June 12, 2014

8
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA If you’re looking for educa- tional television, a recent Penn study suggests that you should consider tuning into Comedy Central. Senior researcher at the An- nenberg Public Policy Center Bruce Hardy and his team found that viewers of “The Colbert Report” were more knowledgeable about the fi- nances of political campaigns than those who watched other news broadcasts by surveying 1,232 adults in the U.S. about SuperPACs — which are used to collect campaign funds — and tax exemption policies and comparing the different news programs each citizen watched. “Colbert showed us the pro- cess, compared to the inverted pyramid structure of news, which basically just tells you ‘this is a SuperPAC.’ Colbert’s treatment was much more en- gaging, which led to retention of information,” Hardy said in an email statement. The research team conduct- ed statistical analyses com- paring the influence of news shows on level of knowledge, while controlling for socio-de- mographic varilables, political orientation, general political knowledge and political en- gagement, Hardy said. The researchers attributed the educational success of Col- bert’s program to two main factors: his use of narrative style and satirical humor. By creating his own Super- PAC — Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow — on the show, Colbert provided his viewers with a more thorough understanding of how Super- PACs operate. With each epi- sode, Colbert led his audience through the process of legally creating and raising funds for his SuperPAC. Viewers could engage directly by making their own contributions to Americans for a Better Tomor- row, Tomorrow. The SuperPAC series earned City Tap House customers from Center City won’t have to rely on cabs for much lon- ger — this September, a new location will open at 2 Logan Square. City Tap House Logan Square will replace an Amer- ican pub- style restaurant called Public House due to the Public House Investments team’s decision to transform the space. Public House will close its doors on July 5 after dinner service. “This project is the culmi- nation of months of exhaustive research, asking loyal custom- ers for feedback and sugges- tions…” co-owner Gary Cardi said in a press release. Cardi, who recently opened a highly successful City Tap House in Washington, D.C., said that “City Tap House be- gan as [his] dream bar.” He is “very proud“ to announce the second location in Phila- delphia. Managing partner of City Tap House Andy Farrell said that the brand wants to “take Weekend partygoers may no longer have to split cab fare after a late night on the town. On June 3, SEPTA announced its pilot program to operate a 24-hour subway service on the Broad Street and Market- Frankford lines beginning on June 15. The summer pilot ser- vice will run from 12 a.m. until 5 a.m. on Saturdays and Sundays until Labor Day weekend. The overnight service pilot returns after being shut down in 1991 due to low ridership and safety concerns at the time. SEPTA’s senior management has acknowledged the changes in the city since then, however. “There’s an in crease in late night activity around the city and an increase in population of people in the city compared to 1991,” SEPTA spokesperson Manuel McDonnell-Smith said. “Our customers have asked us to operate service on the week- ends so that they can have an additional option to make their way to all these locations.” The late night trains on the Broad Street and Market- Frankford lines will run every 20 minutes between midnight and 5 am on the weekend. SEP- TA officials agreed that there would be a need for increased security during those hours. “We want people to be mind- ful of their safety when they’re taking SEPTA at any time of the day,” Smith said. According to Smith, there will be an officer aboard every train that oper- ates in the overnight service. There will also be additional deployment of SEPTA police Editorial (215) 898-6585 • Business (215) 898-6581 Visit us online at theDP.com Send story ideas to [email protected] online at THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 thedp.com Gutmann announces new post- grad award Penn wants to fund its graduates’ efforts to bet- ter the world, thanks to a new initiative created by Penn President Amy Gutmann. Starting this year, seniors can apply for the Presi- dent’s Engagement Prizes, which will provide up to three recipients with up to $150,000 to devise and implement a local, national or global engagement project during the year following their graduation from Penn. “These Engagement Prizes are a unique way to draw students into putting their knowledge into practice right after they graduate,” Gutmann said. The initiative, which was announced on Monday to the Class of 2015 in an email from Gutmann, will be open to undergraduates in all four schools. Col- laborative projects with up to three awardees will Luke Chen/Senior Photographer The late night trains on the Broad Street and Market-Frankford lines will run every 20 minutes between midnight and 5 am on the weekend. SEPTA officials agreed that there would be a need for increased security during those hours. Brittany Binler/DP File Photo Penn President Amy Gutmann called the initiative a “unique way to draw students into putting their knowledge into practice.” SEPTA launches 24 hour weekend subway service, free internet service The President’s Engagement Prizes will provide recipients up to $150,000 BY KRISTEN GRABARZ News Editor SEE SEPTA PAGE 3 SEE ENGAGEMENT PAGE 5 Overnight service will feature a security officer on every train BY FOLA ONIFADE Deputy News Editor Tap House to expand to Center City The second Philadelphia location will open in September BY MADELINE MCCALLUM Staff Writer Luke Chen/Senior Photographer City Tap House will join the ranks of Center City restaurants, allowing patrons from downtown to enjoy a much shorter commute. There is also a City Tap House in Washington, D.C. Colbert is more effective than the classroom Stephen Colbert educated viewers by launching a Super-PAC BY ALISON ELLIOT Staff Writer SEE COLBERT PAGE 5 SEE TAP HOUSE PAGE 3 Courtesy of Creative Commons Stephen Colbert received his second Peabody Award for his coverage of Super- PACs and campaign financing.

description

 

Transcript of June 12, 2014

Page 1: June 12, 2014

Front1

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSIT Y OF PENNSYLVANIA

If you’re looking for educa-tional television, a recent Penn study suggests that you should consider tuning into Comedy Central.

Senior researcher at the An-nenberg Public Policy Center Bruce Hardy and his team found that viewers of “The Colbert Report” were more knowledgeable about the fi-nances of political campaigns than those who watched other news broadcasts by surveying 1,232 adults in the U.S. about SuperPACs — which are used to collect campaign funds — and tax exemption policies and comparing the different news programs each citizen watched.

“Colbert showed us the pro-cess, compared to the inverted pyramid structure of news, which basically just tells you ‘this is a SuperPAC.’ Colbert’s treatment was much more en-gaging, which led to retention of information,” Hardy said in an email statement.

The research team conduct-ed statistical analyses com-paring the influence of news shows on level of knowledge, while controlling for socio-de-mographic varilables, political

orientation, general political knowledge and political en-gagement, Hardy said.

The researchers attributed the educational success of Col-bert’s program to two main factors: his use of narrative style and satirical humor.

By creating his own Super-PAC — Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow — on the show, Colbert provided his viewers with a more thorough

understanding of how Super-PACs operate. With each epi-sode, Colbert led his audience through the process of legally creating and raising funds for his SuperPAC. Viewers could engage directly by making their own contributions to Americans for a Better Tomor-row, Tomorrow.

The SuperPAC series earned

City Tap House customers from Center City won’t have to rely on cabs for much lon-ger — this September, a new location will open at 2 Logan Square.

City Tap House Logan Square will replace an Amer-ican pub- style restaurant called Public House due to the Public House Investments team’s decision to transform the space. Public House will close its doors on July 5 after dinner service.

“This project is the culmi-nation of months of exhaustive research, asking loyal custom-ers for feedback and sugges-tions…” co-owner Gary Cardi

said in a press release.Cardi, who recently opened

a highly successful City Tap House in Washington, D.C., said that “City Tap House be-gan as [his] dream bar.” He is “very proud“ to announce the second location in Phila-delphia.

Managing partner of City Tap House Andy Farrell said that the brand wants to “take

Weekend partygoers may no longer have to split cab fare after a late night on the town.

On June 3, SEPTA announced its pilot program to operate a 24-hour subway service on the Broad Street and Market-

Frankford lines beginning on June 15. The summer pilot ser-vice will run from 12 a.m. until 5 a.m. on Saturdays and Sundays until Labor Day weekend.

The overnight service pilot returns after being shut down in 1991 due to low ridership and safety concerns at the time. SEPTA’s senior management has acknowledged the changes in the city since then, however. “There’s an in crease in late night activity around the city

and an increase in population of people in the city compared to 1991,” SEPTA spokesperson Manuel McDonnell-Smith said. “Our customers have asked us to operate service on the week-ends so that they can have an additional option to make their way to all these locations.”

The late night trains on the Broad Street and Market-Frankford lines will run every 20 minutes between midnight and 5 am on the weekend. SEP-

TA officials agreed that there would be a need for increased security during those hours. “We want people to be mind-ful of their safety when they’re taking SEPTA at any time of the day,” Smith said. According to Smith, there will be an officer aboard every train that oper-ates in the overnight service.

There will also be additional deployment of SEPTA police

Editorial (215) 898-6585 • Business (215) 898-6581 Visit us online at theDP.com Send story ideas to [email protected]

online atTHURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 online at thedp.com

Gutmann announces new post-

grad award

Penn wants to fund its graduates’ efforts to bet-ter the world, thanks to a new initiative created by Penn President Amy Gutmann.

Starting this year, seniors can apply for the Presi-dent’s Engagement Prizes, which will provide up to three recipients with up to $150,000 to devise and implement a local, national or global engagement project during the year following their graduation from Penn.

“These Engagement Prizes are a unique way to draw students into putting their knowledge into practice right after they graduate,” Gutmann said.

The initiative, which was announced on Monday to the Class of 2015 in an email from Gutmann, will be open to undergraduates in all four schools. Col-laborative projects with up to three awardees will

Luke Chen/Senior Photographer

The late night trains on the Broad Street and Market-Frankford lines will run every 20 minutes between midnight and 5 am on the weekend. SEPTA officials agreed that there would be a need for increased security during those hours.

Brittany Binler/DP File Photo

Penn President Amy Gutmann called the initiative a “unique way to draw students into putting their knowledge into practice.”

SEPTA launches 24 hour weekend subway service, free internet service

The President’s Engagement Prizes will provide recipients up to $150,000

BY KRISTEN GRABARZNews Editor

SEE SEPTA PAGE 3

SEE ENGAGEMENT PAGE 5

Overnight service will feature a security officer

on every trainBY FOLA ONIFADE

Deputy News Editor

Tap House to expand to Center City

The second Philadelphia location

will open in SeptemberBY MADELINE MCCALLUM

Staff Writer

Luke Chen/Senior Photographer

City Tap House will join the ranks of Center City restaurants, allowing patrons from downtown to enjoy a much shorter commute. There is also a City Tap House in Washington, D.C.

Colbert is more effective than the classroom

Stephen Colbert educated viewers by

launching a Super-PACBY ALISON ELLIOT

Staff Writer

SEE COLBERT PAGE 5SEE TAP HOUSE PAGE 3

Courtesy of Creative Commons

Stephen Colbert received his second Peabody Award for his coverage of Super-PACs and campaign financing.

Page 2: June 12, 2014

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PAGE 2 THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 THE SUMMER PENNSYLVANIANNEWS

Harnwell’s Rooftop Lounge housed a whole lot of words last week.

With most students gone for the summer, faculty members can finally focus on their own writing. Last week’s third an-nual faculty writing retreat helped instructors from the School of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Education do just that.

Organized by faculty and funded by the two sponsoring schools, the retreat allowed 26 registered participants from 14 departments to focus uninter-ruptedly on their own writing. From 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. last week, participants gathered in the Rooftop Lounge of Harn-well College House where they spent each day writing with an hour break for lunch and

socialization.“It’s really nice to have this

come right at the beginning of summer when you need some-thing to kick off your writing,” Graduate School of Education professor and event co-orga-nizer Betsy Rymes said.

GSE editor Jennifer Moore, East Asian Languages and Civilizations professor Ayako Kano and GSE professor Anne Pomerantz joined Rymes in or-ganizing the retreat. Because of its unstructured nature, many of their responsibilities involved logistics, setup and cleanup. Also, they led each day’s 15- minute reflection ses-sion, during which participants discussed the their “strategies, triumphs and challenges,” Kano said.

Although the participants did not read each other’s work, Moore served as a writing consultant and editor on site off whom faculty could bounce ideas and meet with one-on-one.

“They can make headway on current projects when they’re

done with grading and focus on their own research,” Moore said of the retreat. “I thought it was a special thing to be around so many people work-ing so hard.”

Now in its third year, the retreat has come a long way from its inaugural setting in a McNeil classroom.

“It really felt like boot camp,” Kano said of the classroom at-mosphere. “This year, because of the openness of the space, it felt more like a retreat — more relaxing and inspiring.”

Working alongside their col-leagues, participants could also escape the isolation that characterizes much humani-ties research.

“In the humanities it’s very common that we work in isola-tion for our research,” Kano said. “There’s a lot of stress on doing your own thing. There’s relatively little collaboration.”

The retreat fostered pro-ductivity along with its social atmosphere.

She spent the bulk of the retreat revising a chapter of

her manuscript about various forms of labor that women jug-gle, finally finishing on the last day. Rymes published a book this year that she began during her first faculty writing retreat.

The retreat’s benefits tran-scend manuscript pages . Work-ing in collaboration, the faculty forged bonds over the week — one small cohort even walked up the 24 flights of stairs. Past years have produced “writ-ing buddies” who have gone on to work together in rented library rooms and other venues throughout the year, Kano said.

This year, assistant profes-sors, who face publication pres-sure in order to gain tenure, were particularly encouraged to sign up. “Repeat customers” from previous years also filled many spots. Next year, the or-ganizers hope to see the event grow in scope, participation and duration.

“ This is a fairly low key and low expense way — but to me a very visible way — of sup-porting faculty,” Kano said. “It gives me joy to see it happen.”

Suicides occur most fre-quently at night, according to a recent study by Penn Medicine.

Led by Behavioral Sleep Medicine Program Direc-tor and Psychiatry profes-sor Michael Perlis, the study determined that most sui-cides take place between the hours of midnight and 6:00 a.m. The findings were released in the wake of the Spring semester’s two stu-dent suicides.

In addition to revealing a possible connection between insomnia and suicide, the research findings suggest that those who are awake at such late hours may also put themselves at a greater risk for suicidal thoughts and be-haviors.

“These results suggest that not only are nightmares and insomnia signif icant risk factors for suicidal ide-ation and behavior, but just being awake at night may in and of itself be a risk factor for suicide,” Perlis said in a press release.

According to the study, suicide rates saw an uptick after midnight and peaked between 2:00 a.m. and 3:00 a.m. at a rate of 16.27 per-cent. After 6:00 a.m., this rate drops down to just over 2 percent.

The study’s findings con-tradict earlier studies, which concluded that the majority of suicides occurred during the daylight hours. Perlis and his team explained that the percentage of late night suicides is higher because fewer people are awake, but

those who are awake are more prone to suicidal ac-tivity.

The findings accompany university-wide efforts to raise awareness and in-crease dialogue about men-tal health after following the five student suicides over the past year.

Earlier this year, the Uni-versity created a mental health task force to brain-storm ideas for improving assistance for students who are under severe stress and may suffer from other condi-tions.

I n M a r c h , P e n n a n -nounced that Counseling and Psychological Services would be increasing its per-manent staff numbers. While not a direct response to the two suicides earlier in the semester, this bolstering il-lustrated Penn’s increased awareness of mental health support. The expansion was expedited after months of budgeting by the adminis-tration.

Around the same time as this change was announced, documents surfaced evinc-ing complaints filed about CAPS. Students who needed help had not been getting it — The Daily Pennsylva-nian reported that one staff psychologist emailed the program director to share concerns over long wait times for students asking for appointments, although these concerns were not ad-dressed at the time. Data reveals that throughout the 2012 to 2013 school year, students had to wait for an average of about 13 days to get an appointment with a counselor at CAPS.

The research will be pre-sented at SLEEP 2014, the 28th annual meeting of the Associated P rofessional Sleep Societies LLC.

Study shows most suicides occur at night

A Penn research team found a link between insomnia and suicide

BY ZAHRA HUSAINStaff Writer

OUTDOOR ART SHINES ON RITTENHOUSE

Ali Harwood/Photo Editor

Sculptor Jack Hill worked on a new piece of art at the 83rd annual Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show. From June 6 to June 8, over 140 local, national and international artists participated in the show. Families came out to enjoy the art and sunshine at Rittenhouse Square.

Faculty members ‘retreat’ to Rooftop Lounge to focus on individual writing projects

24 faculty members spent last week at

annual writing retreatBY KRISTEN GRABARZ

News Editor

Page 3: June 12, 2014

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Do you have a child currently in high school?Do you want a better understanding of how colleges review applications?

The Office of Admissions wants to help you navigate the college admissions process, whether you plan to apply to Penn or elsewhere.Please join us for our 3rd Annual College Search Seminar.• What courses are important to take in high school? • How significant are extracurricular activities? What about essays and interviews? • How important are good grades or high test scores?• Oh, and what should I look for in a college?Answers to these questions and many more will be discussed. All students of high school age are welcome.

You and your family are invited to join us:

Wed., June 27, 4:30-6:30pm • Room F85, Huntsman Hall, 3730 Walnut

Please RSVP by June 25th at www.admissions.upenn.edu/seminarsUnable to attend the seminar? Have additional questions? Admissions Advising Sessions are available by appointment. Please contact [email protected].

College Search Seminars

AdmissionsPenn Staff and Faculty Families

Do you have a child currently in high school? The Office of Admissions wants to help you navigate the college search,

whether your child plans to apply to Penn or elsewhere. Please join us for our College Search Seminar.

Answers to these questions and more will be discussed. All students of high school age are welcome.

You and your family are invited to join us:

Thursday, June 26, 5:15 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. School of Nursing, Claire M. Fagin Hall, 418 Curie Boulevard

Please register by June 24 at https://key.admissions.upenn.edu/register/FS62614 A supplemental program will be held in August.

Have additional questions? Please contact [email protected]

• What courses are important to take in high school? • How significant are extracurricular activities? What about essays and interviews?• How important are good grades or high test scores?• What should a prospective student look for in a college?

THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 PAGE 3NEWSTHE SUMMER PENNSYLVANIAN

Two recent Penn graduates are helping physicians quickly communicate with colleagues.

Seratis, a mobile app soon to begin a new pilot site in the psychiatric ward of Penn Medi-cine, was created to improve the sporadic communication between physicians interact-ing with common patients, 2014 Wharton MBA graduate Divya Dhar said.

By clicking on a patient in the app, a doctor can see which of his colleagues are also work-ing on a particular patient and real time updates on the pa-tient’s condition.

“Seven out of 10 care mem-bers coordinating with a pa-tient do not know each other,” Dhar said. “We want to change that.”

Dhar worked to create Sera-tis along with fellow 2014 Whar-ton MBAgraduate Lane Rettig, who turned Dhar’s idea into a physical product by designing and developing the app.

A former physician, Dhar came up with the idea when she witnessed the difficulties

of doctor communication first-hand. With nothing more than a pager to keep track of her patients and colleagues, it was difficult for her to stay updated on the health of her patients — a problem that can threaten quality of care, she said.

“One story that sticks in my mind was a woman who had developed overnight really bad deteriorating abdominal pains… I had to get in touch with the senior physician and the nurse to get an x-ray and a CT scan done,” Dhar said. “While everything else was happening, her condition was deteriorating pretty rapidly

and, well, she ended up dying.”Although text messaging

devices like cell phones could help to prevent these types of situations, they are illegal for use in hospitals because confidential patient-doctor information is at risk for hacking.Pagers, unlike cell phones, are more secure be-cause the data is encrypted, but they are becoming an out-dated technology.

Seratis has a secure network for communication, making it easier for doctors to speak with one another without com-promising confidential infor-mation.

There are a number of other mobile apps working toward a similar goal, like Cureatr, which is currently being tested at the Hospital of the Universi-ty of Pennsylvania. But Rettig says Seratis adds extra value to hospital communication.

“Giving people the ability to communicate doesn’t help them if they don’t know who to message in the first place,” Lane said. “That’s the problem we’re solving, which we call team transparency.”

Last year, Seratis ran a small pilot with Andrew Resn-ick — the chief surgical offi-cer of Penn Medicine who has since become the chief quality officer at Penn State Univer-

sity — along with some of his team members.

“I am very interested in quality [of healthcare], and one of the big issues in quality of healthcare across the country — and world, really — is com-munication,” Resnick said.

Seratis will begin a larger pilot in the psychiatric unit of Penn Medicine in the upcom-ing weeks, which will involve many more of the team mem-bers that work with each pa-tient in the unit.

After finally finishing devel-oping the app, Dhar and Rettig are ready to see how well their product works and to add any additional features that would further help physician com-munication.

“What we’re doing has enor-mous potential to help literally millions of people,” Rettig said. “I like to tell people we have a secret weapon.”

and personnel at major hubs and terminals, he said. SEP-TA cashiers will be present at stations with high rider-ship. Passengers will be able to pay the operator at un-staffed boarding ovations.

“I think it’s long overdue,” rising College junior Jade Parker said of the pilot. “People always complain about Philly closing down to early so this will definitely be helpful.”

During the pilot run, SEP-TA will stop the Nite Owl bus service, which follows the same pattern as the subway and currently serves as the late night public transporta-tion option.

The train will also replace

the Nite Owl on July Fourth and Labor Day.

While the pilot may not necessari ly be the less expensive option, it could outweigh its cost in terms of convenience for riders. “There will be extra costs for traction power and ad-ditional security and support it will, but again the point of the pilot is for us to take a look at a number of factors: including increased rider-ship,” Smith said.

Tomorrow morning at 11 am SEPTA senior manage-ment will host a kick off at the Walnut-Locust station of the Broad Street Line for the launch of the pilot pro-gram, which begins on Sat-urday night. Xfinity will also announce its completion of Xfinity Wifi installation on most Broad Street Line sta-tions. According to a SEPTA media advisory report, SEP-TA riders will be among the first in the country to experi-ence free internet access on subway platforms.

SEPTA will run all night on weekends

SEPTA from page 1

a neighborhood bar approach while still delivering what could be appreciated citywide.”

Most Penn students know and love City Tap House, a restaurant and craft beer bar located at 39th and Walnut Street. Commonly referred to

as just “Tap,” the restaurant boasts five stone fire pits and a 120-seat rustic dining room.

Farrell — who has been in-volved with D.C.’s new City Tap House — plans to be “very, very involved” with the Center City bar and restaurant. He is excited to see what the new location in Philadelphia will do for the brand.

The new location will be built in the same style as the Univer-sity City Tap House, featuring reclaimed lumber, steel and copper accents. The restaurant will continue to be a haven for beer lovers, with its wide selec-

tion of rare ales and lagers.“The overriding principle of

City Tap House is making it approachable and fun… for the masses,” Farrell said, adding that there will be some “slight differences” between the Uni-versity City and Center City locations. He noted that the University City community has embraced the bar and contrib-uted to its success and “[the] ability to grow the brand.”

Although the bar soon won’t be the only City Tap House in Philadelphia, Farrell said that the 39th and Walnut location will “always be special.”

Univ. City bar will “always be

special”TAP HOUSE from page 1

App improves medical care communicationTwo MBA grads created Seratis to boost doctor

communicationBY JILL CASTELLANO

Staff Writer

Courtesy of Divya Dhar

Divya Dhar and Lane Rettig created Seratis to help physicians keep tabs on individual patients.

Page 4: June 12, 2014

A specter is haunt-ing hip-hop — the specter of Lil B.

For better or for worse, nearly ev-

ery hip-hop listener has heard of Brandon McCartney aka Lil B aka the Based God, whose ar-tistic reign spans the farthest reaches of Myspace and Twitter. He’s like the “Ed, Edd n Eddy” of popular music: bizarre, inco-herent and yet disturbingly easy to enjoy. Despite (or perhaps be-cause of) its weirdness, Lil B’s music inspires cultish adulation. A considerable chunk of the in-ternet hails Lil B as a genius, a harbinger of the avant-garde in hip-hop and beyond. Even Jonah Weiner wrote an article in Slate justifying the “post-Lil-Wayne deconstructionist.” With music so frivolous, it’s easy to attach satirical value to Lil B’s work and enjoy it tongue-in-cheek.

It’s as if an inside joke has swept through the rap commu-nity. The issue is that the joke might eventually become seri-ous.

Traditional music listeners

fear that after playing devoted groupies for so long, hip-hop hipsters have conditioned themselves to genuinely enjoy the Based God. They argue that by giving so much attention to anomalies like Lil B, we starve legitimate musicians of the re-spect they deserve.

The defendants, however, see nothing problematic about this. They object that all music — and art, for that matter — is subjec-tive. Who’s to say that Lil B is any less important than the likes of “real” rappers?

This debate ought to look familiar. The clash between high and popular art has long been a central feature of West-ern culture, with mainstream entertainment vying for legiti-macy alongside the critically esteemed works of the past. Ad-vances in technology have only complicated the debate: decen-tralization fosters more intri-cate cultures and subcultures within the artistic community, sprouting a sort of musical Sin-gularity in which facetiousness runs rampant and nonconfor-

mity has become its own brand of snobbery.

There does seem to be some truth to the claim that artistic appreciation is relative. Yet we still acknowledge that some works possess exceptional val-ue. There is something univer-sally recognizable about Mozart that sets him above other musi-cians, but is his music truly “bet-ter” than that of the Based God? Is there a way to reconcile our conflicting intuitions? I think so.

Art is powerful for its ability to conjure meaningful experienc-es and offer new perspectives. It’s not a quantifiable substance, but a potential for interpreta-tion. To call a collection of notes artistic is to assert the possibil-ity of having a meaningful ex-perience listening to them, and since meaning is subjective, all art is indeed relative to whoever perceives it. You might say it’s all Based on your point of view.

That said, particular tokens of artwork can satisfy a given set of criteria better than their competitors. We employ a mul-titude of expectations when

observing art. Some of these ex-pectations have been so promi-nent that they came to define entire periods of history — the Baroque Era emphasized elabo-rate structure and technical el-egance, while Romantic artists strove to embody the sublime. Not all art is valuable for the same reasons — we must ap-ply the proper standards when judging a work for its value.

My attitudes, emotions and preferences aren’t always the

same, either. Pregaming in my apartment calls for a dif-ferent ambiance than does my morning meditation, and choosing “Timber” over the Well-Tempered Clavier might not reflect ignorance so much as situational awareness. For those brief moments, the for-mer actually possesses great-er value.

Of course, some works have an absolute advantage. John Ruskin defined fine art as “that in which the hand, the head and the heart of man go together.” The most lasting works of art fulfill multiple departments at once — they are universally accessible and easy to appreciate across a wide range of dispositions. Perhaps this is what distin-guishes the great composers from those who have not yet stood the test of time, that “je ne sais quoi” that even Miley Cyrus fans acknowledge sets Bach apart from “Bangerz."

Within the web of absolute rel-ativism, we can make subjective assessments that come usefully

close to objectivity. Our prefer-ences are often well established, and some works satisfy those paradigms better than others.

The knottier question is which perspectives are most worthy of endorsing. This issue reach-es beyond the scope of pure aesthetics, reflecting deeper disagreements about ethics, politics and society. In truth, it’s unclear whether a single an-swer even exists; our goal might instead be, as Richard Rorty says, “keeping the conversa-tion going.”

And that’s what we’ll con-tinue to do, Based God willing. Perhaps that was His plan for us all along.

“W hen Ameri-cans come, they always w o n d e r

why the Chinese are always in a hurry,” the man sitting across from me said. “They question why whenever a train or bus prepares to stop, every-one always pushes and shoves to be first in line.”

I nodded, being the per-ceived “Westerner” despite my black hair and eyes. “There’s no use in getting up too fast. It won’t make the train stop any sooner,” I said.

The man acknowledged my “typical” answer. “That’s what they all say,” he responded, “but what outsiders don’t inter-nalize is that on most forms of public transportation in China, everyone competes for limited seats. If you are not one of the first people in line, you will likely have to stand or wait for the next bus. That’s why people

are always conditioned to be in a hurry.”

I visited all the top desti-nations listed on About.com during my trip to China last summer, but the most enlight-ening parts of my trip did not occur while climbing the Great Wall in Beijing or cruising through the bunds in Shang-hai. They took place during those long seven-hour train rides sitting next to strangers with whom the only commonal-ity I shared was where we were sitting.

This trivial example can be applied to a larger global scale. While some Chinese practices may be different from U.S. standards, it does not mean that its people cannot be just as happy. I do not advocate for one standard of living over another, and it’s important to realize two separate ideologies can-not be easily compared. Each culture comes with its distinct

traditions and values, and like the man on the train said, “You cannot compare Eastern and Western standards of happi-ness.”

On a smaller and more famil-iar scale, the same principle can be applied to our very own

Penn bubble. In such a dense and diverse community filled with so many cultures with even more clubs to join, people to meet and events to attend, it can be easy to impose our own views on others’ decisions. In Penn’s pre-professional atmo-sphere, it is easy to question why someone would choose a major or become involved in a club they are not passionate about in pursuit of a perceived status or profitable career. The reverse is equally questionable to some: devoting all of one’s time to a single activity, forgo-ing other passions and friend-ships.

With organizations ranging from performing arts groups to cultural clubs to religious and spiritual groups, each group attempts to promote its own identity to distinguish it from neighboring groups. When we find a group whose identity does not align with our

own, it can be easy to dismiss the views of the people in the organization, creating frac-tions within the Penn commu-nity. I sometimes hear fellow classmates talk about wanting to meet people from around the world before they leave college, yet they end up spending most of their time with people simi-lar to themselves ideologically. This becomes even more prob-lematic when our social iden-tity becomes closely linked to the groups we choose to associ-ate ourselves with, and it often becomes hard to free ourselves from the mold constructed out of our extracurricular activi-ties.

We are often told to find our niche at Penn, but that does not mean we cannot venture outside these boundaries to meet those who are different from us. In fact, these people can become our own “strang-ers on the train” who can teach

us more about the world and ourselves.

In the end, whether you are an anthropology major or a mechanical engineer, and whether you choose to spend Saturday nights out with friends or inside your cozy apartment watching reruns of “Game of Thrones,” we are all simply trying to do things we enjoy. During those split-second moments when I ques-tion others’ choices, I quickly remember that everyone else — in their own way — is sim-ply trying to seek their own happiness, just like me.

PAGE 4 THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 THE SUMMER PENNSYLVANIAN

VOL. XXXI, NO. 3

� e Sunmer Edition of the Independent Student Newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania

31st Year of Publication

LUKE CHEN, Editor -in-Chief

MARLEY COYNE, Summer Street Editor

KRISTEN GRABARZ, News Editor

FOLA ONIFADE, Deputy News Editor

ALI HARWOOD, Photo Editor

SOPHIA LEE, Design Editor

HOLDEN MCGINNIS, Sports Editor

KATARINA UNDERWOOD, Opinion Editor

IN IT FOR THE PERKS

SPIRIT OF ADVENTURE | How an unexpected lesson on perspective can apply to us at Penn

Standards of happiness

Opinion

FAITHLESS QUAKER | In a world where everything is relative, what do we do about art?

Eye of the B-holder

JONATHAN IWRY

JONATHAN IWRY is a College 2014 graduate from Bethesda, Md., who studied philosophy. His email address is [email protected].

YUQIAN LI is a College junior from Lexington, Mass., studying economics and political science. Her email address is [email protected].

YUQIAN LI

‘‘I sometimes hear fellow classmates talk about want-

ing to meet people from around the

world … yet they end up spending most of their time with people similar to themselves ideo-

logically.”

The DP wants to ensure that all content is accurate and 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? Write us!

The DP encourages guest submissions from the Penn community. Submissions can be up to 700 words long. The DP reserves the right to edit for accuracy, clarity, grammar and DP style. The DP does not guarantee publication of any submission. Send submissions to Summer Pennsylvanian Opinion Editor Katarina Underwood at [email protected].

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OPINION

SIYUAN CAO is a College 2014 graduate from Bronx, N.Y. Her email address is [email protected].

‘‘Art is powerful for its ability to conjure meaningful experi-

ences and offer new perspectives. It’s not a quantifiable

substance, but a po-tential for interpreta-

tion.”

Page 5: June 12, 2014

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Follow theporchat30th on Facebook and Twitter #theporchat30thFull Porch event schedule

THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 PAGE 5NEWSTHE SUMMER PENNSYLVANIAN

A recent Penn study found a correlation between marijuana use and sleep problems — but the study’s senior author said that other factors could play a role.

The study — which assessed responses to a 2007 to 2008 National Health and Nutri-tion Examination Survey by self-selecting people ages 20 to 59 — showed that any history of marijuana use is linked to impaired sleep quality. While the study only demonstrates correlation, not causation, re-sults suggest that those who began using marijuana in ado-lescence have a much higher risk of sleep impediments as adults than those who did not.

“The most surprising finding was that there was a strong relationship with age of first use, no matter how often people were currently using marijua-na. People who started using early were more likely to have sleep problems as an adult,” said lead author Jilesh Chheda, who came up with the project idea, in a statement released by Penn Medicine.

Psychiatry instructor Mi-chael Grandner, the senior study author, agreed that the risks of marijuana “seem to be the greatest for the young-est people.” However, he noted several potentially confound-ing variables that could have contributed to the correlation.

The abstract of the study states that those adults “who began after 18 years” most fre-quently experienced ‘severe nonrestorative sleep’ — a con-stant feeling of unrest during the day, no matter how much sleep one has the night before. This result is particularly ap-plicable to college students, as many people become exposed to marijuana after they leave for college.

“If you think about it, [non-restorative sleep] could be an effect [of cannabis use],” Grandner said. “If it’s mellow-ing people out during the day,

they’ll probably feel sluggish no matter how much sleep they’re getting. That’s a possible expla-nation.”

The study’s abstract con-cluded that “frequent cannabis use is associated with impaired sleep quality. Initiation of can-nabis use in adolescence may impart a higher risk for sub-sequent insomnia symptoms.”

However, as Grandner noted, people who begin using mari-juana in adulthood are “funda-mentally different” from people who begin using marijuana be-fore the age of 15.

“Are those people on the same psychosocial stress tra-jectories as those [who begin using marijuana before the age of 15]? Probably not,” Grandner said.

Grandner noted another confounding variable between sleep and marijuana use may lie in people trying to solve pre-existing sleep conditions by self-medicating with mari-juana, which may exacerbate the symptoms rather than solve the problem.

While writers ran amuck with the study’s results — Time magazine published an article titled “Marijuana use can bring

sleepless nights, study finds” and the International Business Times wrote that “Marijuana could turn you into a nighttime ‘Walking-Dead’ zombie” — this study does not reveal causa-tion, Grandner said, noting that other variables are “probably more likely” to impact sleep than marijuana use.

The study was published in Sleep magazine and is titled “Patterns of Marijuana (Can-nabis) Use and Sleep Symp-toms in American Adults.”

“Just like everything else in the world, there’s always a good and a bad, and it’s always better to know what the good and the bad is,” Grandner said of marijuana. “The truth is always more important than your agenda. [Right now] the evidence is not overwhelming in one direction or another.”

Study: Marijuana might impede sleep (or not)

Researchers found a correlation between pot

and sleep problemsBY ARIEL SMITH

Staff Writer

Graphicby Luke Chen

However, according toDr. Grandner, the correlation could be explainedby other variables

People whosmoked marijuana before age 15 are

twice as likelyto have sleep troubles.

Sleep-related problems were considered severe if they occurred at least 15 days per month.

Crime Log: May 30 - June 3

Assault:May 30, 2014: A 20-year-old

affiliated male was arrested in connection with a fight to which police responded at 2:00 a.m. on the 100 block of S. 39th Street. The suspect fled the scene be-fore returning and charging at an officer, punching him in the face and causing further injuries.

Other Assault:May 30, 2014: A 43-year-old

affiliated male reported to po-lice at 9:30 a.m. that a known male made veiled threats.

DUI:May 31, 2014: An unaffiliated

25-year-old male was arrested at 3:15 p.m. on the 100 block of S. 38th Street when he was found to be asleep at the wheel of his car in a moving lane of traffic. The suspect was ob-

served to have bloodshot eyes and slurred speech.

Disorderly Conduct:May 31, 2014: An unaffiliated

22-year-old male was arrested at 1:45 a.m. on the 3800 block of Chestnut Street in connection with a cab dispute. Police noted that the suspect became bel-ligerent and yelled when they arrived on the scene.

Fraud:June 1, 2014: An affiliated

20-year-old male reported un-authorized charges on his bank card at 5:00 p.m.

June 2, 2014: An affiliated 45-year-old male at the Perel-man Center for Advanced Medicine, 3400 Civic Center Blvd. reported an attempt was made to fill unauthorized pre-scriptions.

June 4, 2014: An unaffiliated male reported to police at 6:30 p.m. that a suspect attempted to pay for his order with fake currency at Jimmy Johns, 3925 Walnut St.

Burglary:June 1, 2014: An unaffiliated

female reported at 10:00 a.m. that a stained glass light fix-ture and a window were taken from a property on the 4000 block of Spruce Street.

Other Offense:June 3, 2014: An unaffiliated

33-year-old male was cited for trespass at 3:45 p.m. at Houston Hall after being advised not to enter earlier the same day.

Harassment:June 5, 2014: A suspect alleg-

edly made harassing comments about an employee of Presbyte-rian Hospital at 8:00 a.m.

Theft:Theft from vehicle: 1Theft from building: 10Bike theft: 4Retail theft: 4Other Theft: 1

Arrests from theft:May 30, 2014: An unaffiliated

21-year-old male was arrested in connection with a bike theft.

June 3, 2014: An unaffiliated 29-year-old female was arrest-ed in connection with a retail theft at the Fresh Grocer.

This week’s crimes include two assaults

and one burglary.BY JENNIFER WRIGHT

Staff Writer

also be eligible. The monetary award will be divided into up to $50,000 in living expenses and up to $100,000 for project implementation expenses.

“These prizes are unique in the field of higher education in their scope among the other kinds of prizes our peers offer,” Center for Undergraduate Re-search and Fellowships Direc-tor Harriet Joseph wrote in an email. “They are a tremendous opportunity to give graduating Penn students the opportunity to actually make an impact on

local, national and global en-gagement through the projects they design.”

According to the CURF web-site, the President’s Engage-ment Prizes will supplement Penn’s “commitment under the Penn Compact 2020 to im-pactful global, national and local student engagement.”

“It’s an exciting new venture for Penn,” Gutmann said. “It always gives me great pride to see how committed Penn people are to making a positive difference in the world.”

Further details about the prizes and application instruc-tions will be released at the beginning of the fall semester in late August, although ap-plicants will have to submit a project proposal. The applica-tion process will take place throughout September and October.

“An exciting new venture

for Penn”ENGAGEMENT from page 1

Colbert his second Peabody award in April 2012. Later that year, he announced that he was dissolving Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomor-row — but, as Hardy’s study demonstrates, viewers have carried its message with them.

“I am not saying that main-stream news should set up their own SuperPACs, but the use of narrative to show the process of creating one was a very successful teaching tool

Colbert employed,” Hardy said.The researchers suggested

that Colbert’s integration of comedy and news allowed him to more effectively communi-cate with viewers.

“Annenberg Public Policy Center has done studies in the past showing that political satire shows... are extremely effective in teaching people po-litical literacy because they are also funny,” research assistant for the study and LPS student Madison Russ said. “If you’re laughing about something and they make a joke but it’s also true, you’re more engaged, which leads to increased re-tention.”

The research team hoped to contribute to the existing dialogue on the most efficient methods of teaching.

“I hope that a study like this will spark a bigger conversa-tion about news media,” Russ said. “There cannot just be one news model. Every type of news is useful in its own way.”

Contributing to the discus-sion himself, Colbert com-mented on the study’s findings in a recent segment of “The Colbert Report” by comically instructing other news net-works to follow his example and apologizing for being too informative.

Hardy said that seeing Col-bert discuss his research was “definitely a highlight of [his] career so far.”

“Let that be a lesson to you, Fox News: show, don’t tell,” Colbert said. “I let you down, nation. Clearly, I must work harder at informing you less.”

“Political satire... is effective”

COLBERT from page 1

Your New Career Awaits

University of Pennsylvania’s Organizational Dynamics program offers a unique coaching and consulting concentration for working professionals interested in a comprehensive and focused approach to coaching and consulting as a profession.

Join Penn faculty, executive coaches and alumni for an information session and group workshop focusing on the practical application of coaching strategies designed to help you navigate, manage and lead in your organization. Light refreshments to be provided.

Thursday, June 19th, 6 – 8 p.m.Graduate Student Center, 3615 Locust Walk

To learn more and register, visit www.upenn.edu/executivecoaching

Page 6: June 12, 2014

PAGE 6 THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 THE SUMMER PENNSYLVANIAN34TH STREET

summer

Ever since Imogen Heap’s fi rst album was released way back in 1998, the woman has not lost touch with the type of artist that she is. Listening to Heap’s new album “Sparks”— with that signature sooth-ing voice — once again reminds us why we fell in love with her in the fi rst place. The eccentric and wildly creative Brit proves to listeners that her familiar electronica-pop-techno style is still fresh. Heap’s lyrics are as poetic as her older works, which she proves with songs like “You Know Where to Find Me” and “Propeller Seeds.” Do not let some of the weird-ness — that’s her thing anyway — discourage you because once you hit play on any song, you will be transported to a surreal, magical island the locals call Imogen. This album includes the usual trademarks for Heap with her smooth-as-caramel-sweet-as-honey voice mixed with her stellar piano skills and instances of wild syncopation. Those that are savvy enough to listen to “Sparks” in its entirety will surely be pleased. Heap is back at it, but even better.

ALBUM REVIEW“Sparks”

— Imogen Heap

1) ACQUIRE BOOZE (& CHASERS & MIXERS)Presumably, you know the drill. Fine Wine & Spirits on 43rd & Chestnut, UCB on 43rd and Walnut, Shopping Bag across the street if you have enough arms for the chasers. Shouldn’t take you long unless you need to outsource a favor to someone more age-appropriate. Your summer party is the time to experi-ment with that weird drink (see “Drink of the Week” online for drinkspo) you’ve always wanted to try and buying alcohol you might actually enjoy drinking.

2) TEXT ALL YOUR SUMMER GROUPMES Because there’s about 20% of the normal population chilling here during the summer. So go ahead and spam your sorority listserv, your frat listserv, your IAA listserv, and whoever’s around is around. Hell, invite your high school friends, invite your favorite Green Line barista, invite your coworkers. The best part of summer parties is that you have no idea who is going to show up and there won’t be enough of you to avoid making new friends!

3) GAMESYou should refresh your drinking game knowledge before everyone gets there, so that the whole “new friends” thing isn’t forced to rely solely on everyone’s small talk abilities. Small talk sounds like work, and summertime is no time for work (besides your totally stressful internship). Slap Cup, Flip Cup, King’s Cup, and Asshole are all good alternatives for when you realize that Pong only involves four party guests.

4) MAKE SURE YOUR PLAYLIST IS AD FREESummer parties are defi nitely more laid back, but ads on your Spotify can totally kill the mood. Try to use your roommate’s Spotify Premium, or make a Sound cloud (or Hype Machine! new feature of the website) playlist.

5) PREPARE FOR MILD REJECTIONSome people might leave your party to check out the Smoke’s/Blarn/Cav’s (lol Drexel) scene. That’s okay because they will either a) come back because those places are empty/lame dur-ing the summer (refer to Street last week) or b)have a less fun time than you anyway because your party is going to be GREAT.

A NIGHTMARE ON SPRUCE STREET

BY REBECCA LAPOINTE

THROWING A SUMMER PARTY FOR MORE THAN THREE PEOPLE

Actually not that different from a regular party, just less DFMO–ing. Probably.

1. Distrito $5 margaritas, $2 Tecate. ‘Nuff said. 2. Kick Off Party at Fado Quizzo, nerds. 3. Philadelphia Union Watch Parties Aspirational. 4. Brauhaus Shmitz Because Germans are better at beer.5. Worldtown Festival Beer, burgers and balls.

BY CASSANDRA KYRIAZIS

Because asbestos builds character.

BY ROCHELLE SHEN

THIS WEEK IN PHILLY: TOP 5World Cup Edition

34ST.COM FOR BEARZ. BEATZ. BATTLESTAR GALLACTICA. NEW CONTENT DAILY.

ATTN SPORTS FANS: MORE DETAILS & WATCH PARTIES LISTINGS AT 34ST.COM

@34STREET: 6 months of skating through frozen hell & I thought we’d be due for a bit of sunshine. Guess not. I’m breaking out galoshes and a summer reading list circa 7th grade.—MC

Cue the music: it’s time to start the summer subletter shuffl e. Be it the high-rise resident displaced by incoming summer students or the brother hoping to escape the abyss of frat house stank, no one is immune. To commemo-rate this annual Penn tradition, here’s what you had to say.

“My roommate was addicted to Adderall and was super fi lthy and had a disgusting smelly charcoal dog when I moved in. A couple weeks later, I couldn’t stand how terrible he smelled so I washed him... and turns out that it’s a white dog… She threatened to sue me when I moved out. Also: never thanked me for washing her dog.” — Barunie K. ‘14

“I didn’t get a sublet so I couch-surfed for over a month…I mean I ended up living in an empty room in the Radian for a while which was nice. I paid rent by baking.” — Melissa D. ‘16

“There was blood in the fridge….like, dried blood.” — Jackie C. ‘15

“The housekeeper stayed 3 hours overtime on her 4 hour shift be-cause she couldn’t stand to leave the house in all its fi lth. She only did so out of the goodness of her heart because she didn’t want us living in such an unhealthy environment.” — Elliot O.’17

“[The people I was subletting from] told me when I had arrived on their doorstep with all my stuff that their house was being condemned in a month, but I could stay if I wanted. So I did.” — Anonymous, ‘17

“When I was cleaning, I found a black stick stuck between the closet doors, blocking it from closing. Little did I know that this black stick was the hilt of a giant and VERY sharp black serrated sword. So I stood there like King Arthur amazed at what had just happened and grateful that I had not stabbed myself or someone else when pulling it out.” — Carlos C. ‘14

GRADE: A DOWNLOAD: “Me The Ma-chine” or “Lifeline”SOUNDS BEST WHEN: You’re in the mood to take a seri-ous chill pill (or a Xanax)

Page 7: June 12, 2014

Sports7

FOR RENT1BR APARTMENT. 3400 Sansom St., across Penn Law. Call John at Avril 50, 215‑222‑6108 or [email protected]

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ACROSS 1 “Friday the 13th”

setting 5 Cry

accompanying a slap

15 Green leader?16 Office

addresses?17 Tragically

heartbroken figure of myth

18 Some cocktail garnishes

19 Noted nominee of 2005

21 Stumped22 Bit of audio

equipment?23 Controversial

thing to play25 Stats. for new

arrivals27 Base’s opposite29 “That’s true —

however …”33 Locale for the

Zoot Suit Riots of ’43

36 Fashion clothes38 Team unifier

39 They created the Get Rid of Slimy Girls club

42 Brand with a “Wonderfilled” ad campaign

43 Nail44 Beginning of

some tributes45 Just beginning47 Longtime rival of

42-Across49 Midwest

terminal?51 Reality show

documenting a two-week trade

55 “A veil, rather than a mirror,” per Oscar Wilde

58 Line outside a gala

60 Dreaded message on a returned 32-Down

61 Reverse transcriptase is found in it

64 “To End ___” (1998 Richard Holbrooke best seller)

65 Q&A query

66 Barker in a basket

67 One endlessly smoothing things over?

68 Cross state

DOWN 1 Fencing material 2 Europe’s City

of Saints and Stones

3 Battlefield cry 4 Abstention

alternative 5 “Let ___ Run

Wild” (B-side to “California Girls”)

6 Physical feature of Herman on “The Simpsons”

7 Home to Main Street, U.S.A.

8 The Hardy Boys and others

9 He called his critics “pusillanimous pussyfooters”

10 With flexibility in tempo

11 Reagan-___12 Harkness Tower

locale13 Pueblo cooker14 Red giant that

disintegrated?20 Round windows24 Brand named

after some Iowa villages

26 High (and high-priced) options for spectators

28 Rocker ___ Leo30 Sci-fi villain ___

Fett31 They may be

made with koa wood, briefly

32 Course obstacle?

33 Elasticity studier’s subj.

34 It’s canalized at Interlaken

35 Boatload

37 Boatload transfer point

40 Mann’s “Man!”

41 Eagle of Delight’s tribe

46 Group with the 1963 hit “South Street,” with “the”

48 Obsolescence50 Moisturizer brand52 Cry

accompanying a high-five

53 Treasured strings54 Politico

caricatured by Carvey

55 Start of Egypt’s official name

56 ___ Belloq, villain in “Raiders of the Lost Ark”

57 Modern farewell letters

59 Air62 Wood problem63 Title for knights

on “Game of Thrones”

PUZZLE BY EVAN BIRNHOLZ

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Edited by Will Shortz No. 0426CrosswordNEWYORKTIMESCROSSWORDPUZZLE

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

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THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 PAGE 7NEWSTHE SUMMER PENNSYLVANIAN

play and we were excited about that,” Zeglinski, Singletary’s for-mer teammate, said. “He said he would help coach and stay on the roster, he has a great basketball mind and it’s great to have him on the team.”

The Patriots coasted to an easy win in their first round matchup against Pup ‘N Suds, a team of unheralded players from nearby Delaware County. While the Patriots were made up of players with experience playing basketball in Europe or on D-I teams, Pup ‘N Suds were the underdog in the truest sense, from their name (a reference to the Disney movie “Brink!”) to their lack of relative size and athleticism.

“They [gave us some trouble], we thought we were going to blow them out looking across the

court,” Patriots power forward Ryan Pettinella said. “It’s a typi-cal thing coming in first round, but you can’t overlook anyone.”

After dispatching Pup ‘N Suds 71-51, Dougherty’s team went on to face the tougher Citi Team, which proved to be too much for the Patriots to handle and ended their tournament run with a 74-70 loss. The Citi Team was led by Anthony Gurley (UMass/Wake Forest) and Darin Mency (Merrimack) who contributed 21 and 18 points respectively.

In the remaining tournament games, Team Barstool and

Notre Dame Fighting Alumni ultimately separated themselves from the pack to set up a final matchup on June 28 at a location to be decided by fan vote. Team Barstool boasts a plethora of ex-NBA talent including Dahntay Jones and Josh Boone, while the Fighting Alumni have a bal-anced roster of some of the best basketball talent to graduate in the past decade.

Though talent came from far and wide to play, a large number of players came from within the local Philadelphia area.

In many ways, Dougherty was

an example of the type of talent that made up most of the tourna-ment.

Dougherty is a local player, having grown up in nearby New Britain, Pa., and a former Ivy League and Big 5 player with aspirations to play in Europe.

The Basketball Tournament featured plenty of players of all of those dispositions, including teams from Cornell and Princ-eton, teams of local players (like Pup ‘N Suds), and teams of Big 5 players. In fact, Dougherty wasn’t even the only recent Ivy League graduate to play, as for-

mer Princeton guard T.J. Bray teamed up with other recent Princeton alumni on another team.

But for a lot of players, Dough-erty included, a large part of the experience was playing close to home in the city of Brotherly Love.

“Playing in Philly has been so important to me, high school, college and now still playing in tournaments like this,” Dough-erty said. “It’s really special and it’s great to stay at home and have people come out to the games that you know.”

TOURNAMENT from page 8

Ivy League and Big Five make impact

together.And in the end, I was left with

a resounding feeling that this was the epitome of what basket-ball can be.

I’ve been to plenty of basket-ball games in my life at a variety of skill levels, but The Basket-ball Tournament was different.

Most games involve two well-disciplined teams with full coaching staffs and well-thought-out plays and rotations. These games often have very little on the line, just another win or loss on the record. The vast majority of the time play-ers are on those teams because they were selected, not by their own choice.

The Basketball Tournament was none of that.

Instead this weekend there

was something unique. Teams came out, each brought togeth-er by some meaningful connec-tion, and played with energy and passion and, most of all, without inhibition.

For once, there was noth-ing stopping Selby from taking a long three-pointer because he saw an opening, or Smush Parker, a former Lakers point guard, from throwing an alley-oop off of an inbounds play.

Teams could play without coaches, without full rosters and without real playbooks.

Were there plenty of shots that most coaches would have screamed their heads off about their players taking? Certainly. But for every terribly chosen shot, there was one that blew the small crowds in the arena away.

You might expect more dis-cipline in a tournament where the teams were all brought to-gether by the prize of $500,000, yet it became clear that the prize wasn’t on the minds of the majority of teams.

Players were there for the experience, for the love of bas-

ketball and for the chance to play with teammates old and new. It was clear in their faces and in their press conferences.

After facing the Philly Pa-triots, a team with a number of UVA players and Penn’s Fran Dougherty. Pat Fisher, a 5-foot-9 Pitt graduate from the Philadelphia area, had nothing but praise for his opponents following the loss. For Fisher, it was all about the experience of getting together a good group of friends and having the op-portunity to play against top level talent.

So while the first part of The Basketball Tournament is over and only the final remains to be played, the experience will last for a while, because I doubt I’ll ever see basketball quite like that again.

I’m not sure if I’ll ever stand agape from displays of pure athleticism and basketball skill as often as I did this weekend, and it’s not just because of the number of games played.

Here’s to hoping that The Basketball Tournament wasn’t just a one time deal.

MCGINNIS from page 8

Tournament unlike any

other

put on quite the show for its na-tion.

This summer’s World Cup figures to be a different story entirely for the United States in some respects and eerily simi-lar to that of four years ago in others.

First of all, the U.S. has a new man at the helm, having parted ways with the calm and collected presence of former head coach Bob Bradley in favor of Jurgen Klinsmann, a more fiery and intense personality.

The U.S. team also has a dramatically different look on the pitch, having cut Donovan — the team’s all-time leading goal-scorer and most recogniz-able figurehead — from the final World Cup squad in a highly con-

troversial decision.The team’s new look is not all

negative, though. Forward Clint Dempsey has filled in nicely in the captain’s role for Donovan, supported directly by more ex-perienced team leaders in fel-low forward Jozy Altidore and midfielder Michael Bradley (son of Bob).

The U.S. team’s more experi-enced core has been augmented by a more dynamic and youthful supporting cast than ever before in the team’s history.

This energized squad, in com-bination with Klinsmann’s more proactive approach to the game, has led to some of the most excit-ing and successful play in recent memory leading up to the year’s World Cup.

But despite this apparent reju-venation and sea change for the national squad, the U.S. team finds itself in a similar position to last year: namely, facing an uphill battle.

This year, the U.S. team got very unlucky in its World Cup draw, finding itself in the prover-bial “Group of Death.”

To even move past group play, the U.S. will need to contend with perennial powerhouse Germany, Christiano Ronaldo’s Portugal and Ghana, which has been a thorn in the side of the U.S. for each of the past two World Cups.

And even if the U.S. were to earn more points than two of those teams and advance past group play — which is quite possible — it would still need to contend with Lionel Messi’s Argentina, defending champion Spain and home favorite Brazil to contend for the championship.

Even Klinsmann has conced-ed that expecting for the U.S. to win the World Cup this year is simply “not realistic.”

But all is not lost.The U.S. are still possibly

fielding its most exciting squad of all time, and they are primed to put on a show in one of the world’s most spectacular sport-ing enough. For now, that’s more than enough to expect.

It’s almost time to hit the pitch, and it’s going to be fun.

That will never change.

HENDERSON from page 8

2014 is a different story

for U.S.

vitalization through arts and culture.”

Though a major soccer team like Bethlehem Steel no longer exists in the town, there is cer-tainly still a strong culture of soccer and a link to the history of the club.

“It’s always interesting having conversations with people about the event and if they knew there was the team in the past. Some people knew about the history and others don’t,” Mosel said. “There’s still a lot of club soccer being played and an NPSL team here called F.C. Sonic.”

In recent years, the strong tradition of Philadelphia-based soccer has been continued by the Philadelphia Union. The Union began playing in 2010 as an expansion team in Major League Soccer, and are cur-rently one of very few remaining professional soccer teams in the area, following the dissolution of the Kixx and the Independence in the past five years.

“A couple years ago, [the Philadelphia Union] came out with their third kit, which is a Bethlehem Steel F.C. jersey, as a [tribute] to the team,” Mosel said. “That happening inspired a lot of the programming that we’re doing with our event.”

During the process of plan-ning the event, Mosel and his team of community volunteers reached out to Daniel Paul Mor-rison, whose great uncle played for Bethlehem Steel F.C. After learning more about the team

through Morrison, the commit-tee reached out to Mitchell and Ness, a Philadelphia-based ap-parel company, which agreed to develop a line of 12 clothing items using the images provided by Morrison.

It is precisely that unique combination of community, his-torical soccer significance and culture that made the site an ide-al venue for the event. Though the event is centered around the World Cup games, there is still plenty of other entertainment to be found there.

“In addition to the 26 games that will be shown on a giant LED screen, every night after the games there are concerts by nationally touring artists playing on our Levitt stage,” Mosel said.

“ESPN is going to be broad-casting live here on Monday do-ing live look-ins during the USA Ghana game. It’s going to be a place of national attention.”

BETHLEHEM from page 8

Soccer prominent in local culture

Holden McGinnis/Sports Editor

Former Cornell guard Louis Dale was among a large number of players who saw The Basketball Tournament as an opportunity to reunite with college teammates, as he joined with 10 of his teammates from the 2010 Sweet Sixteen team.

SPORTS

Page 8: June 12, 2014

8Sports

Long ago in the town of Beth-lehem, there was born... a soccer team.

In the early 1900s, Bethlehem, Pa. was home to Bethlehem Steel Football Club, widely considered to be America’s first pro soccer dynasty. Now, as the soccer world prepares itself for the World Cup, the site of the original Bethlehem Steel plant – which sponsored the club – prepares itself for a unique World Cup viewing experience.

As part of the FIFA World Cup SoccerFest and Viewing Party, ESPN has selected Bethlehem SteelStacks as one of very few ven-ues around the country where it will look-in live at crowd reactions during the USA vs. Ghana game on June 16.

“It’s been a wonderful experience and opportunity for us. We’ve been working on this event for over two

years,” Curt Mosel, vice president of marketing and public relations for ArtsQuest, the nonprofit arts organization serving as the host for the SoccerFest and Viewing Party at SteelStacks, said.

“And we formally took steps about 15 months ago with an orga-nizing committee made up of com-munity volunteers to participate in creating a programming and working through all the ideas that culminate with what this event has become.”

However, the viewing party is just one aspect of SoccerFest as the overall event will span June 12-16 and 19-22 at SteelStacks. The venue is a recently renovated arts and cultural center that hosts other festivals and concerts throughout the year.

“We’re on an industrial brown field, the former headquarters for Bethlehem Steel,” Mosel said. “It’s an 1100-acre area that could have just as easily been torn down and turned into a Walmart, but instead it’s an arts and cultural campus that’s designed around urban re-

A lot has happened in the world of international soccer since the last World Cup was held four years ago in South

Africa.All-time greats like Ron-

aldinho have faded away from their once seemingly untouch-able positions of supremacy. Up-and-coming stars like the electric Neymar have taken their places. Most of the world was made aware — for the first time — of Qatar’s existence, the controversial host of the future 2022 World Cup.

But despite all of the change, one thing remains the same.

The eyes of the entire foot-balling community — and even the world — will converge on this year’s World Cup, as they do every fourth summer. And this time, they will turn to Bra-zil, a nation with a rich history of soccer.

The ride hasn’t always been smooth. In fact, with potential strikes for Brazilian public transportation workers and dif-ficulties in stadium construc-tion, it has been anything but.

However, all of that will be forgotten when the Brazilian national team opens up the tournament this afternoon against Croatia.

The past four years have sig-naled change across the board in the international soccer com-munity, and the United States national team is no exception.

Four years ago in South Af-rica, the United States national team captured the imagination of the nation with an inspired

— if not wholly successful — showing in the World Cup.

The team finished first in its initial group, propelled by an improbable tie against the English national team and an exhilarating last minute victory against Algeria courtesy of a Landon Donovan goal.

The U.S. was knocked out in the first round of single elimi-nation play, but it had already

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Sportsonline atonline at thedp.com/sportsTHURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

City of Basketball Love

If you enjoy watching basketball to any degree, then Philadelphia University became heaven on earth this weekend as The Basketball Tourna-ment took over the Gallagher Center.

Though his team would eventually fall in the second round, 2014 Penn graduate Fran Dough-erty was center stage for the event and certainly important in helping his team, the Philly Patriots, come together.

“It started with Fran McGlinn, Dan Comas and Fran Dougherty. They put it together,” Sammy Zeglinski, a member of the Patriots and a UVA graduate , said. “I got some of my former Virginia teammates in on it and they were all about it.”

Going into the tournament, the team was looked at as one of the favorites to go on a deep run, in part due to their recruitment of former UVA star Sean Singletary. Yet a late injury to Singletary left him on the bench as the team’s coach.

“It was a shame Sean didn’t get the OK to play, coming in we thought he would be able to

Dougherty and co. fall in the second round in Philly-centric

basketball tournamentBY HOLDEN MCGINNIS

Sports Editor

For the joy of the game

SEE TOURNAMENT PAGE 7

“You guys need a fifth? I’ll suit up, man.”

At most basketball games, com-ments like that would be taken as a joke, but it was a serious question.

Josh Selby, former NBA player and Kansas graduate, and the rest of the members of his team, Team FOE, were warming up on the court, notably short one player.

Selby turned to the man shout-ing at him from the stands and simply said, “Don’t worry, we’ll be fine,” before flashing a smile, turn-ing around and knocking down a three-pointer from several steps behind the line.

Though Selby wasn’t entirely right, as his team would go on to lose their opening round game, his attitude was characteristic of the pure basketball paradise that was The Basketball Tournament. Put simply, it combined all the best parts of basketball.

There were Cinderella stories upon Cinderella stories.

One team that only started one player over six foot went against a team with former NBA talent. Another was comprised of athletes from Olivet Nazarene University, an NAIA school, yet held its own for most of a game against former Ole Miss star Marshall Henderson and NBA veteran Hakim Warrick.

There was a game of four-on- five, as mentioned above, where the score was close the entire way.

There was raw athleticism on display and alley- oops and high-light- reel dunks abounded.

There were teams of alumni suited up in their school colors and teams brought together who had clearly spent little time playing

HOLDEN MCGINNIS

SEE MCGINNIS PAGE 7

ESPN coming to history-rich Bethlehem for SoccerFest

All is not lost for U.S. soccer

SEE HENDERSON PAGE 7

Small town in Lehigh Valley, Pa. hosts World

Cup viewing partyBY HOLDEN MCGINNIS

Sports Editor

Courtesy of Spark Creatives

Bethlehem SteelStacks, the former site of Bethlehem Steel’s industrial headquarters, will host a nine-day soccer festival, including the viewing of 26 different World Cup games. The festival will also include a number of concerts at Levitt Pavillion and various games and activities for people of all ages.SEE BETHLEHEM PAGE 7

Philly Patriots vs. Citi Team

Holden McGinnis/Sports Editor

By teaming up with some high school friends and former UVA players, former Penn forward Fran Dougherty put up a strong effort, but his team, the Philly Patriots, ultimately fell short in the second round.

Philly Patriots vs. Pup ‘N Suds

COLIN HENDERSON