September 19, 2016

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2016

Shooter called police ‘doomed’ in letter

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Something Old, Something New Jersey Penn Anthropology class travels to New Jersey every week

His letter ranted against probation and parole officers along with police NICOLE RUBIN Staff Reporter

Nicholas Glenn, the 25-year-old man who terrorized West Philadelphia on Friday, had a checkered past and expressed hatred of police and his probation officer, according to court records and documents revealed by Philadelphia Police over the weekend. Around 11:19 p.m. on Friday, Glenn fired 18 rounds into Philadelphia Police Sergeant Sylv i a Yo u n g’s police cruiser around 52nd and Sansom streets with a Ruger Model SR9, 9MM, semi-automatic pistol, according to police officials. He injured Young — who sustained wounds to the left NICHOLAS GLENN shoulder, arm and torso, NBC10 reported — and a Penn Police officer, Ed Miller, who was shot in the hip and leg. As of Sunday evening, NBC10 reported that Miller was sent home from Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, but Young remained hospitalized and in stable condition. Police found a note in Glenn’s possession, labeled “Doomed People,” that indicated his hatred of probation and parole officers, as well as the police, officials said. Glenn also shot four bystanders, including a 25-year-old woman who died from her injuries. He was later killed during a firefight with other Philadelphia Police responders and was pronounced dead at 11:45 p.m., the release said. Police added

M

ALLY JOHNSON Staff Reporter

ost students go to Center City when they want to leave the Penn bubble. But for students who truly want an escape, there’s another option — rural New Jersey. On Friday morning, a handful of students piled into a van outside the Penn Museum and headed to various towns in New Jersey to study historical sites, such as early Quaker and Swedish settlements. These students are enrolled in

Anthropology 219, taught by Robert Schuyler — a class divided in to two sections that travel every Friday or Saturday. Students learn about prehistoric New Jersey and then examine significant sites from the 17th to 20th centuries. They also visit important environmental sites, such as the wetlands along the Jersey shore. The class also visits historically significant sites like Cape May and the estate of Joseph Wharton, the founder of the

WEATHER FORECAST SEPT 19–SEPT 22

The issue is often cloaked with misinformation

Temperatures reflect the highs for the day

79° Rain

TUES

GENEVIEVE GLATSKY Staff Reporter

85°

Partly Cloudly & Warmer

SEE ARCHAEOLOGY PAGE 3

Administrators and students tackle leaves of absence in panel

SEE SHOOTER PAGE 2

MON

Wharton School of Business. After 11 years of excavating historic sites in the planned community of Vineland, New Jersey, the class shifted its focus to above-ground archaeology. From 2001 to 2012, students participated in the Vineland archaeological dig in the fall semester and could continue their work during the laboratory course in the spring. Current

DP FILE PHOTO

The students on the leave of absence panel discussed the benefits and consequences of taking a leave of absence.

Students and administrators came together on Friday to discuss the process, experience and often misinformation surrounding leaves of absence at Penn. Two students sat on the panel. One was Blake Mergler, who took a leave

due to anxiety after she separated from her twin sister, who attended a different college, and is now a student at the Perelman School of Medicine. The other was Engineering sophomore Gerdin Falconi, who took time off to get treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder. The rest of the panel was composed of various administrators involved in the leave of absence SEE PANEL PAGE 5

SEE FORECAST PAGE 5

I want to warn against accepting Penn Face as a fundamental element of the debate surrounding the school’s culture. - James Lee PAGE 4

Cheerleaders make statement during national anthem Two cheerleaders kneel, raise fist at football opener JACOB ADLER Senior Sports Reporter

One Penn cheerleader knelt and another raised her fist during the national anthem at Penn football’s opening game against Lehigh.

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After the Penn Band concluded the Star-Spangled Banner, College junior Alexus Bazen and Wharton junior Deena Char hugged and resumed cheering as the Quakers took the field. Some athletes across the country have been protesting police brutality and racial inequality during the national anthem by kneeling, sitting or raising a fist, beginning with San Francisco 49ers

quarterback Colin Kaepernick. Bazen confirmed Kaepernick’s protests were her inspiration for kneeling. “I believe that the climate of the world right now is very hostile,” Bazen said. “All over the news there has been brutality and violence against people of color and I truly believe in … fighting for equality and standing up for what I believe in.”

Bazen, who said today’s protest was her idea, went to her coach before the game and received permission to kneel during the anthem. Bazen said her teammates were supportive of what she chose to do regardless of her decision. Char, who raised her fist, elected to join Bazen in solidarity. SEE CHEERLEADERS PAGE 8

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