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INSIDE FOOTBALL SUFFERS BIG LOSS BACK PAGE SPORTS NEWS OPINION AN APOLOGY AND APPEAL M. SOCCER DRAWS YALE GETTING HIRED AT WHARTON Columnist Jeremiah Keenan reflects on his column from last week In disappointing finish, Penn men’s soccer ties last place Bulldogs A look at the practices Wharton uses to hire new professors and staff PAGE 4 BACK PAGE PAGE 7 According to Wharton’s new dean, the biggest challenge fac- ing women in the business world is ensuring that they “can have a balance between their families and their professional lives, with their husbands and partners.” In an Oct. 17 article in the Wall Street Journal, Geoffrey Garrett said that helping women create that balance is a challenge with economic implications. “If we lose a lot of productivity at times of highest talent and potentially highest contribution, that’s a cost that society can’t bear,” he said. Clarifying his comment in an email from abroad last week, Gar- rett added that “there is simply no justification for paying women any less than men to do the same jobs. Equal pay for equal work should be a core principle for all societies.” But with full-time female em- ployees making 78 cents to ev- ery dollar earned by males in the same jobs, and females still com- prising only 40 percent of each the newest undergraduate and MBA classes, the new Wharton leadership team may not be fo- cused on the right issues. Wharton sophomore Gracie- la Arana thinks Garrett’s Wall Street Journal comment repre- sents a “typical” mentality. “The world is changing, and couples are becoming different. There is more shared responsibility in the household,” she said. “But I wouldn’t say it’s the biggest chal- lenge women face in business today.” That, she said, is “the narrow mindset” men still seem to have about what women can and can- not do. “A lot of men, even though they seem to be really open- minded, still have in the back of their minds that women are not meant to be in high positions — that they’re too emotional or that they’re meant to be home with their families,” she said. Arana grew up in Puerto Rico and attended an all-girls high school. After a clubbing night she attended during her freshman year, Arana joined the under- graduate student group Wharton Women, designed to bring wom- en in business and pre-business tracks together to overcome common challenges women face today. “Wharton Women has def- initely given me a lot of opportu- nities,” she said. In general, Arana described her experience in Wharton as posi- tive. “To be honest, I haven’t real- ly felt like I’ve had to overcome a lot of challenges in Wharton that men don’t,” she said. “I haven’t met a single woman in Wharton who thinks of herself as less ca- pable or as less of a competitor than men.” Wharton senior Anna Reighart, a vice president of Wharton THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA | MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014 CONTACT US: 215-422-4646 SEND STORY IDEAS TO [email protected] ONLINE AT THEDP.COM CORRECTING MISCONCEPTIONS For African international and first genera- tion students at Penn, Ebola is more than just a news topic. Many of these students are frustrated with how the media covers the virus and the over- all lack of discussion on campus about Ebola- affected countries. “Some students seem to believe the virus is spread across the continent, that it’s affecting a larger area than it is,” College senior and Penn African Students Association President Kevin Rugamba said. “Others think we [Afri- can students on campus] may have potentially been exposed to the virus, but that’s not the case. There are no cases of Ebola in South Africa. None in East Africa. None in North Africa. African students would appreciate if there was more informed awareness of the African students say Ebola should not define the continent EUNICE LIM Staff Writer SEE WEST AFRICA PAGE 6 What is Wharton doing for women? Dean Geoffrey Garrett called work-life balance females’ biggest obstacle JESSICA MCDOWELL Staff Writer As volunteers, students dedicate more than a vote Penn students are jumping into political races across the country to influence the out- come of 2014 midterm elec- tions, which could change the makeup of Congress. “You can’t really change how governments support you if you are just sitting at home,” said Penn Democrats Outreach Director and College sopho- more Ray Clark. “And that’s why I personally volunteered. Just doing my part on that end can make sure that we have leaders who support our values in the long run.” Clark canvassed for guber- natorial candidate Tom Wolfe and participated in phone banking for congressional can- didate Kevin Strouse, who is running in Pennsylvania’s 8th District. “I’ve helped certain candidates because they have a strong vision for education and Penn students are vol- unteering in midterm election campaigns JONATHAN BAER Staff Writer CONCERT ROUND UP This weekend saw a rich mix of concert performances both on and off campus. It kicked off with Jeremih performing at the SPEC-TRUM Concert on Thursday, hip-hop DJ and producer Carnage entertaining crowds at the Electric Factory on Friday, Skylar Grey’s show at the SPEC Fall Concert on Saturday and rounded off with Penn Glee Club and Penn Dance’s joint performance “Prime Time” that ran three nights this weekend. PHOTO FEATURE Alums release documentary Eight years and one docu- mentary after graduating from Penn, 2006 College graduate Adam Weber discovered that required reading can, in fact, come in handy later in life. Weber, along with his friend and 2007 College graduate Jimmy Goldblum, co-pro- duced and co-directed a docu- mentary called “Tomorrow We Disappear,” which pre- miered last weekend. The film was inspired by Salman Rush- die’s novel “Midnight’s Chil- dren,” written in 1981 about India’s transition from British Colonialism to independence to British partition. The film was featured at the Tribeca Film Festival STEPHANIE BARRON Contributing Writer SEE WOMEN PAGE 7 SEE VOLUNTEERS PAGE 2 SEE FILM PAGE 7 “AFRICAN VILLAGES IN GUINEA-CONAKRY” COURTESY OF JURGEN LICENSED UNDER CC 2.0 (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT) MARCUS KATZ, JEREMY BAMIDELE, IRINA BIT-BABIK, FREDA ZHAO//STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS
Transcript
Page 1: October 27, 2014

Front1

INSIDE

FOOTBALL SUFFERS BIG LOSS

BACK PAGE

SPORTS

NEWS

OPINION

AN APOLOGY AND APPEAL

M. SOCCER DRAWS YALE

GETTING HIRED AT WHARTON

Columnist Jeremiah Keenan reflects on his column from last week

In disappointing finish, Penn men’s soccer ties last place Bulldogs

A look at the practices Wharton uses to hire new professors and staff

PAGE 4

BACK PAGE

PAGE 7

According to Wharton’s new dean, the biggest challenge fac-ing women in the business world is ensuring that they “can have a balance between their families and their professional lives, with their husbands and partners.”

In an Oct. 17 article in the Wall Street Journal, Geoffrey Garrett said that helping women create that balance is a challenge with economic implications. “If we lose a lot of productivity at times of highest talent and potentially highest contribution, that’s a cost that society can’t bear,” he said.

Clarifying his comment in an email from abroad last week, Gar-rett added that “there is simply no justification for paying women any less than men to do the same jobs. Equal pay for equal work

should be a core principle for all societies.”

But with full-time female em-ployees making 78 cents to ev-ery dollar earned by males in the same jobs, and females still com-prising only 40 percent of each the newest undergraduate and MBA classes, the new Wharton leadership team may not be fo-cused on the right issues.

Wharton sophomore Gracie-la Arana thinks Garrett’s Wall Street Journal comment repre-sents a “typical” mentality. “The

world is changing, and couples are becoming different. There is more shared responsibility in the household,” she said. “But I wouldn’t say it’s the biggest chal-lenge women face in business today.”

That, she said, is “the narrow mindset” men still seem to have about what women can and can-not do. “A lot of men, even though they seem to be really open-minded, still have in the back of their minds that women are not meant to be in high positions —

that they’re too emotional or that they’re meant to be home with their families,” she said.

Arana grew up in Puerto Rico and attended an all-girls high school. After a clubbing night she attended during her freshman year, Arana joined the under-graduate student group Wharton Women, designed to bring wom-en in business and pre-business tracks together to overcome common challenges women face today. “Wharton Women has def-initely given me a lot of opportu-

nities,” she said.In general, Arana described her

experience in Wharton as posi-tive. “To be honest, I haven’t real-ly felt like I’ve had to overcome a lot of challenges in Wharton that men don’t,” she said. “I haven’t met a single woman in Wharton who thinks of herself as less ca-pable or as less of a competitor than men.”

Wharton senior Anna Reighart, a vice president of Wharton

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA | MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

CONTACT US: 215-422-4646SEND STORY IDEAS TO [email protected] ONLINE AT THEDP.COM

CORRECTING MISCONCEPTIONS

For African international and first genera-tion students at Penn, Ebola is more than just a news topic.

Many of these students are frustrated with how the media covers the virus and the over-all lack of discussion on campus about Ebola-

affected countries.“Some students seem to believe the virus is

spread across the continent, that it’s affecting a larger area than it is,” College senior and Penn African Students Association President Kevin Rugamba said. “Others think we [Afri-

can students on campus] may have potentially been exposed to the virus, but that’s not the case. There are no cases of Ebola in South Africa. None in East Africa. None in North Africa. African students would appreciate if there was more informed awareness of the

African students say Ebola should not define the continent EUNICE LIM Staff Writer

SEE WEST AFRICA PAGE 6

What is Wharton doing for women?Dean Geoffrey Garrett called work-life balance females’ biggest obstacle

JESSICA MCDOWELLStaff Writer

As volunteers, students dedicate more than a vote

Penn students are jumping into political races across the country to influence the out-come of 2014 midterm elec-tions, which could change the makeup of Congress.

“You can’t really change how governments support you if you are just sitting at home,” said Penn Democrats Outreach

Director and College sopho-more Ray Clark. “And that’s why I personally volunteered. Just doing my part on that end can make sure that we have leaders who support our values in the long run.”

Clark canvassed for guber-natorial candidate Tom Wolfe and participated in phone banking for congressional can-didate Kevin Strouse, who is running in Pennsylvania’s 8th District. “I’ve helped certain candidates because they have a strong vision for education and

Penn students are vol-unteering in midterm election campaigns

JONATHAN BAERStaff Writer

CONCERT ROUND UP This weekend saw a rich mix of concert performances both on and off campus. It kicked off with Jeremih performing at the SPEC-TRUM Concert on Thursday, hip-hop DJ and producer Carnage entertaining crowds at the Electric Factory on Friday, Skylar Grey’s show at the SPEC Fall Concert on Saturday and rounded off with Penn Glee Club and Penn Dance’s joint performance “Prime Time” that ran three nights this weekend.

PHOTO FEATURE

Alums release documentary

Eight years and one docu-mentary after graduating from Penn, 2006 College graduate Adam Weber discovered that required reading can, in fact, come in handy later in life.

Weber, along with his friend and 2007 College graduate Jimmy Goldblum, co-pro-duced and co-directed a docu-mentary called “Tomorrow We Disappear,” which pre-miered last weekend. The film was inspired by Salman Rush-die’s novel “Midnight’s Chil-dren,” written in 1981 about India’s transition from British Colonialism to independence to British partition.

The film was featured at the Tribeca Film

Festival STEPHANIE BARRON

Contributing Writer

SEE WOMEN PAGE 7

SEE VOLUNTEERS PAGE 2

SEE FILM PAGE 7

“AFRICAN VILLAGES IN GUINEA-CONAKRY” COURTESY OF JURGEN LICENSED UNDER CC 2.0

(CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT) MARCUS KATZ, JEREMY BAMIDELE, IRINA BIT-BABIK, FREDA ZHAO//STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS

Page 2: October 27, 2014

2PageTwo

2 NEWS MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014 | THEDP.COMTHE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

PennWorld to ‘Mix It Up’

This week, PennWorld is “mixing up” students on campus.

On Oct. 28 this year, PennWorld is hosting its Mix It Up event to encour-age intercultural conversa-tions, as well as identify-ing and questioning social boundaries. Students will be assigned seats in dining halls so they can eat and talk with someone they don’t normally interact with. The dining hall loca-tion creates a symbol for change in a place where, normally, segregation is common.

Club founder and Col-lege junior Joy Zhang said

that last semester around 30 people attended Mix It Up at 1920 Commons. Based on a sign-up sheet, each student was seated with someone from a dif-ferent cultural background. The stimulating conversa-tions students had prevent-ed the need for the previ-ously planned icebreakers.

“A lot of people said they met someone they would not have met, and it was an interesting experi-ence,” Zhang said.

Mix It Up at Lunch Day is a nationwide campaign developed by Teaching Tolerance over a decade ago. Zhang said that her inspiration to bring Mix It Up to Penn is to promote interactions between dif-ferent groups of people.

“I deeply believe that di-versity is not a number but measured by experience,” she said.

The group will bring students from differ-ent cultures together

BY VIVIAN ZHENG Contributing Writer

job creation.”Deputy Executive Director of

Pennsylvania Democrats Diane Bowman said the party values the volunteers.

“We need to train the lead-ers of tomorrow, and there is no better place to start than [on col-lege campuses],” she said. “Their manpower and their strength of numbers and their intel and their savviness with social media is piv-otal to some candidates’ success or failure.”

While Penn Democrats have focused more on local races as the Nov. 4 election approaches, College Republicans have volun-teered for Republicans challenging Democratic incumbents across the country, with the goal in mind to have Republicans take control of the Senate.

They have helped the social media operations of Republicans Charles Djou, a Penn alum who is running for Congress in Hawaii’s 1st District, and Carlos Curbelo, who is running in Florida’s 26th District. In addition, they plan on phone banking for former Massa-chusetts Senator Scott Brown, who is running for a Senate seat in New Hampshire.

The College Republican Na-

tional Committee has identified college students as key voters and spent $2 million this election cycle

on television ads and field opera-tions during the 2014 midterms.

“In a lot of cases, young people

have been a deciding factor in lots of midterm elections,” CRNC Na-tional Chair Alex Smith said.

VOLUNTEER >> PAGE 1

Penn Democrats and College Republicans were both involved in organizing “Bridging the Gap: Voter Registration Kickoff”, an event hosted last month to highlight the importance of voter registration.

NIMAY KULKARNI /DP FILE PHOTO

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Page 3: October 27, 2014

News3

3NEWSMONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

SEXUAL IVY LEAGUE

YALE

PENN

Harvard trains staff to be able to properly investigate claims of sexual

assault. They report to a Title IX officer, a position that was created in 2013. Per federal guidelines, Harvard

has adopted the preponderance of evidence standard, meaning anyone

accused of assault will be found guilty if more than 50 percent of

evidence indicates their guilt.

PRINCETON

As of Sept. 16, Princeton also abides by the preponderance of evidence standard, but students are no longer part of a committee that investigates and handles sexual assault

complaints. The complainant and respondent are given the chance to have outside lawyers or other legal counsel present at any meeting during the disciplinary process.

In Sept. 2013, Yale issued a new policy stating that consent to one sexual act does not constitute consent to all acts

and that consent can be negated.

Yale's University-Wide Committee on Sexual Misconduct is made up of

faculty, staff and students who undergo serious training before their one- to

three-year terms. The University does acknowledge that the committee is not a replacement for law enforcement and suggests seeking assistance the police. Individual schools within Yale can also handle disciplinary matters relating to

sexual assault.

BROWNAs of summer 2014, Brown is formally using new resources

offered to universities through Title IX to education its student body in

addition to its sexual assault investigators, who have the power to

sanction guilty parties.

COLUMBIA

In September, a Columbia student made headlines for carrying around a mattress to raise awareness for her experience with sexual assault and the school's lack of response, despite apparent changes enacted

by Columbia. Columbia’s Gender-Based Misconduct Office

handles issues of sexual assault. A new committee handling cases will

not have students serving on the panel. Specially trained investiga-tors will look into every complaint,

and panel members undergo specific training for the adjudica-

tion process as well as for sensitivity on these issues

annually.

CORNELLIn response to the White House

task force, Cornell brought in Title IX investigators to take charge of

the sexual assault response program. Cornell will provide

increased training, and the new Title IX headed prevention and

response program is designed to promote equality and inclusivity in

the process handling student complaints.

DARTMOUTH

The Department of Education is investigating Dartmouth, and the

school has received a push from the students to work harder to improve

the sexual assault policy. Dartmouth will employ independent investigators for on-campus sexual assault cases

and has deemed certain circum-stances eligible for mandatory

expulsion. In mid-July, Dartmouth hosted a summit on sexual assault to

educate community members on sexual assault prevention and

response.

HARVARD

As of last week, students will no longer serve on disciplinary committees dealing with sexual assault

cases, following the example of several other Ivy institutions. While some schools continue to involve

students in the disciplinary process, Penn is one school moving away from this model. Title IX investigators will

oversee cases and head a new office specifically created to handle sexual misconduct cases. Title IX investiga-tors look into and handle reports of sexual misconduct following principles outlined by Title IX, such as gender

equality.

“[We] have met formally and informally with student leaders, providing the opportunity to raise questions and

concerns about the proposed new procedure," Senior Vice President and General Counsel Wendy White said in

an email this week.

Changes are coming for Penn’s sexual assault policy. In the last year, Ivy League schools have made significant changes to their sexual assault policies in order to support victims and promote consistency in handling cases, and Penn is now starting to catch up to its Ivy counter-parts.

ASSAULTPOLICIES

Reporting by Zahra Husain, Staff Writer

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Page 4: October 27, 2014

MONDAY,OCTOBER 27, 2014VOL. CXXX, NO. 101

130th Yearof Publication

OPINION4

TAYLOR CULLIVER, Executive Editor

AMANDA SUAREZ, Managing Editor

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Catch our Word on the Walk on marijuana legalization online at THEDP.COM

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THIS ISSUE

Read “Condemning Intolerance,” a guest column by John Vilanova at THEDP.COM/OPINION

ONLINE

Democrats, locally and nationally, assert that Repub-licans are waging

a war on women, often citing Republican candidates who’ve said stupid things and then claiming all Republicans are equally stupid. The second prong of Democrats’ argument is traditional fights over abor-tion. Finally, Democrats bring up court cases where Repub-licans have traditionally sided with religious liberty.

Some of these arguments are easy to answer. First, we’re clearly not all Todd Akin. Republicans on cam-pus don’t make the ridiculous anti-science arguments that some on the right have made. The second two arguments require more explanation. For the first, reasonable people can have different thoughts about abortion. Within our organiza-tion, we have people who are staunchly pro-choice. We also have members who have deep, heartfelt issues of conscience

about abortion. Finally, there are legal questions about the nature of rights and how legal obligations intersect with per-sonal beliefs.

Stepping back, what does having a right to something really mean? There are nega-tive rights and positive rights. Negative rights require inac-tion. Freedom of speech, for example, is a negative right. Within certain constraints, no one can forbid you from saying what you want to say. Positive rights require action — basic subsistence is a positive right. Rights to contraception, health clinic access and other repro-ductive services are positive rights. Legally, what generates this positive obligation to pro-vide these things? Even if we grant that such an obligation exists, why is a closely held corporation obligated to pro-vide 20 different types of con-traceptives to their employees? Hobby Lobby already provides 16 types of contraceptives to their employees. For religious

reasons, they object to four other types, which are aborti-facient.

The two competing inter-ests are religious freedom of expression and the right to a very specific type of contra-ceptive. On the one hand, we have a clear negative right. On the other, we have a dubious

positive right, which would require people to violate their own belief systems. Clearly, this isn’t a simple issue of mean-spirited people trying to subjugate women. These are people struggling with trying to do the best for their employ-ees and neighbors, while not violating their conscience.

Quite frankly, sometimes these arguments are purposely deceptive. Planned Parent-hood’s 3 percent statistic, for example. Planned Parenthood has unbundled every particu-lar “service” rendered in order to reduce the percentage that abortions make up. A routine visit, for instance, could rack up many “services,” depend-ing on what exams you get or pills you receive. This conve-nient tallying is designed to distract from the other, more significant statistics — namely, the staggering number of abor-tions they perform.

Clearly, the 3 percent sta-tistic is working, as the govern-ment still generously funds this

group. The fact that Planned Parenthood tries to play down the number of abortions they perform is telling. This isn’t to say that people can’t be pro-choice, but this is a hard ethi-cal decision for many people and shouldn’t be trivialized. In a similar vein, the Women’s Right to Know Act has taken a lot of flak from pro-choic-ers. This is not the pro-choice movement in its best light. Even the most diehard pro-choice activist does not wish to increase the total number of abortions performed or to have women request abortions without knowing what the pro-cedure entails. The attempts to ensure that women who are thinking about abortion make an informed decision. Surely, we can all agree that this is a good thing. Ascribing malice is not the way to move forward, and it’s not the way to make policy.

There’s always a danger in politics when buzzwords be-come a substitute for analysis.

Buzzwords such as “war on women” are rhetorically effec-tive and convenient narratives. And sometimes they’re true. The problem, however, is that as the narratives develop and grow, they can stray far from the truth while the “statistics” cited aren’t always very accu-rate. The war on women narra-tive has been repeated so often that it’s become gospel. That’s not fair to people struggling with issues of conscience. While we should all work to make sure people have access to health care and for gender equity in all areas of life, it’s never constructive to name-call and ignore facts to serve a narrative.

At the beginning of their careers, doctors must bury a few mistakes

in the morgue, lawyers wave goodbye to a few mistakes out-side jail and journalists publish a few on the front page of a newspaper. Each type of error may be painful, but the last — however embarrassing — has some chance of partial remedy.

I’d like to hazard that chance with regard to last week’s column. I am sorry for the way in which I wrote. It was ill-advised to write a col-umn as casually as I did about such a sensitive topic. The column was labeled in strong terms by many. Evidently — leaving aside my actual point — my mode of expression was foolish and highly ineffective.

Let me clarify first what I did not mean. Many assumed I was employing a strictly lit-eral writing style. Some read-ers thought that I believe black people must be either crimi-nals, pan-handlers, dumb stu-dents or wealthy immigrants.

This is, as I said, a stereotype that I see and hear at Penn. It is no more my personal belief than the stereotype that white people are all racists. Other readers assumed that I claimed a “sour sense of unfair treat-ment and smug feelings of su-periority” for my own. On the contrary, it is my observation that affirmative action leads to sour and smug feelings on the part of white people, but in my belief, such feelings are not justified.

I could go on listing phras-es that were misunderstood, but the article was so unclear that it is easier to simply state what I believe. In my experi-

ence at Penn, I am stereotyped on a racial basis. This labeling includes socially acceptable elements like wealth, as well as some negative connotations like snobbery and racism. I have observed this stereotype applied frequently in conver-sations in which whites are ar-bitrarily labeled as “probably racist.” When arguing over topics unrelated to race, white males are often labeled as such in an effort to invalidate their views.

At the same time, I find at Penn that black people are neg-atively stereotyped — more severely than white people. Little offhand comments made

in casual (“all white”) conver-sation, a refrigerator magnet I saw: “UPenn safety alert: black male seen on campus. Avoid everything” and many other things might be brought up to confirm this impression.

What particularly upset me about these stereotypes is when I caught myself start-ing to play along with them. When a white friend was ar-bitrarily labeled a potential racist, I joined in the joke saying, “Well, I don’t know ... he is from the South.” Af-ter a semester or two at Penn, I also thought the refrigerator magnet funny, when formerly I would have found it strange — if not offensive.

Thinking about this prob-lem, I realized that there seemed to be very little hon-est discussion between the “black” and “white” communi-ties on the issue. In last week’s column, I stated that the heavy emphasis on reparations, pro-grams earmarked for racial minorities and affirmative ac-tion is unproductive. For this, I

apologize. The arguments sur-rounding these sensitive ideas are too complex to address lightly and largely separate from what I am trying to say.

Unfortunately, many peo-ple took my attack on racial stereotyping as a form of rac-ism. Thankfully, a number of people from the black commu-nity reached out to me person-ally about the column, and we had open, friendly conversa-tions. Honestly addressing ste-reotypes on both sides helped to bring them down.

One student shared her experience as a black person in America with me — how racial stereotyping forces her to be self-conscious about ev-erything from her posture to how she styles her hair, how her parents grew up under systematic discrimination and even today would tell her to “trust her black friends.” And I shared parts of my story with her, as a “color-blind” finan-cial aid student learning to be stereotyped as rich and racist.

It would seem strange that a

column as ill-fated as the one I wrote last week could lead to productive conversations. But I hope that others will also be willing to forgive my poor ar-ticulation and see something valuable in an open and honest discussion — coming from all different perspectives — of the destructive racial stereotyping that so many of us face and perpetrate at Penn.

Name-calling isn’t policy

CARTOON

PENN COLLEGE REPUBLICANS strives to promote conservative ideals at Penn and foster a community for conservative students. They can be reached at [email protected].

An apology and an appeal

JEREMIAH KEENAN

KEEN ON THE TRUTH | An apology for incendiary style and an appeal for more constructive conversation

GUEST COLUMN BY COLLEGE REPUBLICANS EXECUTIVE BOARD

JEREMIAH KEENAN is a College sophomore from China studying mathematics. His email address is [email protected]. “Keen on the Truth” usually appears every Wednesday.

SAM SHERMAN is a College junior from Marblehead, Mass. His email address is [email protected].

Thankfully, a number of people from the black community reached out to me personally about the column, and we had open, friendly conversations. Honestly addressing stereotypes on both sides

helped to bring them down.”

Buzzwords such as ‘war on women’ are rhetorically effective a n d c o n v e n i e n t n a r r a t i v e s . A n d sometimes they’re true. The problem, however, is that as the narratives develop and grow, they can stray far

from the truth.”

Page 5: October 27, 2014

News5

5NEWSMONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

Although the leaves are chang-ing colors, things are still green at Penn.

This year’s Fall Green Week began Oct. 21, and will run until Oct. 28. Once a semester, orga-nizations including the Penn En-vironmental Group, the Student Sustainability Association at Penn, the Kelly Writers House, the Philomathean Societyand the Penn Vegan Society host the event, which broaches a number of environmental issues.

This year, Fall Green Week began with the official launch of Penn’s Climate Action Plan 2.0, which includes the goal of reduc-ing carbon usage by seven percent

and overall building energy by 10 percent by 2019.

Other highlights of the week in-cluded planting a new orchard in Penn Park on Thursday. The fes-tivities continued on Friday with GreenFest, which covered College Green with activities and booths run by Green Acorn, Fossil Free Penn and the Urban Nutrition Ini-tiative, among others.

“I would say it’s overall inten-tion is to raise awareness about environmental policy at Penn and how we, as members of the Penn community, can be more engaged and make more sustainable life-style choices,” Undergraduate As-sembly and SSAP liaison and Col-lege sophomore Kat McKay said.

To end the Fall Green Week, PEG and the Eco-Reps will be holding a tap versus bottled water comparison test on Locust Walk on Monday. The final event of the week is a discussion held by the Penn Entrepreneurship Commu-

nity which will cover sustainabil-ity and green business models on Tuesday.

“There is definitely work to be

done, which is why these groups serve such an important purpose in the campus community,” she said.

Fall Green Week pushes for awarenessThe week’s events includ-ed a festival and planting

trees in Penn ParkGRACE KIRKPATRICK

Contributing Writer

Student Sustainability Association at Penn rallied different campus and city organizations that promote environmental consciousness.

JING RAN/SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

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6 NEWS MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014 | THEDP.COMTHE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

crisis.”Rugamba was born in Uganda

and raised in Ivory Coast.College sophomore and first-

generation Guinean Oumouru-mana Jalloh said that the con-stant media coverage has another negative consequence: “When Ebola breaks out in third world countries, it defines that country. Now, there is a negative connota-tion to someone who identifies as a Guinean or Liberian. If I travel or go somewhere, do I really want to say I’m Guinean? The media makes it seem like all Guineans have Ebola.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, not all of Guinea is even affected — only areas of Southeast Guinea bordering Liberia, Sierra Leone and Ivory coast, as well as three smaller areas in the western part of the countries near the coast.

Jalloh has grandparents and relatives back in Guinea, one of three West African countries af-fected by Ebola. “I am thankful none of my relatives are dying from Ebola,” Jalloh said. “But just knowing that family is there, it is on my mind a lot. There’s really no way to ignore the issue, espe-cially with constant media cover-age of the disease.”

College senior Oyinkansola Muraina said there is a need for more discussion about Ebola on campus. “I don’t think the major-ity of students are engaging criti-cally with the crisis. I’ve heard some problematic comments on campus,” Muraina said. “People are primarily concerned with making sure it doesn’t come to them. We all need to remember that we are all vulnerable as long as it continues to ravage commu-

nities in other parts of the world.”Muraina, whose entire extend-

ed family lives in Nigeria, recalls her experience being in the coun-try this past summer when a cou-ple of Ebola cases broke out. “It caused a mild hysteria. Everyone was distributing hand sanitizer and warning each other to drink or bathe with salt water. Two people actually died from drink-ing too much salt water. However, all of the Ebola cases have been handled since, and there are no more cases in Nigeria,” she said.

Penn Muslim minister Ka-meelah Rashad has counseled many African students who worry about the crisis in West Africa and agrees that the lack of dis-cussion is troubling. “Is a student supposed to assume that because there’s no discussion, it’s not im-portant?” Rashad asked. “It is dif-ficult for students who must tend to two worlds, the one back in Africa and the Penn world, where they are expected to do well in all of their classes and extracurricu-lars.”

Going forward, the Penn Afri-can Student Association plans to address this need. Recently, the African student group at Brown University reached out to PASA, and the two groups are working to spread information on campuses and to send support to Ebola-af-fected countries.

“African students here repre-sent the continent. We don’t want to just sit here idle when there are things we can do to support relief efforts,” Rugamba said. “It’s the least we can do.”

WEST AFRICA >> PAGE 1

West Africa Ebola Outbreak Distribution

Liberia

Sierra Leone

Guinea

Active areas in red

Source: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

GRAPHIC BY ZOE GOLDBERG

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Page 7: October 27, 2014

News7

7NEWSMONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

Women, generally agreed with Garrett, though, that work-life balance is one of the biggest is-sues for women in the workforce. “Coming out of Wharton, there’s a lot of pressure to have a really big career, and the focus on family life is not as important,” she said. “I can’t speak for all women, but I think in general, that’s probably the thing that I wonder about the most.”

As the job market only gets more competitive, Arana ac-knowledged that gender dis-crimination is something that has

crossed her mind when she thinks about her future career.

“I am worried about it,” she said. “I went to a Goldman Sachs program this summer, and we spoke to a lot of men and women. But when you really look at these companies, their top manage-ment is almost entirely men, and women tend to work in marketing or communications. That’s some-thing that’s yet to be overcome.” Research suggests that women are at a disadvantage in the hiring process because they only apply to jobs they feel completely quali-fi ed to fi ll, while men will apply to a job even if they meet only 60 percent of its qualifi cations.

For its part, Wharton does ac-knowledge the role it plays in its female students’ futures. “Creat-ing the supply of capable young people who will become future business leaders — that’s impor-tant to [Wharton’s] role, and we continually ensure that we are training as many qualifi ed wom-en as we can,” Vice Dean of the Wharton Undergraduate Division Lori Rosenkopf said in an inter-view earlier this semester.

“I think Wharton does a really great job. I don’t get the impres-sion at all that women are disad-vantaged or in any way less valued than men,” Reighart said.

“Especially in the MBA class,

it’s a great place to be a woman. We consistently have the highest percentage of women out of any MBA class anywhere,” said 2015 MBA candidate and co-President of Wharton Women in Business Valerie Liu.

Liu acknowledged that Whar-ton Women in Business had seen and discussed Garrett’s comment to the Wall Street Journal but re-fused to comment on its possible implications for women at Whar-ton.

And while Garrett’s comment might call into question how much a priority gender equity is for the administration, not all stu-dents feel it should be one. “The

administration can’t realistically get involved with every minor-ity problem on campus because then there would be too many problems for them to possibly ad-dress,” Arana said.

Liu agreed. “Administrators don’t need to be at the forefront of this initiative. Students are a lot more open to change coming from within their class as opposed to from the top levels.” she said.

Like prospective undergradu-ates and MBAs , prospective Wharton professors have to stand out in a pool of candidates to score a spot on the faculty roster.

Of the 10 new professors at Wharton this semester, four were hired directly out of doctoral programs for their fi rst teaching positions. In an admissions-like process, these newly-minted Ph.D.s face off for the limited number of open faculty positions at universities.

And experienced profes-sors are usually in the mix, too. Wharton departments actively

recruit professors from other universities in an eff ort to build the strongest faculty.

New Dean Geoff rey Garrett, who is also the Reliance Profes-sor of Management and Private Enterprise, was wooed from his old post as dean at the Australian School of Business at the Univer-sity of New South Wales. Other new professors this semester agreed to come to Wharton from the Stanford Business School, the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan and the University of Chicago Law School.

Wharton management pro-fessor Minyuan Zhao, who was recruited this year from Ross, explained that the business edu-cation community is a very small one in which everybody knows the research that others are do-ing. In her case, she explained

that the department she joined at Wharton was very interested in the work that she was doing and made her an off er to come join the Wharton faculty.

“There are a number of people that we do bring in who have already established themselves at other institutions,” said Lori Rosenkopf, vice dean and direc-tor of the Wharton Undergradu-ate Division. “That’s a wonder-ful plus for us when you have somebody who is already a re-nowned expert to be joining your faculty.”

Rosenkopf said that hiring at Wharton is done on the depart-mental level, allowing faculty to look at who is doing the most intriguing research in their fi eld. She said that hiring always be-gins, though, with empty faculty positions being openly adver-tised in forums like the Chroni-

cle of Higher Education.Gerard Cachon, chair of the

Operations and Information Management Department, said that after identifying the best candidates, departments also try to determine who would be most willing to actually join Whar-ton’s faculty.

Departments work hard on pitching themselves to prospec-tive professors, he noted. “You make an off er and try to sell the person on the value of coming to Wharton,” Cachon said. ”For-tunately, there are lots of great things about Wharton from the perspective of an academic, so we surely have something to of-fer.”

“Many times the sales pitch works,” Cachon said.

Though she believes that the methods across departments are reasonably similar, Rosenkopf

cautioned that she could only de-fi nitively speak from her experi-ence as a member of Wharton’s management department. The management team always starts out by simply seeking candidates who are publishing in academic journals, leading the profession-al societies and who have a great reputation in their fi eld.

Making the fi nal decision about adding someone to Whar-ton’s faculty is not simple, though. In the case of Garrett, a consultative committee chaired by Dean of the Perelman School of Medicine J. Larry Jameson vetted around a dozen semi-fi nalists before recommending four fi nalists to Penn President Amy Gutmann. The commit-tee additionally consulted with headhunting fi rm Spencer Stuart, whose representatives declined to comment for this article.

WOMEN>> PAGE 1

Weber and Goldblum based the documentary on a scene in the novel where the protagonist encounters a magician’s ghetto — a slum inhabited by circus performers, magicians and pup-peteers. Rushdie created the ghetto as an allegory for the real-life tinsel slum of the Kathputli colony on the western edge of New Delhi .

“It really got to me,” Goldblum said. “I realized that Rushdie had based the scene on a real place, and I thought it would make an incredible documentary.”

Tomorrow We Disappear pres-ents its viewers with the compro-mise that the New Delhi govern-

ment is making in bulldozing the Kathputli Colony, forcing its resi-dents to relocate, and building a strip mall in its place.

“You can’t build something new without losing something old,” Goldblum said.

The documentary has been re-ceived with critical commenda-tion. The feature was described as “one of the best documentaries of 2014” by Indiewire and was fea-tured at the Tribeca Film Festival.

After graduation, Weber worked as an apprentice editor for Inglorious Basterds and Gold-blum won an Emmy for a project at the Pulitzer Center in the “new approaches to documentary” cat-egory. Their path to Tomorrow We Disappear began when Gold-blum and Weber took Paul Hen-

drickson’s class in documentary writing as English majors.

“A lot of the ideas that led to it

[Tomorrow We Disappear] were born out of our education there,” Goldblum said.

FILM >> PAGE 1

Getting hired at WhartonWharton’s departments go to lengths to woo the faculty they want most

COREY STERNStaff Writer

theDP.com

MINYUAN ZHAOWharton Management

Professor

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Page 8: October 27, 2014

8Sports

Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9.

Skill Level:

Create and solve yourSudoku puzzles for FREE.Play Sudoku and win prizes at:

prizesudoku.comThe Sudoku Source of “Daily Pennsylvanian”.

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SUDOKUPUZZLE

NEWYORKTIMESCROSSWORDPUZZLE

ACROSS

1 Noggin

5 Handout to a party guest

10 Almost any “Get rich quick!” offer

14 House overhang

15 Jong who wrote “Fear of Flying”

16 Frat house party wear

17 Bank heist group

19 Visa or MasterCard rival, informally

20 Conversed

21 Tiny type size

23 The “S” in 36-Across

24 Sweet rum component

28 Relatives by marriage

30 Rome’s ___ Fountain

31 Appurtenance for Santa or Sherlock Holmes

34 Cheer for a torero

35 Morgue identification

36 Sch. in Baton Rouge

37 Indy 500 leader39 Russian jet40 Changes42 Hamburger

holder43 Hair goops44 Kind of question

with only two answers

45 South-of-the-border nap

47 Company downsizings

49 Signed, as a contract

53 “A pity!”54 Coastal land

south of Congo55 Couple57 British rocker

with the 1979 #1 hit “Da Ya Think I’m Sexy?”

60 Electrical adapter letters

61 Japanese dog breed

62 ___ vera (skin soother)

63 Cry on a roller coaster

64 Adjusted the pitch of, as an instrument

65 Sunbeams

DOWN

1 Opposite (or synonym) of worsts

2 Really bother

3 St. Teresa of ___

4 Item not worn on casual Fridays

5 Fight between late-night hosts, e.g.

6 Dadaist artist Jean

7 Pep

8 Atlantic and Pacific

9 Stove

10 Height

11 “I’m stranded and need a ride”

12 Grow older

13 Reach the limit, with “out”

18 Astute

22 Fur trader John Jacob ___

24 Telephone

25 Not very much

26 To no ___ (in vain)

27 Bobby who lost 1973’s Battle of the Sexes tennis match

29 Eton johns

31 “Hamlet” and “Macbeth”

32 Speck of land in the sea

33 Takes off the front burner

35 Gets color at the beach

37 Univ. lecturers

38 Stage prompts

41 Carry out, as a law

43 Fight over turf

45 Numerical puzzle with a 9x9 grid

46 Fork prong

48 Gem weight

50 Down Under “bear”

51 Jetson boy of 1960s TV

52 Results of using eHarmony

54 Not very much

55 Animal foot

56 German’s “Oh my!”

58 Loud noise

59 Sault ___ Marie, Ont.

PUZZLE BY IAN LIVENGOOD

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S T R E A K S L E A D U PQ U I R R E L L A N G I N AU N D E R D O G S T R E W NA N D A S P E C T R A T I OD E L T S L O S E S E PS L E W A P E X P O L L

O P T I C S O D D YP R O J E C T R U N W A Y

C L A U S R I F L EL A I T C O M O R A V EA Y N S H U N A S T I NM A G I C T R I C K S H O FA R E N O T C O C A C O L AT E A R U P S T U N T M A NO A R E R S S P A R E S T

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Edited by Will Shortz No. 0922CrosswordACROSS

1 Self-praise couched in self-deprecation, in modern lingo

11 Story lines

15 Wanting

16 What marketers might follow

17 2013 Golden Globe winner for “Girls”

18 Colony in ancient Magna Graecia

19 “Downton Abbey” title

20 Four-star figs.

21 Risotto relative

22 Refrain syllable

23 Going green?

24 South American cowboy

26 Animal that may swim on its back

28 It’s often checked on a cell

30 ___-soul (style of Erykah Badu and Lauryn Hill)

31 Talent scout’s find, informally

33 Public

35 Beginning of a process of elimination

37 One who gets numbers by calling numbers

40 Bathes

44 Coach Parseghian

45 44-Across’s “Fighting” team

47 Between, to Balzac

48 One living in urban poverty, pejoratively

50 Baby docs

52 ___ pop

53 Contemporary and compatriot of Debussy

54 You may drop a big one

56 Toon toned down for the 1930s Hays Code

57 Resort options

58 A nerd may not have one

60 Some tributes

61 Alcopop relative

62 Christie novel title that, without spaces, is a man’s name

63 New lease on life

DOWN

1 There’s no place to go but down from here

2 Make public

3 Obamacare obligation

4 Fourth of July, for Calvin Coolidge, informally

5 Was up

6 Level

7 Unit of energy?

8 First name in Chicago politics

9 Not level

10 Peach

11 Eschewed takeout, say

12 Stuffed chili pepper

13 How you may feel after taking allergy medication

14 Shore dinner

21 Spots where artists mix?

23 Nickname for Oliver Cromwell

25 Turkish dough

27 Unstable compound

29 Ties up in a slip

32 ___ desk (newsroom assignment)

34 Either director of “True Grit”

36 Negligee

37 Fire

38 Sentinel’s place

39 Taylor of “Twilight”

41 Chef de cuisine’s shout

42 Publishing house employee

43 Dr. Ruth, for one

46 Bros

49 “Divine” showbiz persona

51 Bad place for a whale

55 Spots annoying teens

56 Stain

58 Match.com abbr.

59 ___ Lonely Boys (2004 Grammy winners)

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B I T E A S I A N M A M A SL O O P C A S E Y A G A V EO W N S A L E R T R A M O NC A S I N C U E A L I B I S

L A I T A A S I N A R EC O R O N A E L I O N SA R E N A K I L N T A G SN Y U S A S I N S E A U N OE X P O R O M E M U R A L

R A I N Y I M I T A T EE A S I N E Y E N I C EA L L E Y S Y A S I N Y O US T A N D I A M B S S O B SY E N T A Q R C I U I L I EA R T S Y S C A T S L O T S

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For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550For Release Friday, October 24, 2014

Edited by Will Shortz No. 0919Crossword

Red and Blue come from behind for road victory

110 minutes not long enough for Red and Blue

Penn sprint football gets blown out on senior night

A change of scenery can do wonders.

Getting away for the weekend, Penn fi eld hockey traveled to New Haven and overcame an early defi -cit to beat Yale, 2-1. The win over the last-place Bulldogs moves Penn to 2-3 in Ivy play, good for a fi fth place tie with Harvard.

In the fi rst half, the Quakers (6-7, 2-3) dictated play, possess-ing the ball and creating off ensive chances. Senior midfi elder Alex Iqbal and junior attack Elizabeth Hitti helped the Red and Blue pro-duce multiple scoring chances, as the squad registered seven shots on goal in the fi rst half — more than Yale (2-13, 0-5) had in the entire

match.But alas, Penn was unable to

fi nd the back of the net with Yale senior goalkeeper Heather Schle-sier making seven saves, and both teams went into halftime in a scoreless draw.

Things changed quickly in the second half as freshman Kiwi Comizio beat Penn goalkeeper Al-lison Weisenfels for the fi rst goal of the match.

But it wouldn’t be the only one.With Penn down a goal, the

Quakers’ top scorers kicked it into another gear. Just eight minutes after the Yale score, freshman at-tack Alexa Hoover got a goal of her own. The game-tying score was Hoover’s team-leading 12th of the year.

Senior attack Emily Corcoran followed Hoover’s goal with the

go-ahead tally, coming off an as-sist from Iqbal. Corcoran now has nine goals this season after she tal-lied 13 last season.

From there, the Quakers held on despite a yellow card given to Hoover with just six minutes to go, leaving Penn short-handed.

While Hoover and Corcoran were the goal scorers for Penn, Iqbal and Hitti had just as strong a role in the off ense, putting up eight of the Quakers’ 11 shots on goal.

The win ends a two-game los-ing streak in Ivy play for the Red and Blue and marks Penn’s second come-from-behind win of the sea-son. It also gives the Quakers their second two-game win streak of the year, something the squad will ob-viously look to top in the coming week.

The Quakers play another road match on Tuesday, heading a short way to Villanova, before a Home-coming tilt with Brown — Penn’s fi nal home match of the season.

While it may not have been the on-fi eld performance the team was looking for, Penn sprint football had a night to remember as it honored its se-nior players in their fi nal home game.

Penn was handed a 47-7 loss by a powerful Army squad that has not lost a game in three years. It was a disappointing loss for the Quakers (3-3) but even Penn’s coach acknowl-edged Army’s strengths.

“Army plays to a diff erent beat,” coach Bill Wagner said. “They play with a major mis-sion, to win a battle, because they’re getting ready to win real battles. They bring that to the fi eld. They’re hard to beat, they’re well coached, and they’ve got a lot of talent. They have that one mission — to win at all costs.”

The loss also cost the Quak-ers junior wide receiver and tight end Brendan Dale , who injured his knee and is not ex-pected to play in next week’s season fi nale. Dale had to be helped off the fi eld by medical staff .

However, returning from a concussion suff ered last week was senior captain running back Mike Beamish , who re-turned for the fi nal home game of his career. It was remarkable that Beamish was able to play at all given his truncated week of practice.

Beamish, however, strug-gled to fi nd holes against the powerful Army defense, as he tallied little more than one yard per carry on the night. The Black Knights (6-0) smoth-ered the Red and Blue off ense all night, sacking sophomore quarterback Mike McCurdy

six times, intercepting him twice and blocking a punt in the Quakers’ end zone that went for a safety.

Penn’s lone score came in the fourth quarter when Mc-Curdy connected with junior wide receiver Henry Mason for a 32-yard touchdown pass. By contrast, Army’s off ense fi red on all cylinders, gashing the Quakers for big plays through-out the game.

Penn will graduate a strong class of seniors, led by Beamish and senior defensive back Keith Braccia . Beamish has rushed for over 2,500 yards and punted for nearly 5,000 yards during his sprint football career. Brac-cia earned all-CSFL honors as a receiver and defensive back last year.

“Braccia, Beamish, [senior off ensive lineman Alex] Smith and those guys, they’ll be tough to replace,” Wagner said. “They’re real leaders.”

Seniors such as Braccia have played essential roles for younger players on the team, like freshman linebacker Quinn Karam , who has been a prime fi gure on the Penn defense this season.

“Honestly, I don’t even know where we’d be without the se-niors on this team,” Karam said. “They give us so much help and inspiration. Tight games, games like [the 14-7 Penn vic-tory against] Franklin Pierce, I don’t think we would’ve won without the seniors fi ring us up and leading us.”

The gratitude goes both ways.

“I couldn’t be more thankful to sprint football,” Braccia said. “Above the game, [the team is] a family.”

Braccia, Beamish and their fi ve fellow seniors will fi nish out their sprint football careers next Friday against winless Princeton.

For the Penn women’s soccer team , this season has been fi lled with ups and downs. And Satur-day’s game at Yale proved to be no diff erent.

The Quakers entered the game in New Haven with high hopes of redeeming themselves in Ivy League play after a disappoint-ing start, but a late goal for Yale stifl ed their eff orts, resulting in a 1-1 double-overtime draw.

Despite being unable to main-tain possession of the ball for the majority of the game, the Red and the Blue (5-5-3, 1-3-2 Ivy) showed glimpses of off ensive ex-cellence.

In the 38th minute, freshman forward Juliana Provini displayed her fancy footwork and shooting skills when she sent the ball past Yale senior goalkeeper Elise Wil-cox off a brilliant assist from ju-nior midfi elder Erin Mikolai , her fourth of the year.

Just when it looked like Pro-vini, who has scored two game-winning goals this season, would be the hero again, Yale (6-4-3, 1-1-3) evened the score in the 74th minute off senior forward Melissa Gavin ’s beautiful volley, impres-sively shot with her back to the goal over the leaping junior goal-keeper Kalijah Terilli .

Nevertheless, the Quakers still had their chances to win the game.

Two corner kicks in the last min-ute of regulation seemed promis-ing, but the Quakers were unable to capitalize on their set pieces.

With a 1-1 tie after 90 minutes, the game at Reese Stadium headed to overtime, which consisted of two sudden-death 10-minute pe-riods.

As tiredness and weary legs began to set in, the play became sloppier than either team would have liked. Back and forth kicks around the midfi eld made the game more akin to pinball than to soccer.

However, the intensity and heart for both teams was evident

until the very last second. Both the Quakers and Bulldogs came pain-fully close to victory in the closing minutes of the game, with Mikolai launching a shot off the crossbar and Provini also missing a shot high for Penn. The Bulldogs too almost won the game in the fi nal fi ve seconds, but Terilli beautiful-ly blocked a shot as time expired.

Although they did not claim the victory, Penn has still not lost a game at Reese Stadium since 2004.

The Quakers will lace up again on Tuesday night at Lehigh with the hopes of winning their fi nal non-conference game.

ALEX LIAO/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERFreshman forward Juliana Provini was Penn’s lone scorer against Yale, as the Quakers came close multiple times but were unable to tally a winning goal.

SAM SHERMAN/SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERFreshman attack Alexa Hoover supplied one of the Red and Blue’s two goals on Saturday, helping to lead an increasingly balanced offense to a come-from-behind victory over Yale — a team currently at the bottom of the Ivies.

W. SOCCER | Penn battled hard but couldn’t

hold on to win at YaleBY ANNA DYER

Staff Writer

AT YALE

FIELD HOCKEY Quakers prevail in low-

scoring affair BY STEVEN TYDINGSSenior Sports Editor

SAM SHERMAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSophomore quarterback Mike McCurdy threw a 32-yard touchdown, but he was unable to get much else going against a formidable Army defense on Friday.

AT YALE

VS. ARMY

Army outmatches Quakers, who celebrate

careers of seniorsBY STEVEN JACOBSON

Staff Writer

8 SPORTS MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014 | THEDP.COMTHE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

Page 9: October 27, 2014

of the rest, scoring a few times and passingly adequately. As for the other four, those who played made little impact, and two did not touch the court at all.

The loftiest expectations en-tering the game fell on junior shooting guard Tony Hicks, who will be counted on — as a leader and arguably the team’s best player — to erase the pains of yesteryear. He stood out de-fensively, applying great pres-sure beyond the three-point line to the Blue team’s guards. His ability to drive against big-ger defenders shows that all his offseason work has been paying off.

However, the scrimmage still exposed weaknesses in his game. Shifted to point guard for much of the game, Hicks was unable to get the Red team going in the

first half as they trailed by 10. Only when the coaches shifted senior guard Camryn Crocker — who was a strong playmaker in the game — from Blue to Red in the second half was Red able to pull within reach.

Additionally, with over 10 seconds left each time, Hicks kept the rock for what should have been the closing shot of each half. Hicks not only missed on both attempts, he also gave the Blue team a few seconds to try — albeit unsuccessfully — to score. While there were bright spots in his game, Hicks will need to continue to improve in order to lead the Quakers throughout the season.

Though play as a team shifted often from crisp to sloppy, the Quakers look ready to try and take back some control of the Ancient Eight. How much con-trol will it be? That is yet to be answered.

Sports9

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able to match Torgersen in a shootout. The Ivy League’s lead-ing passer picked apart Penn’s secondary seemingly at will all game long, hitting wide receiver Deon Randall for one touchdown and backup running back Candler Rich for another.

His favorite target, though, was Wallace, who abused Quakers cornerback Kevin Ijoma so badly in the first half that the senior was benched. Wallace caught 10 balls for 173 yards and added another touchdown in the second half.

“I knew [Roberts would] make the right reads,” Wallace said. “Our gameplan was really solid, so I was open based on what they were giv-ing us and what the play calls were.”

Ijoma — who would return to the field late in the third quarter — was not the only Penn defen-sive back to have a bad day at the office. Dan Wilk, Trevor Niemann and Dylan Muscat all gave up big plays as Penn coach Al Bagnoli shuffled the secondary to no avail. Even freshman Brandon Michel got burned on Wallace’s second score, which made it 43-14.

“We’ve got to find some con-sistency back on the third level,”

Bagnoli said. “We’re not playing as consistent as I’d like to see us play. And so we’re looking at some answers, we’ll go back, look at the film and see where we are.

“We’ve just gotta be more in sync back there than what we are, and obviously that’s my fault.”

Despite all of their defensive struggles, the Quakers still had a chance to make it a game late in the first half.

After a big fourth down stop of Varga, Torgersen took over from his own 22 to engineer a no-huddle drive and pull the Quakers within eight points.

Penn seemed to lose its momen-

tum, though, after the game was stopped for several minutes due to an apparent head injury to Yale cor-nerback Spencer Rymiszewski. The sophomore was stretchered off the field and had the face mask cut off of his helmet before being transported to a local hospital for concussion tests.

Once play resumed, Scott slipped coming out of his break on what would have been a first down reception, dashing the Quakers’ hopes.

By the end of the afternoon, Penn’s dream of seriously con-tending for the Ivy title had suf-fered a similar fate.

FOOTBALL>> PAGE 10

Varga set the tone for the game right after Penn went three-and-out to begin the game. Like he has done all year for Yale, the se-nior running back rushed into the second and third level, reeling off some solid runs to begin the game.

And like it has done all year, Penn’s defense had a propensity to give up the big play. On fourth and one at the 22, Varga broke free and easily got into the endzone for a touchdown.

But it wasn’t just Varga reel-ing off plays that made Penn look like a second-rate defense: Junior quarterback Morgan Roberts gave NBCSN viewers a chance to see the Red and Blue’s struggling sec-ondary.

Roberts — who struggled and threw two interceptions in a loss to the Quakers last season — was the star of the game, throwing more touchdowns than incompletions. The junior picked on whichever cornerback fit his fancy, hitting his receivers with relative ease.

In particular, Roberts continu-ally found senior wide receiver Grant Wallace, who was able to get by every defensive back that Penn put on him.

"[The Bulldogs] certainly have

the capability of exploding and that’s the fear that everyone has playing against that offense this year,” coach Al Bagnoli said. “I thought the whole key was trying to minimize big plays and hope-fully get a turnover or two, and, defensively, we didn’t get any turnovers and we gave up way too many big plays.”

All in all, the Bulldogs were able to score early and often, tally-ing their most points against Penn

since 1967.With Yale up from the start,

Penn was forced to abandon the running game and throw the ball. While sophomore quarterback Alek Torgersen was extremely ef-fective at times, the offense was easier to stop once it became one dimensional, similar to many of Penn’s losses already.

“We got behind and we had to play uphill,” Bagnoli said. “That’s an awful lot of pressure you’re put-

ting on a sophomore quarterback.”Yes, this is Yale, a team that

is bulldozing FCS (and FBS) de-fenses left and right. Varga and Roberts are early favorites for the Ivy League’s Offensive Player of the Year, and the team is a strong Ivy title contender.

But there was time –— mostly before the season began — that Penn fancied itself an Ivy contend-er as well. Bagnoli said in the Ivy League’s preseason teleconference that the team’s front seven was going to be its strength. And it’s not like the defense didn’t have a plethora of upperclassmen return-ing.

However, Yale, like Villanova, Dartmouth and two others before it, found Penn’s flaws and exploited them. It is clear by now that Penn has a problem with big plays. That they can’t effectively stop a good passing attack. That it struggles to stay balanced offensively.

And with Brown and its im-proving offense coming to town for Homecoming, it is time for Penn to address these flaws in or-der to win.

TYDINGS>> PAGE 10

FOOTBALLEXTRA THEY SAID IT“We’ve just gotta be more in sync back there than what we are, and obviously that’s my fault.”

— On Penn’s secondary’s struggles

Al BagnoliPenn coach

STATISTICS PENN YaleFirst Downs 17 28Rushing Yards 47 264Passing Yards 286 341— Attempts 41 30 — Completions 23 27— Interceptions 0 0Total Yards 333 605Sacked-Yds Lost 3-22 0-0Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 2-30 7-57Punts-Yards 8-347 4-149— Avg. per punt 43.4 37.23rd-Down Conv. 4-15 5-134th-Down Conv. 1-1 2-4 Red Zone Scores 0-1 4-5Time of Poss. 20:56 39:04 Attendance: 11,402

TELLING NUMBERS

1967Was the last time that Yale scored 43 points or more against Penn. With Morgan Roberts and Tyler Varga leading the charge, the Bulldogs had no trouble exploiting Penn’s struggling defense.

605Total yards from Yale’s offense on Saturday. It was a balanced attack from the Elis as both the passing and rushing game came easy against the Red and Blue.

167Yards receiving for Penn senior wide receiver Conner Scott. Scott caught two long touchdowns and moved into fifth all-time on Penn’s receiving yards list.

THE RECORD

1-5, 1-2 Ivy HOME ROAD 1-1, 1-0 Ivy 0-4, 0-2 Ivy

GAME SIX

AT A GLANCEStar of the game: Yale quarterback Morgan Roberts It isn’t often that a QB

throws more touchdowns than incompletions but that is precisely what Roberts did on Saturday, picking apart

Penn’s defense to the tune of 346 yards passing. His four touchdown throws paced the Bulldogs to victory.

Play of the game: Tyler Varga’s 23-yard touchdown run

On Yale’s first drive, the Elis got going quickly, taking advantage of good field position and getting to the Penn 23-yard

line. However, it looked like the drive may be teetering out, as Penn forced a fourth and one. But the offense stayed on the field and Varga ran 23 yards all the way to the endzone.

Longest pass: Yale Jr. QB Morgan Roberts to Sr. WR Deon Randall Second Quarter Third and 10 from

the Yale 19 to Penn 28.

Longest run: Yale Sr. RB Tyler Varga First Quarter Fourth and 1 from the Penn 23 for a touchdown.

53YARDS

23YARDS

THOMAS MUNSON/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERAfter struggling against Penn last season, junior quarterback Morgan Roberts dominated this year’s Penn team, throwing for four touchdowns and 346 yards.

STEVEN TYDINGS is a Wharton junior from Hopewell, N.J., and is senior sports editor of The Daily Pennsylva-nian. He can be reached at [email protected].

into first place. Furthermore, the Red and Blue have yet to face two of their toughest conference

foes in Harvard and Princeton.Against an Elis team that has

managed just one win on the season and ranks in the bottom 10 of all NCAA Division I teams in terms of RPI, a win was some-

what expected for the Quakers going into the match.

Penn will take on West Vir-ginia at Rhodes Field in its final nonconference match on Tues-day.

M. SOCCER >> PAGE 10

M. HOOPS >> PAGE 10

FREDA ZHAO/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERJunior midfielder Forrest Clancy continued his recent hot streak as he scored Penn’s only goal of the match. Clancy notched a pair of assists in the Quakers’ last game. However, the Red and Blue were unable to stay hot as well, drawing Yale.

>>THEDP.COM/SPORTS

9SPORTSMONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014THEDP.COM | THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

Page 10: October 27, 2014

And so it begins.Penn basketball gave the

Quakers faithful its first glimpse of the 2014-15 pro-gram on Saturday in its Red and Blue scrimmage.

Though the Blue team ultimately won 33-32, the scoreboard itself mattered little. What did matter was the way in which the play-ers performed in a real game scenario, and a team with many questions surrounding it provided few answers.

The biggest of these ques-tions pertained to coach Je-

rome Allen’s newest crop of freshmen, as the freshmen got their first taste of col-lege basketball. Perhaps the best player on the court was freshman forward Mike Au-ger, who used 6-foot-7 stat-ure and excellent movement to be successful in the paint .

Though unable to finish on many moves in the first half, the New Hampshire product lit up in the second. Although he struggled a bit defensively against players driving to the basket, Allen may have found the corner-stone to his rebuilding proj-ect in Auger.

As for the remainder of the freshmen, little can be said thus far. Guard Darnell Foreman was the strongest

NEXT GAME: VS. BROWN | SAT, 1 P.M.

YALE (5-1, 2-1 IVY) PENN (1-5, 1-2)

Coach Rudy Fuller always says that anything can happen in any given Ivy League matchup.

Unfortunately for Penn men’s

soccer, the team ended up with the short end of the stick against Yale, fi ghting to a 1-1 draw against one of the weakest teams in the country.

The Elis (1-9-3, 0-3-1 Ivy) opened up the game with a goal in the third minute from junior

Keith Bond . The goal was the fi rst of the season for Bond and just the sixth goal that Yale has scored all season.

Junior Forrest Clancy re-sponded for the Quakers (6-6-1, 2-1-1) with a goal of his own just four minutes later to tie the game. While Penn and Yale each found multiple opportu-nities to score throughout the remainder of the game, neither

was able to fi nd the back of the net.

Overall, Yale was able to put more pressure on the Quak-ers’ defense, taking 17 shots to Penn’s nine. Junior goalkeeper Max Polkinhorne came up with a few key stops to maintain the tie, but the Quakers struggled to convert off ensive opportunities of their own.

With the draw, the Quakers

no longer control their own des-tiny in the Ivy League. The team sits in a three-way tie for second place, with Dartmouth reclaim-ing its spot atop the Ivies.

While this match doesn’t necessarily eliminate Penn from title contention, it does mean that the Quakers require a Dart-mouth loss or tie to move back

THOMAS MUNSON/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Penn had little chance trying to stop Yale senior running back Tyler Varga

on Saturday, as he rushed for 140 yards and two

touchdowns. On this play, he put Yale ahead for good

on its first drive, reeling off a 23-yard dash. Varga

helped put up 43 points, which were the most

Yale scored against the Quakers since 1967.

10Sports

NOTHING DOING IN NEW HAVEN

Bulldogs accentuate football’s

flaws

Two weeks ago, Dart-mouth exposed Yale’s fl aws, showing that the Bulldogs were

beatable.But Penn football wasn’t able

to do what the Big Green did. In fact, the Bulldogs accentuated the Quakers’ fl aws throughout the game, letting a national TV audience see what has plagued the Red and Blue all year.

For the fi rst four games of Penn’s season, the Quakers simply couldn’t stop anyone. Jacksonville dropped 34 points. Villanova one-upped them with 41. Fordham fi nished off non-conference play with a 60-spot that left Penn fans weary.

But the Columbia game be-came a beacon of hope for the Quakers as Penn did everything right for the majority of the game. The off ense clicked with a balanced attack while the de-fense made the Lions look like mincemeat.

Needless to say, Penn’s con-fi dence was up after fi nally get-ting its fi rst win.

But it all came crumbling down against Yale, play-by-play, Tyler Varga run after Tyler Varga run.

SEE TYDINGS PAGE 9

Men’s soccer unable to top YaleClancy’s goal ties game early, but Quakers fail

to capitalize BY HOLDEN McGINNIS

Sports Editor

AT YALE

SEE M. SOCCER PAGE 9

Penn faithful get first glimpse at new Quakers

M. HOOPS | Team shows ups and downs

in scrimmageBY CARTER COUDRIET

Staff Writer

ANDREW DIERKES/DP FILE PHOTOAs a leader and one of the probable best players on the team, junior guard Tony Hicks will be relied upon heavily by the Red and Blue in their upcoming season. Hicks will need to improve on the inconsistency that he exhibited last year.SEE M. HOOPS PAGE 9

NEW HAVEN — Entering Saturday’s game against Yale, Penn football knew it couldn’t try to tackle running back Ty-ler Varga one-on-one or allow quarterback Morgan Roberts to make big plays if it wanted to pull off an upset.

The Red and Blue couldn’t do either of those things, and a familiar result ensued.

Varga steamrolled Penn for 140 yards and two touch-downs and Roberts completed 26 of 29 passes for 346 yards and four scores as the Bull-dogs emphatically put an end to the Quakers’ aspirations of ascending the Ivy standings, 43-21.

It only took three series un-til it became apparent that this would be a long afternoon for Penn (1-5, 1-2 Ivy).

After a Penn three-and-out, the Bulldogs (5-1, 2-1) took advantage of good fi eld posi-tion at the Quakers’ 46 and let Varga do what he does best: truck defenders. The senior took the ball off left tackle on a fourth and one and sprung free for a 23-yard touchdown,

easily fending off an attempted strip from Penn safety Evan Jackson.

“He’s just a big, strong run-ning back, runs hard, keeps his balance pretty well,” Jack-son said. “[You] just have to wrap up and swarm to the ball if you’re trying to tackle that kid.”

The Quakers promptly took the ball down inside the Yale 20 after a 41-yard hookup be-tween quarterback Alek Torg-ersen and wide receiver Con-ner Scott, but disaster ensued.

Kicker Jimmy Gammill’s 31-yard fi eld goal attempt was blocked at the line, and the Penn fi eld-goal unit stood around in a stunning lack of awareness. Bulldogs line-backer Matthew Oplinger alertly scooped up the live ball and rumbled to the Penn 49. Roberts later connected with wideout Grant Wallace on an 18-yard strike to give Yale a 15-0 lead.

Penn’s off ense was able to shake off the shock and rally — somewhat. Torgersen and Scott connected eight times for 156 yards in the fi rst half, including a pair of touchdowns that drew the Quakers within margins of 15-7 and 29-14, re-spectively.

But Roberts was more than

FOOTBALL | Same problems plague

Quakers in Ivy lossBY IAN WENIKSports Editor

SEE FOOTBALL PAGE 9

COMEBACK QUAKERSQUAKERS

Down a goal in the second half, Penn field hockey rose to the

occasion and beat the Bulldogs

>> SEE PAGE 8

NOT ENOUGH

While Penn women’s soccer got off to an early lead, the Quakers couldn’t hold on and drew Yale

>> SEE PAGE 8

STEVEN TYDINGS

MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

CONTACT US: 215-422-4640SEND STORY IDEAS TO [email protected] ONLINE AT THEDP.COM


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