143 - 5pm
Ann L. Roy AuditoriumClaire M. Fagin HallUniversity of Pennsylvania School of Nursing
Reception immediately followingCarol Elizabeth Ware Lobby
RSVP: 215.746.8822 or http://lang-polomano.eventbrite.com
MONDAY,OCTOBER 20, 2014
The DP wants to ensure that all content is accurate and to be transparent about any inaccuracies. If you have a comment or question about the fairness or accuracy of any content in the print or online editions, please email [email protected].
Have your own opinion? Send your guest column to Opinion Editor Jennifer Yu at [email protected].
VOL. CXXX, NO. 97
130th Yearof Publication
YOUR VOICE
OPINION4
TAYLOR CULLIVER, Executive Editor
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THIS ISSUE
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ONLINE
A man stuck in a flood is tossed a ladder. He refuses the aid, choosing
instead to stand in place and pray. He’s later offered a life-boat and, eventually, a helicop-ter. He refuses both, praying all the while and insisting that God will save him.
Upon drowning and reach-ing heaven, the unfortunate be-liever asks God why he wasn’t saved. “What are you talking about?” God says. “I sent you a ladder, a lifeboat and even a helicopter!”
This bitter joke is more rel-evant than it might seem. With Ebola outbreaks in Uganda and the Congo, thousands of deaths across West Africa and a fierce debate raging over border con-trol, disaster is on the American mind. So is the desperate scram-ble for a vaccine.
As favorable as the main-stream might be toward medi-cal science, you would expect a technologically advanced so-ciety to have an even stronger
consensus in favor of vaccina-tion. Sadly, staunch opposition remains. We all know the ste-reotype of the fanatically faith-ful, who consider science and its heathen orchestrators diametri-cally opposed to religious faith. Annoying as the Bible Belters are, the joke about the guy in the flood ought to address what the CDC calls their “philosophical objections.”
What’s really troubling is that the ultra religious aren’t the only ones who oppose vac-cines. A surprising number of protestors hail from the wealthy, educated suburbs of California, which have been lulled into a false sense of security by low disease rates. Of course, vac-cines are the very reason those diseases have been so infre-quent, and the drop in vaccina-tion rates over the last few years enabled a resurgence of whoop-ing cough in California — the worst in almost a century.
Gossip and a misplaced fear of autism go a long way in ex-plaining how the anti-vaccine
movement became so conta-gious. But the movement can’t be explained without addressing a dangerous underlying attitude.
In areas such as these, em-phasis on an eco-friendly and generally green lifestyle has spawned a homeopathic reli-gion of its own. According to Californian suburbanites and fraudulent doctors, letting the body ward off disease by itself is more natural, so to speak, and Mother Nature has graced her children with all they need to live long and fruitful lives (including an invulnerable im-mune system).
This is a quintessential ex-ample of what philosophers call the appeal to nature — the falla-
cious assumption that whatever is natural is good and morally advisable.
Unfortunately, the cult of the natural has overstepped its bounds. These people are no different from the fanatically religious; they cling mindlessly to dogma, guided by simplistic maxims like “nature good, tech-nology bad.” And their lack of insight is putting everyone at risk.
The whole idea of nature is a bit contrived, and not every-thing natural is necessarily your friend. Poisonous mushrooms, for instance, are so-called prod-ucts of nature, yet they’re also about as lethal as it gets. Simi-larly, open-heart surgery, an artifice of human design, often means the difference between life and death. If Mother Nature were so concerned for her off-spring, then the natural world, evolution included, would be far more pleasant than it actually is — and there would be no need for medical practice of any kind.
In fact, surgery, vaccines
and other medical technology are no less natural than the ho-meopathic “remedies” offered in their place. Biology is the systematic study of the living material world — which is in-cluded in nature — and medi-cine is the application of biol-ogy to human health. Vaccines give us mild doses of harmful pathogens, exploiting the work-ings of biology and chemistry to achieve favorable results. In what way is that not natural?
We can’t rely on nature as a guiding concept for public deci-sion-making. The intuitions be-hind the idea of naturalness are sometimes valuable to examine, but they should be discussed openly to prevent confusion. The homeopaths, like the reli-gious, are making a fetish out of something unreliably vague; were they paying closer atten-tion, they might realize that the things they’ve been rejecting are actually consistent with their general values.
More broadly, this all goes to show how mindlessness and
cloudy thought can be a plague of their own and how they rep-resent a potent threat not just to their carriers, but to others around them.
Israeli and Canadian scien-tists have recently announced that an Ebola vaccine might be on its way. Let’s hope the natu-ralists recognize a lifeboat when they see it.
Core values
ANNEKA DECARO is a College freshman. Her email address is [email protected].
CARTOON
DANI BLUM is a College freshman from Ridgefield, Conn. Her email address is [email protected]. “The Danalyst” usually appears every Tuesday.
An injection of reason
JONATHAN IWRY
THE FAITHLESS QUAKER | Don’t worry, this won’t hurt a bit
I spend way too much time on Penn InTouch. With Advance Registra-tion looming over my
head, I feel obligated to spend my free time creating mock schedules, deleting them, test-ing out the possibilities. It’s fun, to an extent — I can take a mural painting class?! — but when reality sets in, the process gets more frustrating. Instead of taking any class that sounds interesting, I need to chip away at Penn’s College curriculum requirements. But while that’s an annoying aspect of registra-tion, course requirements don’t deserve all of our complaints.
Penn’s curriculum isn’t especially constraining com-pared to other top schools. Fair Harvard estimates that general education requirements make up 30 percent of a student’s total coursework. Old Yale forces students to take at least 10 general education classes, two for each “sector of learn-
ing.” Columbia is notorious for having a set of six classes that all students must take .The ex-ception, of course, is Brown’s open curriculum, which boasts no requirements at all. In the words of 1850 Brown president Francis Wayland, the aver-age student should be able to “study what he chose, all that he chose and nothing but what he chose.”
While that’s all well and good for Brown students, an open curriculum creates the temptation for students to stick with what they know they’re good at. Academically, I’m extremely lopsided: I gravitate toward English and history and tend to stay away from any-thing close to a hard science. If I went to Brown, I’d most likely take only humanities courses.
But there’s an intrinsic value in pushing past our com-fort zones. Penn’s core curricu-lum forces me to take classes I might not enjoy as much, but
will make me a more educated citizen. I’ll need to work my butt off to fulfill the Quantita-tive Data Analysis Require-ment — maybe more so than I would in the creative writing class I’d take in its place — but I shouldn’t graduate without knowing how to think numeri-cally. Penn has an obligation to turn us into well-rounded thinkers, or at the very least to ensure we have a standard knowledge base.
That aside, course require-ments can be a useful tool — for freshmen especially. In a school this pre-professional, it’s tempting to gravitate to-ward the classes we “should” be taking, but course require-ments force us to think out-side our plans. My friends who swear they’ll go pre-med might fall in love with an Arts and Letters class; my tenta-tive poli sci and English major plans might crumble when I take a formal reasoning class.
The point is that we’re young, we’re in our first year of college and it’s okay to not know what we want to do. Course require-ments stop us from specializing too early.
It sucks that I have to put off that creative writing course I’m interested in until next year,
but I want to become a more educated person. Requirements raise us to a level of compe-tency so we can graduate with the knowledge base we need to take on the world. English majors need rudimentary math skills to survive; Wharton kids need to know how to write. Learning across disciplines allows us to pick up skills we wouldn’t otherwise have, to teach us how to think. If that’s not the purpose of college, I don’t know what is.
Some complaints about the general requirement system are fair. Penn should allow AP credit to fulfill requirements — the AP curriculum is standard-ized across the nation; those classes are widely recognized as college-level courses. Fur-thermore, other Ivies let stu-dents use APs to get out of re-quirements. Why should Penn be different? But our founda-tional and sector requirements still have value.
Am I annoyed that I have to put off taking a cool comp lit class so I can check off my req for Living World? Yes. But Penn forces us to be more edu-cated. It’s like eating our veg-etables: complain as we might, ultimately, we know they’re good for us.
DANI BLUM
THE DANALYST | Penn’s core curriculum may be annoying, but it makes us better students
We can’t rely on nature as a guiding concept for public decision-making.”
English majors need rudimentary math skills to survive; Wharton kids need to know how to wr i te . Learning across disciplines allows us to pick up skills we wouldn’t otherwise have, to teach us how to
think.”
While some of the points in this article are will-articulated, its tone is really quite demeaning.
There’s no need to call out Mrs. Krys and make her experiences ‘a teaching moment.’
— Concerned
Jara’s experiences were so far from the norm — even the fact that she has part of a college education
differentiates her from the vast majority of prosti-tutes around the globe.
— Student
READERS CHIME IN…on “The Price of Selling Sex” by Jeremiah Keenan
(see thedp.com/opinion for the column)
JONATHAN IWRY is a 2014 College graduate from Potomac, Md. His last name is pronounced “eev-ree.” His email address is [email protected]. “The Faithless Quaker” appears every Monday.
News5
HACK THE CHANGEThe third annual social-impact hackathon hosted by Penn’s Society for International Development brought students together to create technology-based solutions to real world problems faced everyday by NGOs and developmental organizations.
PHOTO FEATURE
GARRETT GOMEZ/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
doing it just a few times can then lead to pretty significant periods of depression afterwards,” Nettle-ton said. “Your brain is flooded with all of the feel-good stuff, and you do it enough times and it’s hard to feel good for a while after.”
President of the Interfraternity Council Jimmy Germi noted that the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board’s alcohol crackdown may have driven some students toward drugs like Molly, though he said he himself had not observed a significant increase in drug use among Greeks. The IFC partnered with the Medical Emergency Re-sponse Team last semester to edu-cate fraternity members on drug safety, but not Molly in particular.
MERT had a special Molly training session before Spring Fling last year to prepare for a possible increase in calls re-lated to the drug — two of the last three Fling headliners have been EDM performers. Chief of
MERT Grace Kunas has seen stu-dents displaying Molly-related symptoms both at Penn and in her work at the Electric Daisy Festi-val last summer.
“I get that the music plays into the drug’s euphoria, but in terms of risk, an [EDM concert] is the worst place to do it,” Nettleton warned. Complications of taking Molly can alter the body’s ability to regulate temperature, especial-ly when it is taken in concert set-tings that are often loud, cramped and overheated.
Kunas listed fever, increased sensory perception, touching other people, increased heart rate and rapid breathing as major symptoms of Molly use. Clench-ing of the teeth and jaw can also indicate a reaction to the drug.
Kunas explained that many first-time users become panicked, which leads them to voluntarily seek medical help. In addition, users can develop extreme thirst and become overheated, which requires medical attention. On campus, Molly users who seek medical attention are protect-
ed from legal ramifications by Penn’s medical amnesty policy.
But if students are found to have abused Molly, or any other drug, there are several measures that Penn takes to prevent further problems. Students who sought medical attention for Molly use are expected to attend First Step, a brief intervention counseling program with Associate Director of OAOD Noelle Martin. OAOD created a specific Molly handout to distribute to students.
Ecstasy was a huge trend in the early 2000s when rave festivals were popular, but due to media exposure depicting ecstasy-relat-ed deaths and a decrease in rave concerts, the drug went out of style. With the EDM scene, it has made its comeback.
“What I find fascinating is that [ecstasy] has been repackaged to be called Molly,” Nettleton said. “It looks different, and there is an assumption by students, which I believe to be erroneous, that it is safer and purer.”
Staff writer Zahra Husain con-tributed reporting.
MOLLY >> PAGE 1
5NEWSTUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
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propriate, a catchphrase coined by Ford Motor Company.
The mantra might sound ironic for Garrett, who held each of his two previous deanships for only about a year each. Garrett came to Wharton from the Australian School of Business at the Uni-
versity of New South Wales, and before that served as dean of The University of Sydney Business School.
John A. Byrne, the founder and editor-in-chief of business school news source Poets & Quants, blasted the University in March for tapping Garrett, a man he called “an itinerant job hopper,” to lead Wharton. Byrne was dis-
mayed that, by his count, Garrett worked for 11 diff erent employers in the past 27 years.
Greg Whitwell, the current dean of The University of Sydney Business School and Garrett’s se-nior deputy dean at UNSW, said that a “mixture of emotions” ac-companied Garrett’s departure for Wharton.
“Geoff ’s leaving was, in a sense, creating a big hole for the business school, and for the uni-versity. He had articulated very well his vision for the business school,” Whitwell said. “It’s that much more diffi cult when the architect of that vision leaves.” Whitwell added that despite the disappointment, there was a sense of pride associated with Garrett’s departure for one of the world’s top business schools.
And Garrett says he is at Whar-ton to stay. “Being the dean of one of the best, if not the best business school in the world is not a bad gig for anybody. I used to say, and it was true, that in Australia being the dean of the Australian School
of Business was probably the best job in Australia for me. This is probably the best job in the world for me,” he said.
While Garrett prepares for the road ahead, he has a clear image in mind of what a Wharton educa-tion should look like.
“We want to give [students] cutting edge technical and disci-plinary skills, but we also need to have a matrix approach to that,” he said, emphasizing the importance of leadership training, internship opportunities and international experiences as crucial parts of the Wharton experience.
“I’m a very macro person, not a micro person. So I look at the role of business where it fi ts in economically, socially [and] how it aff ects geopolitics,” he said. “I think that we’re living in this world in which there is an ex-panded role of the private sector, and a decreasing distance between private benefi t and public good is going to be a big feature of the world.”
That, he said, means that busi-
ness education will become more relevant, not less relevant, and it means that the leadership position Wharton occupies is even more important.
Wharton’s Vice Dean for Un-dergraduates Lori Rosenkopf thinks that Garrett will bring a fresh perspective to the under-graduate program. She praised his enthusiasm for engaging di-rectly with students, citing a Sept. 4 breakfast with undergraduates that Garrett himself proposed. “It was his initiative to want to get out and really say hello to the students formally but in an informal way,” she said.
Whitwell also lauded Gar-rett’s performance as an aca-demic leader. “Geoff has the ability to change the way you look at things. He always brings a fresh perspective. I think his background in political science and international aff airs [adds] a whole new dimension to the way he [approaches] business is-sues,” Whitwell said, adding that Garrett’s strong background with
numbers also makes him a good business educator.
At UNSW, Whitwell said, Gar-rett emphasized the role of tech-nology in transforming the stu-dent educational experience, the importance of business schools in having a positive impact on business, government and soci-ety and the role of the business school in working with the rest of the university.
“Geoff really does have a big picture approach. He’s very good at understanding trends. He un-derstands what’s happening glob-ally,” Whitwell added. “He’s got a good understanding [of] what’s happening in terms of interna-tional development, economic development, nations, [and] un-derstanding where growth is oc-curring.”
“I actually have a lot of perspec-tives now, both on the world and on how diff erent kinds of univer-sities operate, which I think will allow me to do the job at Wharton better,” Garrett said. “I’m always on the glass half full side.”
6News
GARRETT>> PAGE 1
6 NEWS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2014 | THEDP.COMTHE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
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News7
INTERNATIONAL ARCHAEOLOGY DAYPenn Museum celebrated International Archaeology Day with an afternoon of the first public opportunity to visit learning laboratories behind-the-scenes, simulated digs and talks for museum visitors of all ages. International Archaeology Day is held each year on the third Saturday of October.
PHOTO FEATURE
IRINA BIT-BABIK/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
MARCUS KATZ/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
HARVEST>> PAGE 1
7NEWSTUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
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8Sports
first time in the night. After a string of five crisp passes, freshman midfielder Austin Kuhn was able to bury it.
For the next 35 minutes, the match was dominated by Penn’s defensive perfor-mance. Thanks to a superb second-half effort from junior goalkeeper Max Polkinhorne — in addition to a more con-certed effort by the defense —
Penn would not allow another goal and seal the victory.
“I think we have a talented team, good leadership, a lot of experience around the field,” Fuller said. “I don’t view the losses as letting the game get away late, it’s just we didn’t defend well.”
“When we’re able to focus on it, stay in tune and con-nected, we’re very difficult to break down.”
Penn faces last-place Yale on Saturday in New Haven.
M. SOCCER>> PAGE 12
For 13 m i nutes , Pen n sprint football and Post were merely playing an uneventful field position battle.
However, that suddenly shifted when the Quakers’ senior star running back Mike Beamish was taken out of the game due to a bone-crushing hit by Post’s fresh-man corner Trevor Patterson with 2:31 remaining in the first quarter.
Patterson would be ejected for targeting and the Red and Blue would respond with a touchdown fueled by the emotion of seeing their cap-tain go down. But ultimately, Post would emerge on top 28-21 in a high-energy contest between the two teams.
“We were just fired up … We wanted to get this win for him,” sophomore defensive
back Chris Colavita said in reference to the atmosphere on the sideline after Beamish was taken out.
Beamish would return to the game briefly but would finish the game with negative two rushing yards before be-ing taken out for good.
On the other sideline, Post (2-2) was fired up as well. Despite being ejected, Pat-terson was receiving con-gratulatory handshakes as the whole team started jump-ing with excitement.
Just one minute later, junior wide receiver Jack Epstein hauled in a 50-yard pass from sophomore quar-terback Mike McCurdy to put Penn up 7-0. However, Post came back with a long touchdow n of their ow n. S ophomor e qua r t er back Greg Volpe threw an 81-yard bomb to junior wide receiver Jay’Len Mahan to even the
score.McCurdy led the Red and
Blue offense back onto the f ield hungry to regain the lead. However, Penn lost any momentum when Post junior defensive back T.J. Piland hauled in an interception with 11:15 remaining in the half.
Colavita and the defense kept Penn’s spirits up with consistent pressure. But un-fortunately for the Red and Blue, mistakes allowed Post multiple chances to capital-ize.
“The bottom line was we had too many turnovers … and we just can’t do that,” coach Bill Wagner said.
Wagner also commented on the defense, which let up a couple crushing big plays that led to Eagle touchdowns, saying, “We gotta start tack-ling better. That’s all.”
Down 21-7 with seven min-utes remaining in the third, the Quakers’ offense finally found their way into the red zone. Junior wide receiver Henry Mason was McCurdy’s
man all drive. Well over six feet tall, Mason did a great job of gett ing separation and taking advantage of his height to exploit the shorter Eagles defensive backs. It was Mason who caught Mc-Curdy’s second touchdown pass of the night on an 11-yard score, cutting the Post lead to seven.
After a Post rushing touch-down that made the score 28-14, it was again Colavita who gave Penn a spark after he returned the kickoff to midfield. McCurdy, however, would again make a costly decision when he threw his third pick of the night two plays later.
Still Penn wasn’t ready to give up. After another tackle for loss by Colavita, Penn got the ball back with four min-utes left. This time, McCurdy found freshman receiver An-drew Sutton for six as Penn cut the deficit in half.
In the end, Penn’s come-back hopes would fade when McCurdy fumbled with 1:32 remaining.
“I couldn’t protect the ball. So, I gotta do a better job of that next week,” McCurdy said of his four turnovers. He took all the blame and refused to pin the absence of Beamish or the play of his lineman for his miscues.
Now the Quakers will need to focus on a tough home matchup with A rmy this Friday. The Red and Blue hope to play spoiler to the Black Knights in what will be the senior class’ final home game.
Penn sprint football posts disappointing defeat
ILANA WURMAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERAfter taking a big hit in the first quarter, star senior running back Mike Beamish had to be taken off the field. He would briefly return but was largely ineffective.
Key injury leads to one-touchdown loss to Post
on SaturdayBY THOMAS MUNSON
Staff Writer
VS. POST
The Daily PennsylvanianSports BlogTHE
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down the right sideline after an impressive scramble proved to be a key play that kept the drive moving.
After some runs got Penn to the 10-yard line, Torgersen rolled out right to hit tight end Ryan Kelly for a seven-yard touchdown to give Penn its first lead of the afternoon.
The Quakers would turn the ball over before the end of the
half on a Torgersen fumble, but no harm was done after Colum-bia missed a field goal.
The Quakers’ defense shut down Columbia’s rushing at-tack in the early going, holding Lions back Cameron Molina to 18 yards on 11 carries in the first half.
“We played assignment foot-ball and stuck our gaps,” senior defensive back Evan Jackson said. “The guys up front did a great job swarming to the foot-ball. It was a good performance
for the run defense.”Penn started out the second
half hot, aided by a running into the punter penalty. After first down runs by Schoenauer and Torgersen in Penn’s first drive, a quarterback sneak by Torgersen gave the Quakers a 21-7 lead after a seven-minute march down the field.
Following a Columbia punt, Penn used a beautifully execut-ed 48-yard screen play to Fiore to set up a three-yard plunge by Strouss, extending the lead to
28-7 with 1:49 remaining in the third quarter.
“We have some injuries, so its just next guy up,” said Fiore, who had 89 all-purpose yards. “We have a lot of capable guys. I’m just fortunate I’m able to be that next man up.”
Penn would add a 23-yard field goal by Jimmy Gammill while the defense held Columbia in check.
The Quakers head to Yale next week in a crucial battle to keep their Ivy hopes alive.
FOOTBALL>> PAGE 12
So with Penn’s top three out, the buck stopped with ... sophomore Brian Schoenauer?
Though a relative unknown for Penn fans, Schoenauer im-pressed in his first career start. The sophomore had 18 carries, picking up 77 of the team’s 276 total yards on the ground and consistently driving forward to gain extra yards.
Between Schoenauer and senior Eric Fiore, the Quak-ers were in good hands. Fiore’s 12-yard run in the first quarter knotted the game for Penn, and the duo consistently made the plays needed to help a sputter-ing team right the ship.
Not only did they provide relief to an offense that had thrown the ball 107 times in two games, the backs also set the tone for a winning game plan.
The numbers from the early portion of the Red and Blue’s season weren’t terrible. The team averaged 131.8 yards per game on the ground, a mark good enough for fifth in the Ivy League entering Saturday’s
game.But it’s important to remem-
ber that other than a strong performance against Jack-sonville, the rest of the Quak-ers’ yard totals this year have been either supbar or mean-ingless. Ninety-seven yards against Villanova. Thirty-three against Dartmouth. And 187 in a 38-point loss to Fordham.
In Penn’s two best perfor-mances this season, f irst against Jacksonville and now against Columbia, the team has been able to run the ball. Some-times, the recipe for success is that simple.
And while after the game Ba-gnoli mentioned that the lack of production from the running game has stemmed from the Quakers’ large deficits this year, it’s clear that Penn will need to establish its running game early and often — as it did on Saturday — if it wants to stay in the Ivy title chase.
While Saturday’s win may have come against Columbia, a team poised to go 0-for-the season once again, the Red and Blue’s ground production is a step in the right direction for
the Quakers.The Quakers’ depth at run-
ning back has finally revealed itself. Hopefully for them, it’s not too late.
STEELE>> PAGE 12
FOOTBALLEXTRA THEY SAID IT“After this game, we can feel a little bit better about ourselves and have more confidence,”
— On Penn’s first win of the season
Al BagnoliPenn coach
THOMAS MUNSON/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSenior Eric Fiore played running back for the first time his career, reeling off 89 all-purpose yards. His first-quarter touchdown run helped lead to 31 unanswered points.
IVYWATCHIvy Overall
Harvard 2-0 5-0
Dartmouth 2-0 4-1
Princeton 2-0 3-2
Yale 1-1 4-1
PENN 1-1 1-4
Brown 0-2 2-3
Columbia 0-2 0-5
Cornell 0-2 0-5
STATISTICS Col PENNFirst Downs 15 26Rushing Yards 20 276Passing Yards 266 214— Attempts 50 22 — Completions 26 16— Interceptions 0 0Total Yards 286 490Sacked-Yds Lost 1-1 2-17Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1Penalties-Yards 16-118 9-75Punts-Yards 7-304 4-95— Avg. per punt 43.4 23.83rd-Down Conv. 6-18 7-144th-Down Conv. 2-4 0-0 Red Zone Scores 1-3 5-5Time of Poss. 27:40 32:40Attendance: 8,966
TELLING NUMBERS
276Rushing yards for the Red and Blue on Saturday. Unlike previous games when Penn fell behind, the Quakers were able to establish their run game early behind Brian Schoenauer, Eric Fiore and Alek Torgersen.
20Rushing yards for Columbia. P e n n ’ s f r o n t s e v e n demonstrated why coach Al Bagnoli considered it the team’s strength before the year by shutting down the Lions.
8False starts by Columbia as the Lions’ offensive line showed its youth on Saturday. The team made a total of nine procedural penalties that doomed its offensive output.
THE RECORD
1-4, 1-1 Ivy HOME ROAD 1-1, 1-0 Ivy 0-3, 0-1 Ivy
RILEY STEELE is a College junior from Dorado, P.R., and is sports editor emeritus of The Daily Pennsylvanian. He can be reached at [email protected].
9SPORTSMONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
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NO IDEA IS TOO BIG, OR TOO SMALL
All roads lead to Heptago-nals for Penn cross country, and fortunately for the Quak-ers, they are going to be inti-mately familiar with the road in question.
Running on the same course where they will vie for suprem-acy in the Ancient Eight in just two short weeks, the men’s and women’s cross country pro-grams put together impressive performances at Saturday’s annual Princeton Invitational.
The younger Quakers kicked off the morning by placing sec-ond as a team in the women’s open 6,000-meter event, falling only behind Ivy rival Cornell. The Red and Blue were car-ried by back-to-back fifth and sixth place finishes from the freshman tandem of Isabel Griffith and Karen Xiang, who posted times of 23:16 and 23:17 respectively.
In the women’s 6,000m Championship, sophomores Clarissa and Cleo Whiting
and junior Elyssa Gensib led the Quakers to the second-best team score, as the group crossed the line in the 13th-15th positions. It was Cleo’s first race of the year back from injury.
“I thought we did an excel-lent job at executing our team’s game plan today,” coach Steve Dolan said of his team’s per-formance. “On the women’s side especially, out runners stayed together and work off each other, and it lead to some quality results.”
In the 8,000m champion-ship event, the men finished third overall behind Villanova and Virginia Tech, and junior Thomas Awad won the event with a time of 24:00 minutes flat, adding to what has al-ready been an impressive season for the Quakers’ top runner.
“Tom had an excellent race today, and to win on this course I think will go a long way towards boosting his con-fidence when it comes to rac-ing here again in two weeks,” Dolan said. “I think it was defi-nitely a valuable and positive experience, for everyone to get in some miles on this course.”
The Quakers would wrap
up the day of racing in spec-tacular fashion, as the young-er Quakers captured the top team spot in the men’s open 8,000m event, a race that saw six Penn runners place inside the top 25. This included a third-place finish by freshman Chris Luciano, a fourth-place finish by sophomore Chris Hatler and a sixth-place fin-ish by junior Clark Shurtleff.
After placing 15th and 20th in last year’s men’s and wom-en’s championship events at this meet, it is clear that the program has come quite a long way in just the span of a year.
“The one thing I was think-ing when I was watching the woman’s race was how much deeper we are as a team in terms of the number of run-ners we have racing at a high level,” Dolan said. “Part of it is that we’ve worked really hard to be where we are, but part of it is that success is contagious, and we have more and more runners feeding off that [suc-cess].”
While Penn will certainly be pleased with its performance today, the results need to be taken with a grain of salt.
“It was a good day for us, but the fact is we are going to have
to race better than we did to-day if we want to be successful in two weeks against the top of the Ivy League,” Dolan said.
“I wouldn’t try to grade us on our performance compared to the other Ivy schools today because we were not racing
everyone’s ‘A’ squad. While it’s nice to get in some quality racing, we are absolutely going to have to be better at Heps.”
on defense.Just three minutes into
the second half, junior Jackie Friedman sent a solid unas-sisted shot to the back of the net following a failed attempt by the Quakers to clear a Dartmouth corner.
Ambrose gave credit to his squad for its first half fire, yet spoke of a more profound flaw in the team’s culture.
“When your upperclassmen don’t step up and perform at the level they’re expected to, it doesn’t set a great example for our younger players,” he said. “And in turn, the younger players don’t perform to the expectations and standards that go with our program.
This year, we’ve seen that.”The Quakers’ coach dis-
played frustration with the team’s utter lack of consis-tency.
“At the moment, we don’t have consistency in perfor-mance from anyone,” Am-brose said. “We haven’t really strung anything together on either side. By virtue of our roster, between graduation and injuries, we’re just so young that we don’t have a foothold where the girls can have conf idence in their games. They’re not quite sure what they’re capable of.”
One of the most notable storylines from the Quakers’ sideline was the decision to bench reigning first-team All-Ivy goalkeeper Kalijah Terilli and freshman Juliana Pro-vini, who leads the Red and Blue with five points.
“They were decisions we
made and thought were ap-propriate given performance through practices and other things,” Ambrose said. “And that’s what we have to do to send the message to people
that everyone’s got standards.”Penn will look to regroup
and find that elusive 90-min-ute consistency when they take on Yale in New Haven next Saturday.
10Sports
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John43 Jailbird45 Risk, figuratively48 Doozy49 TV show created
by Lorne Michaels, for short
50 Car item that speaks, in brief
53 Jetty56 “Don’t Cry for
Me Argentina” musical
58 Eins, zwei, ___59 Web address60 Common stir-fry
ingredients62 Suffix with expert63 Bruins of the
N.C.A.A.64 Command used
when creating a new file name
65 April payment66 ___ ex machina67 What quivering
legs feel like … or a word that can precede the starts of 17-, 27-, 45- and 60-Across
DOWN 1 Childbirth 2 Funeral song 3 Hit 2008 Pixar
film with a robot 4 Getaway spot in
the sea 5 Clouds’ locale 6 The “A” of A.D. 7 What a butterfly
emerges from 8 Overflowed (with) 9 Camera type, in
brief10 Alan of
“M*A*S*H” 11 ___ II Men (R&B
group)12 Canal to the Red
Sea14 Counseled18 Zodiac symbol
for Sagittarius22 Mr. X24 Au courant26 Cpl. or sgt.27 How Hamlet
stabs Polonius28 Hebrew “A”29 “Not if ___ help
it!”30 100%31 Crystal ball gazer32 “Be it ___ so
humble …”33 Venus de ___34 Whimper38 Colorful parts of
many birds39 Takes for ransom
42 Word that completes the song titles “___ Baby” and “Baby It’s ___”
44 The “S” in R.S.V.P.
46 Lamb’s coat
47 Polynesian land whose Internet suffix is .tv
50 Dish that Oliver Twist asked for more of
51 “He loves me, he loves me not” flower part
52 Spacek of “Carrie”
53 Leave work for good
54 ___ Major
55 “Jeopardy!” host Trebek
57 Bring ___ a third party
58 Peace symbol
60 Blossom-to-be
61 Old British rule in India
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A D E P T C O L U M N I S TT O S E A P R O N O U N C ET W O A M L E T T E R B O XA N T H E M I N S E R TC H E E S E B A L L I T E MK E R N S I N E S N A R EE R I S C O A T I N GD E C B A D G I R L C A T
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1 Queen’s music
12 Film developer?: Abbr.
15 “Hasta la vista!”
16 Musician with the 2012 album “Lux”
17 Allows someone to walk, say
18 Big gun on a ship: Abbr.
19 Oxford, e.g., to its students
20 Michael of “Juno”
21 Oxide used in picture tubes
23 “A person who talks when you wish him to listen,” per Ambrose Bierce
24 Lead
25 Shots
28 Coddle, e.g.
29 Shack
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31 Sharpshooter’s skill
32 Poet Wilfred ___
33 Out of gear?
34 Buchanan in a bookstore
35 Word of logic
36 Moving day multitude
37 Governor or senator follower
38 Caught in a web
40 Certain book, sizewise
41 Makes out
42 Secure neatly, as an umbrella
43 Pioneer in the Nevada gaming industry
44 One of its categories is Agency of the Year
45 With 46-Down, two-in-one movie players
48 It’s often an oxide
49 Something avoided in a factory outlet
52 Washington and McKinley: Abbr.
53 Commute, in a way
54 Replies of confusion
55 Stick here and there
DOWN
1 Archaeologists often find what they’re looking for in this
2 Counterfeiter fighter, informally
3 Isao of golf
4 At full term
5 “No worries”
6 Comes out with
7 Skiing twins’ surname
8 Sister of Phoebe, in myth
9 “Or softly lightens ___ her face”: Byron
10 Like many kids’ self-made greeting cards
11 Didn’t let oneself go, say
12 Lead-in to some written advice
13 Blurred
14 Option for a marinara base
22 Not too big a jerk
23 Old bomber
24 A lot of what makes you you
25 Checked in with loved ones, say
26 Exclamation that might be punctuated “??!?”
27 Put too much weight on
28 Like some potato chips
30 Ceilings
33 From the Union
34 Hebrew for “to the skies”
36 Rival of Captain Morgan
37 Abba’s music
39 ___ Tamid (ever-burning synagogue lamp)
40 Thick spreads
42 Ace on a base
44 Give up
45 One of its fragrances is Poison
46 See 45-Across
47 Rink fooler
50 Small warbler
51 Inits. of Thoreau’s mentor
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Penn cross country sees into its own future
MICHELE OZER/SPORTS PHOTO EDITORJunior Thomas Awad continued his already impressive season by posting a 24:00 mark over the weekend, good for first in the men’s 8,000-meter championship. His coach hopes the win will boost his confidence moving towards Heps.
W. SOCCER>> PAGE 12
Both the men and women impressed at the Princeton Invitational
BY SAM ALTLANDStaff Writer
ALEX LIAO/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSophomore Lindsey Sawczuk was one of just a few Penn players to put a shot on net as the Quakers were shut out by Dartmouth. The team has now lost three Ivy matches.
10 SPORTS MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2014 | THEDP.COMTHE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
For Penn field hockey, it was a weekend of extremes.
The Quakers lost an over-time heartbreaker, 4-3, to Columbia on Saturday but rebounded to pick up an impressive 5-0 victory over Longwood on Sunday.
Coach Colleen Fink was pleased with her team’s resil-iency despite the loss.
“We needed to bounce back quickly,” she said. “We did a good job of playing with a little more intensity.”
Saturday’s loss was perhaps Penn’s most disappointing all year. The Red and Blue (5-7, 1-3 Ivy) were down, 2-1, at half-time before junior Elizabeth Hitti helped put Penn in front with her second assist of the
game and a go-ahead goal.The Quakers took a 3-2 lead
into the final two minutes of the game, only to see Colum-bia’s Christina Freibott tie the game with 1:41 remain-ing. Just 16 seconds into the ensuing overtime, freshman Whitney Hartstone scored the sudden-death winner for the Lions.
Fink was puzzled by her team’s defensive breakdown on the game’s final play.
“I don’t know about that last goal,” she said. “I don’t know if people misunderstood their role defensively, but you can’t give up a wide-open goal like that in OT.”
Freibott scored three of her team’s four goals and as-sisted on the fourth. The de-fending Ivy League Player of the Week, the junior made a
strong case for a repeat nod.Despite the short period to
regroup, the Quakers domi-nated from start to finish on Sunday. The Red and Blue got five goals from four different players en route to the shutout victory — their first win in their last five games.
Freshman Alexa Hoover scored twice, pushing her season total to a team-high 11 goals. Freshmen Gina Guccione and Rachel Huang also chipped in with goals, as well as senior midfielder Alex Iqbal.
Iqbal scored in both of the weekend’s games, pushing her total to six goals on the season.
“She was out for three games, but now she’s back and feeling good,” Fink said of Iqbal. “She’s a huge part
of this team and its success. Whether she scores or not, she’s a key contributor.”
While the win over Long-wood is a nice confidence booster, it didn’t help the Quakers’ Ivy League record. Penn currently sits at 1-3 in Ancient Eight play, good for sixth place.
The Red and Blue will get a chance to improve that mark when they travel to Yale on Saturday. The Bulldogs are 2-10 overall and winless in Ivy League play.
Coming off of four straight losses capped by an OT stun-ner, Penn demonstrated its ability to get back on its feet. However, the Quakers still have a lot of work to do to sal-vage their chances of finishing near the top of the Ivy League.
This Sunday, Penn sent a handful of boats to the annual Head of the Charles regatta in Boston, ending up with some mixed finishes.
The heavyweight crew, which was represented by one boat at the event, finished 20th out of 36 boats in the men’s championship eights race.
The race gave the heavy-weight crew an opportunity to measure up against its compe-tition for the coming Princeton Chase event next weekend.
Four other Ivy League boats finished ahead of Penn, one of which — Harvard — had a particularly strong showing, as its top boat finished third,
beating the USRowing and French national boats, among others.
The lightweights had boats in the lightweight four and eight races, where they man-aged to show some strength.
In the lightweight fours, one boat finished seventh out of 22 boats, while the other finished 20th.
In the lightweight eight race, the single boat representing Penn managed to finish sixth, beating out big names like Yale, Dartmouth and Navy.
The women were represent-ed in the championship four and eight races.
The single boat in the four race struggled, coming in at 14th best out of 17 boats. De-spite the finish, it bested rivals Cornell and Columbia.
In the eight race, the women finished 20th out of 34.
Sports11
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5:30 p.m.a
Penn Bookstore3601 Walnut Street
Black Theology As MassMovement is a call to current andfuture theologians to stretch theboundaries of Black LiberationTheology from what has becomeprimarily an academic subfieldinto a full fledged liberationmovement beyond the walls ofthe academy.
Reverend Charles L. Howard, PhDis the University Chaplain at theUniversity of Pennsylvania. He isthe author of The Awe and theAwful.
This event is being held in conjunction with the PennBookstore. Light refreshmentswill be provided.
11SPORTSMONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
With its back against the wall in a must-win Ivy League contest, Penn men’s soccer found a way to take down Dartmouth.
On Saturday, the Red and Blue scored two unanswered goals after going down by one on an early penalty kick for the 2-1 victory. The win boosted the Quakers (6-6, 2-1 Ivy) into a tie for second in the league, keeping them in the hunt for a
repeat Ivy title.With so much motivation on
Penn’s part, a fast start was imperative for the team. How-ever, a handball by the Quak-ers in the seventh minute gave Dartmouth (7-4-1, 2-1) an early penalty kick which the Big Green capitalized on to take the early lead.
Coach Rudy Fuller was not happy with the decision by the referee.
“It was a generous call,” he said. “I give the team full credit for continuing to keep their head down and play through it.”
Both teams had several chances throughout the half until a corner from junior mid-fielder Forrest Clancy con-nected with freshman Sam Wancowicz right by the net, who was able to score his first goal of the season and tie the game for Penn.
“It was a very simple play but [was] executed very well,” Fuller said.
Overall, the first half saw a rather balanced match be-tween the two squads. Nei-ther team was able to take a commanding lead, which ultimately helped the Quakers in the second half, but Penn still let up plenty of chances to Dartmouth’s forwards.
“Dartmouth has a fantastic team,” Fuller said. “I think we’re a pretty good team so I think it was just a really good soccer game in the first half. I can’t say we did that much better.
“We probably deserved to be up 1-0 just by virtue of the [handball] call but the play was very even. We made some adjustments at the half be-cause we thought we were playing too much in front of them.”
It only took a few minutes in the second half before Penn would take the lead for the
Going into the season, Penn women’s soccer had all the talent, both young and returning, to be a strong force in conference. However, the squad has lacked the consistency to be an Ivy threat.
The Red and Blue trav-eled to New Hampshire Saturday to take on Dart-mouth — Penn looking for its second conference win; Dartmouth, for its first af-ter three ties. The Quak-ers conceded two goals too many, losing the match 2-0.
Penn (5-5-2, 1-3 Iv y) came out firing on all cyl-inders, looking more ag-gressive than they have all year. Coach Darren Am-brose explained Penn’s newfound mentality.
“We changed our system because we’ve got so many injuries,” he said. “We changed the whole system at the last minute, and felt really good about it.”
“We were reasonably good on possession. We made Dartmouth chase it a little bit. We struggled in the final third, which we’ve
done all year.”Dartmouth took the lead
on a goal from junior Co-rey Delaney off a beauti-ful cross from sophomore Meredith Gurnee from the right side. The pass pierced through Penn’s scrambling defense and found Delaney for the goal in the 34th minute.
“We look like a good soc-cer team at times — all the aggressiveness, mentality, and competitiveness, but the fire that’s needed in the 18-yard box to defend and in the 18-yard box to score is what’s missing in this team right now,” Am-brose said.
Following the first goal, Penn’s aggression and con-trol seemed to fade away. The Big Green, unsatis-fied with the one-goal lead, dominated possession and frustrated the Quakers, gleaning 10 fouls from the Red and Blue, double Dart-mouth’s five.
The Red and Blue could never fully recover the pace or the fight with which they began the match, and Dartmouth never sat back
Entering this season, it was easy to point to several of Penn foot-ball’s different units and marvel at the team’s depth.
Sure, while the offensive line lacked experience and sophomore quarterback Alek Torgersen was untested, the Red and Blue’s wide receiving corps, secondary and even their defensive front seven were laden with veterans.
With so many other storylines sur-rounding Penn, it was easy to overlook the squad’s deep backfield.
But the keys to success were there. With veteran Lyle Marsh returning from a year away from the team, he and bruis-ing senior Kyle Wilcox seemed likely to split most of the team’s carries. That pair, combined with freshman Tre Solomon, offered what Bagnoli termed “three dif-ferent styles to form a great 1-2-3 punch.”
Yet four games into the season, all three were injured. And even when any of the three were healthy, the Quakers struggled.
Save for Kyle Wilcox’s 67-yard touch-down scamper against Villanova — a score that ended up being the only points the team put on the board against the Wildcats — it is far easier to recall Penn’s 27 carries for 33 yards against Dartmouth.
Some of that could be the result of the Red and Blue’s adjustment to their new spread, up-tempo offensive system. Some of that could come from the caliber of Penn’s opponents. Some of it could be growing pains behind a relatively young offensive line.
Undoubtedly, Penn’s running game has failed to impress this season. Until Satur-day, that is.
P e n n f o o t b a l l c a n breathe a little easier now.
After a slow start, the Quakers dominated visit-ing Columbia, 31-7, with their most complete offen-sive effort of the season.
With injuries to leading rushers Kyle Wilcox, Tre
Solomon and Lyle Marsh, the questions surrounding Penn’s running game were answered by sophomore Brian Schoenauer and se-nior Eric Fiore, who led the Red and Blue’s over 200-yard combined rush-ing effort alongside quar-terback Alek Torgersen.
“After this game, we can feel a little bit better about ourselves and have more confidence,” coach Al Ba-gnoli said.
The Red and Blue (1-4, 1-1 Ivy) quickly fell behind,
as the Lions (0-5, 0-2) drove the ball down the field with ease on their first drive. Lions’ junior quarterback Trevor McDonagh found Zach Dansby with a six-yard touchdown pass af-ter carving up the Penn secondary on a series of short-to-midrange tosses.
On its third drive, the Red and Blue offense got the ground game going be-hind Schoenauer.
Several Schoenauer runs and a pass interfer-ence call on Columbia
brought Penn into the red zone. From there, a power-ful 12-yard touchdown run off the right edge by Fiore capped off the game-tying drive with four minutes left in the first quarter.
“Eric has played tail-back for three days — on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday,” Bagnoli said. “He has come in and had extra meetings, and I thought he acquitted himself very well. To his credit, he was ready to go.”
After a series of punts,
Penn’s offense switched up the tempo with eight minutes left in the first half, running a wildcat for-mation with sophomore Adam Strouss behind cen-ter.
The move helped to kick-start the offense, as the Red and Blue were able to use an effective mix of run and pass to quickly march down a short field. A pretty Torgersen pass complet-ed to senior Conner Scott
12Sports
NEXT GAME: AT YALE | SAT, 1:30 P.M.
PENN (1-4, 1-1 IVY) COLUMBIA (0-5, 0-2 IVY)
FIRST STEP FORWARD Better late than never for Penn’s running game
RILEY STEELE
FOOTBALL | Penn routs Columbia for first win of the year
BY SEAMUS POWERSStaff Writer
ILANA WURMAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERJunior tight end Ryan Kelly caught his second touchdown of the year, helping Penn to its first win of the season. Kelly has been a backup tight end behind Mitch King and Ryan O’Malley this year, but has still come up with some big catches. His TD gave Penn the lead for good and he properly celebrated the score jubilantly with his teammates in the end zone.
SEE FOOTBALL PAGE 9 SEE STEELE PAGE 9
Freshmen goals power Penn to key win
M. SOCCER | Quakers jump to a tie for 2nd after taking down Big Green
BY WILL AGATHISStaff Writer
AT DARTMOUTH
FREDA ZHAO/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERAfter Dartmouth scored the opening goal on a penalty kick, freshman back Sam Wancowicz scored the equalizer off of a corner service from junior Forrest Clancy. The goal was the first of Wancowicz’s career and came at just the right time for the Quakers.
SEE M. SOCCER PAGE 8
Quakers doomed by inconsistency
W. SOCCER | Coach Ambrose calls out team for poor play
BY INES DIAZStaff Writer
SEE W. SOCCER PAGE 10
AT DARTMOUTH
Senior running back Mike Beamish was injured in Penn sprint football’s 28-21 loss
>> SEE PAGE 11
Penn volleyball split its road trip to Harvard and
Dartmouth this weekend. Read all about it at
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