November 27, 2017

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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2017 VOL. CXXXIII NO. 89

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

FOUNDED 1885

Trump’s immigration decision sparks fear at Penn The Temporary Protective Status program allowed migrants to find haven in the U.S. GIOVANNA PAZ Staff Reporter

M. HOOPS (4-OT) PENN MONMOUTH

Penn beats Monmouth in a ridiculous quadruple-overtime thriller

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COLE JACOBSON Sports Editor-elect

Since the beginning of the Trump administration, students and faculty at Penn have kept a close watch on shifts in United States immigration policy. Now, another recent change has sparked worry on campus. Throughout November, the Trump administration has announced the ending of the Temporary Protected Status program for various countries, which has allowed thousands of immigrants to live and work in the United States for decades. TPS was never intended to lead to citizenship, but rather to allow migrants from several designated countries — such as Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Haiti — to flee natural disasters or internal conflicts. Because each of these countries entered the TPS program in different years, immigrants from different countries have been given different end dates. On Nov. 21, approximately 59,000 migrants from Haiti were told that they were being given 18 months to leave the country, prompting widespread panic within that community. On Nov. 6, close to 5,000 migrants from Nicaragua were told that they have to leave the country in 14 months, though a similar deadline has yet to be set for those from Honduras. One College junior, who has multiple relatives from El Salvador that are protected by TPS and wants to remain anonymous, said in the wake of this policy shift, he has had to struggle silently as a student but also as a provider for his family. “I have to personally reach out to them to help them with their cases,” he said. “I kind of educate them with what’s going on. Sometimes it’s hard to tell people there’s nothing they can do about their status, even if they’ve done everything right. Even if they have a job, or have kids.” The College junior talked about having to work 40 hours a week and having to translate various documents for his parents, all while juggling the demands of being a Penn student. “It’s hard to reach out to anyone,” he said. “You’re kind of trained to do everything yourself.

ou could call it ugly. You could call it poorly officiated. You could call it “the game that broke the Internet” — literally. But there’s one moniker that’s much harder to question: game of the century. In a showdown that went to four overtimes — Penn men’s basketball’s first such game in 97 years — the Red and Blue pulled off a win for the history books at Monmouth. After blowing a 15-point second-half lead and fighting off a pair of unbelievable buzzer-beaters from Hawks guard Austin Tilghman in regulation and in the third overtime, Penn finished the fourth and final extra session on a 12-2 run to take home a 101-96 victory that will go down as one of the most memorable in school history. “I’ve never been in a four overtime game, and I don’t think I’ve ever been in a three-overtime game. I’d be lying if I said for the whole time, I thought we were gonna win this game,” Penn coach Steve Donahue said. “We had to do everything to pull this one out.” For the majority of the contest, it looked like it’d be a comfortable win for the Red and Blue (5-3). Though Monmouth (2-4) gave Penn some problems early with its speed and length on defense, the Quakers heated up late in the first half with one of their finest offensive stretches of the season. Aided by nine first-half points from freshman guard Eddie Scott — whose previous career-high in a full

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SEE OVERTIME PAGE 6

SEE PROTECTIVE STATUS PAGE 5

ZACH SHELDON | SPORTS PHOTO EDITOR

Why New College House still does not have a permanent name The ‘descriptor’ name was meant to be temporary HALEY SUH Deputy News Editor

More than a year after its grand opening, New College House has not received its own unique name despite earlier indications that it would be renamed. Months before the then-newly established dorm opened its doors to Penn freshmen students in fall 2016, Executive Director of Business Services Doug Berger told The Daily Pennsylvanian that the dorm would be “renamed at some point.” “For now it will be called the New College House,” Berger said. “It will probably be renamed at some point, but for now we’re just focused on getting it open.”

A year later, the name change has yet to occur, and an upcoming residential dorm on the opposite end of campus is taking on an adapted version of its moniker. The record-breaking $163 million project has been dubbed New College House West, though Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations John Zeller has said again that this name may be temporary. Zeller said New College House has kept its “descriptor” name because no donors currently have an interest in granting their naming right. Multiple donors raised approximately $60 million for the creation of New College House during Penn President Amy Gutmann’s historic Making History Campaign, where Penn raised a record of $4.3 billion — $800 million more than

its target of $3.5 billion — to enhance various aspects of the University. The lead contributions for New College House came from Stephen and Barbara Heyman, as well as members of the Lauder family, who are the founders of The Estee Lauder Companies Inc. The two families share a history of giving gifts to the University. Stephen Heyman, a 1959 Wharton graduate and trustee emeritus, previously donated to several endowed professorships at Penn, while 1954 and 1965 Wharton graduates Leonard and Ronald Lauder founded Penn’s Lauder Institute, a joint-degree program that integrates management education with international studies. However, among the group of donors that have made significant contributions to the building, there is currently no one

OPINION | Penn in Paradise Papers

“After the recent revelations of the Paradise Papers, it is obvious that Penn hasn’t been entirely practicing what it preaches.” - Spencer Swanson PAGE 4

SPORTS | A tropical Thanksgiving

Over Thanksgiving break, the Penn men’s and women’s basketball teams played in holiday tournaments in Florida and the Bahamas BACKPAGE

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who wants to put their name on the building. “A donor has an option to put their name on [NCH] should they wish to do it, but at the present date, they have no desire to do that,” Zeller said. “For now, it will stay as NCH.” Zeller added that there are various reasons donors may not want to associate their name with the building they helped establish, despite contributing a significant amount of money. “Recognition might not be important for them, or the timing isn’t right,” he said. “They may at some point in the future be willing to have their name associated with [the building].” The naming right of a building does not always belong to the donor who makes the most significant contribution, Zeller SEE HOUSING PAGE 5

IDIL DEMIRDAG | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

New College House had its grand opening one year ago. Lead donors included the Lauder family, founders of The Estee Lauder Companies Inc.

NEWS Student groups weigh in on new GOP tax plan

NEWS Gutmann announces new wellness initiatives

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November 27, 2017 by The Daily Pennsylvanian - Issuu