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Issue date: 10/22/07 Section: Opinion

Jim Newell | Why I won't donate to the capital campaign

The administration can't expect alumni to donate when it won't say a word about Dean Stetson

Jim Newell

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During my wanderings on the Saturday of my first Homecoming as a Penn alumnus, I came across what appeared to be Epcot Center on College Green. As I found out, the campy festivus was actually the kickoff of Penn's new, $3.5 billion capital campaign. Penn, you slut!

Anyone else go to this thing? Lasers! Amy Gutmann in strapless red! Promotional campaign videos featuring students with fun ethnic names! But hey, what about that three-beer limit? If you're throwing a party celebrating the end of the world, at least get the kids drunk.

So. Stupid.

If Epcot Center is an instance of everything capitalism can do bad, this kickoff campaign was an instance of everything Penn can do worse. And although the night's producers thoroughly described the campaign's goals with such expository language as "Making History" and "A New Kind of University," I still had some questions afterwards - picky me! - and would like to present them here.

OK OK, I'll ask just one for President Gutmann: Are you seriously asking me for money now, after you've been embarrassing the school for the last seven weeks? I'm referring to the administration's complete unwillingness to disclose the reason(s) for beloved ex-Admissions Dean Lee Stetson's mysterious, immediate resignation on Aug. 30.

It's like a babysitter refusing to feed an infant its Gerber, and then at the end of the day asking that infant for $3.5 billion.

As an editor of the blog IvyGate, where I track the news, gossip and douchebags of all eight Ivies, no story this fall - not even scabies outbreaks at Harvard, or secret Yale sex tapes! - has carried nearly as much intrigue as "the Stetson Affair."

Like the DP, we at IvyGate have offered previously unexplored degrees of anonymity to any in-the-know officials willing to wax Stetson, but they've all taken blood oaths or something and won't spill the beans. (Fortunately IvyGate is a blog, and since there are no "laws" on the Internet, we published some of the Stetson rumors in September. Good times.)

Their silence, however, has been somehow more edifying than University spokesperson Lori Doyle's curt offerings. Doyle, who we have very generously euphemized as "icy" and "stoic" on IvyGate, famously responds to most Stetson inquiries with, "The reasons for his departure are private and confidential."

Imagine my surprise, then, when an article in the DP about IvyGate and similar blogs quoted her as saying, "We try our best to make sure the blogs have accurate information about Penn but frankly, there is not very much we can do to influence their stories."

A lie, and then another lie. The administration doesn't give us information, and there's a lot they can do to influence our stories. They can give us information, for example.

As fun as it is, there's no point in picking on Lori Doyle for having to spew out the administration's inane drivel whenever the DP, IvyGate, or I don't know, potential donors want to know if there's misconduct among the school's top ranks.

While various rumors offer scandalous explanations for Stetson's departure - some of them even provide decent evidence, I might add - curious, proud Penn alumni such as myself want to see them buried. I make fun of Penn a lot (though not as much as Columbia), but anyone who caught me four-beers-down at Smoke's during Senior Week has heard me say it: Penn offers the fullest undergraduate experience in American higher education. I meant that then and am trying to mean it now, but this silly, ethically questionable administration keeps getting in the way.

I'm trying to do this writer thing nowadays, so it's unlikely that I'll ever have disposable income to donate. Maybe some day, however, I'll find a clean $20 bill on the street that explodes unless I give it to an Ivy League university. Will I give it to my alma mater, or maybe to Harvard, a school that shits $3.5 billion fundraising campaigns after its morning coffee?

Mini-cheeseburgers and tight red dresses, while very pretty, won't open my wallet. An institution that brazenly disregards its constituents' concerns and then panhandles among the same crowd should learn its damn P's and Q's. Whether the Stetson Affair involved misconduct or not, I'll gladly consider ("consider") donating if and when the administration discloses the truth.

And if you're going to have a laser show, it's going to take more than three beers for us to enjoy it.




Jim Newell is a former editor of 34th Street and a contributing editor to IvyGate. He graduated from the College in 2007.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 16

Junichiro A.

posted 10/22/07 @ 5:34 AM EST

How many beers did you have while writing this gem of journalism? I find the conspiracy theories about Stetson as a socialist generalissimo with plans to nationalize America's higher education system more entertaining than this rambling piece. (Continued…)

Roberto S

posted 10/22/07 @ 9:22 AM EST

Why do people, especially undergraduates, care so much about Dean Stetson's departure and the circumstances surrounding it. I have never met him, never had any interaction with him, never seen him, never heard him speak, and I am a senior. (Continued…)

Alum

posted 10/22/07 @ 9:41 AM EST

I don't have a lot of money to give so I doubt the administration cares about me. But I stand with the author on this one. We give because we feel like a part of something or a connection to something. (Continued…)

Mel

posted 10/22/07 @ 11:13 AM EST

You're now allowed to say shits on the op-ed page of the DP? What the hell?

(2 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

W. Roberts

posted 10/22/07 @ 11:36 AM EST

I will not donate any more money until the police department replaces the leader and we see some real reduction in crime.

yours truly

posted 10/22/07 @ 1:11 PM EST

Hey Jim Newell,

Stop being such a provocative c*nt.

That was so easy, almost as easy as, say, a gazelle.

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Andrew J. Rennekamp

posted 10/22/07 @ 2:16 PM EST

This tawdry piece is as much advertisement as opinion; the word "Ivygate" appears on the page a total of seven times. The headline should read, "Screw Penn - Donate to My Tip Line!"

Goose

posted 10/22/07 @ 3:00 PM EST

You're not donating because you can't find out the reason that one official, out of the thousands at Penn, left the place? Boo hoo. Come on Jimbo.

And Mel, you could always say shit on the Ed Page. (Continued…)

A.

posted 10/22/07 @ 3:57 PM EST

The point of this article is valid, but the way in which it is written is ridiculous. I guess you can't expect a lot from someone who writes for IvyGate. (Continued…)

Penn '08

student

posted 10/22/07 @ 6:57 PM EST

This op-ed is a pretty poor excuse for humor; this never would've been published if the writer hadn't written for the DP in the past. That being said, the thesis is a good one: alums shouldn't donate money to an administration that is being tight-lipped about what is almost certainly a case of ethical or legal misconduct. (Continued…)

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