September 10, 2018

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2018 VOL. CXXXIV NO. 37

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Fraternities will face ban on hard liquor in 2019

36 hours at PennApps XVIII

Twenty-seven Penn fraternities will be affected by the NIC’s policy change in September MICHEL LIU Assignments Editor

FUTURE KORTOR | STAFF VIDEOGRAPHER & EMILY XU | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Students from across the world gathered on Penn’s campus this weekend for 36 hours of collaboration, creation, and coding. This was the 18th edition of PennApps, which launched as the nation’s first student-run college hackathon in 2009. This year’s theme was “Superheroes,” and teams of up to four people worked on a range of projects that combined elements of web development, mobile applications, and mechanical engineering.

FOUNDED 1885

Fraternities at Penn and across the country will not be permitted to serve hard liquor in their houses or at any event by September 2019, the North-American Interfraternity Conference announced last week. This comes in the wake of various alcohol-related and hazing-related student deaths that have transpired across the nation. The NIC oversees 66 fraternities with chapters on more than 800 campuses, all of which will need to conform to this policy — including the majority of fraternities at Penn. The policy prohibits alcohol products exceeding 15 percent alcohol by volume at any chapter event or chapter facility, unless the liquor is served by a licensed third-party vendor. NIC spokeswoman Heather Kirk said in an emailed release that the new rules were adopted on Aug. 27 in a “near-unanimous vote.” Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life Director Jazmyn Pulley did not comment on what specific steps the department will take to enforce this new standard, but confirmed that the school will be affected by this new policy. “The Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life has learned of the NIC’s resolution to prohibit hard alcohol from all chapter facilities and events by September 2019,” Pulley wrote in an email statement to The Daily Pennsylvanian. “We look forward to talking with the NIC, Penn’s Interfraternity Council chapters, and Greek alumni about the impact and implementation of this new national expectation.” Director of Office of Alcohol and Other Drug Program Initiatives Noelle Melartin also confirmed that Penn fraterSEE BAN PAGE 7

Faculty stand by Warren amid heritage controversy

Penn sophomore creates scheduling app for students

Warren worked as a professor at Penn Law

UTime shows user’s class data from Penn InTouch

MAX COHEN Deputy News Editor

AMANPREET SINGH Contributing Reporter

United States Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) has a rags-to-riches career path that is well-documented: Born in Oklahoma as the fourth child of middle-class parents, Warren underwent a meteoric rise that took her through the halls of Harvard Law School and to the chamber of the United States Senate. Along the way, Warren also worked as an esteemed professor at Penn Law School in the late 1980s and 1990s. This past week, that time in Warren's career resurfaced in the public eye when The Boston Globe published an investigatory piece on her past at Penn and her controversial claims of Native American heritage. For years, conservative critics of Warren, including President Donald Trump, have used the nickname "Pocahontas" for the Massachusetts senator. Her detractors argue Warren claimed Native American heritage in a bid to advance her law career and get hired at universities. According to the Globe’s

During the first two weeks of class, it’s common to see hoards of students rushing down Locust Walk with their heads down as they scramble to log into Penn InTouch on their phones. The website, which is notoriously difficult to use on mobile devices, is known to crash when more than 5 percent of the student population is logged in at the same time. Wharton and Engineering sophomore Dylan Diamond wants to change that. Diamond has developed an application called UTime that provides mobile access to students’ class schedules and makes it easier to share the schedule with friends. UTime, which is available on the App store, lets students input their course ID numbers to show data from Penn InTouch about their classes. Diamond said he realized this app was necessary his first day of freshman year. “Everyone had that screenshot [of their Penn InTouch schedule] either as their phone background, or they were looking at a crumpled

FILE PHOTO

According to the Boston Globe’s report, Elizabeth Warren listed herself as a white woman when applying for her job at Penn.

report, however, Warren she listed herself as a white woman when applying for her job at Penn, suggesting that her Native American ties were not a factor in her hiring. One figure at the heart of this issue is Penn Law professor Stephen Burbank, who was a member of the appointments committee and part of a subcommittee that investigated all minority prospects for jobs at Penn Law when Warren was

being considered for a professorial position. For Burbank, the matter is simple: Warren was not seen as a minority candidate. “We viewed her as a woman candidate, and a white woman candidate,” Burbank said. “It’s clear we did, as there would’ve been no need to undergo the search for a more qualified minority candidate if she was a SEE WARREN PAGE 9

OPINION | DeVos’ guidelines should scare you

“In a world that constantly blames the victim, why is DeVos lending more rights to be accused?” — Isabella Simonetti PAGE 5

SPORTS | A New Direction

Penn men’s soccer’s new head coach Brian Gill is using his experience as a player and assistant to develop a team-first culture. BACKPAGE FOLLOW US @DAILYPENN FOR THE LATEST UPDATES ONLINE AT THEDP.COM

NEWS Penn Democrats to canvas for midterm elections PAGE 2

SCREENSHOTS FROM DYLAN DIAMOND

UTime lets students see another user’s classes to check their friends’ schedules. Users can also make their profiles private.

pieces of paper to try and find their classes,” he said. Diamond added that he wished Penn InTouch offered a “dynamic interface” and allowed him to connect with friends and other students in his classes, which is why he included these features in UTime. UTime lets students see another user’s classes, allowing students to check their friends’ schedules. Users can also choose to make their profiles private and bar anyone from seeing their schedules. In this private setting, friends can still send requests to see the another

student’s schedule. The app was beta tested last year at the end of the second semester and was launched at the beginning of this semester. According to Diamond, the app had 200 downloads in the first two days of its launch. UTime isn’t the first app that the sophomore has launched. As a junior in Staples High School in Westport, Conn., Diamond launched iStaples — an app that similarly helped students organize and see their class schedules. After coming to Penn, SEE APP PAGE 9

NEWS A breakdown of the Penn Bookstore’s revenue PAGE 3

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