Author Archives | Gina Vitale

Purpose of first building revealed

Photo courtesy: Drexel Now

Photo courtesy: Drexel Now

The first tower to be erected as part of Drexel University’s Schuylkill Yards initiative will host a combination of lab and office space totaling 700,000 square feet. This news was shared by Joe Ritichie, vice president of development for Brandywine Realty Trust, at an April 21 panel discussion during the Urban Land Institute Spring Meeting. However, construction on this building is not slated to be completed until 2020. Ritichie also revealed that two million square feet of the project will be dedicated to residential space, with one solely residential building and several mixed-use buildings.

The first element of the project that is expected to come to fruition is an elliptical green space that will be established on the 1.3-acre plot adjacent to One Drexel Plaza.

Schuylkill Yards, which was announced as a project between Drexel and Brandywine Realty Trust on March 2, will take an estimated 20 years to complete and is ultimately intended to connect Drexel’s University City campus with Amtrak’s 30th Street Station and Brandywine’s Cira Centre. The project involves 14 acres of University City land in total and will cost $3.5 billion.

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Drexel team designs first video game for visually impaired

The ability to see is something that many people inadvertently take for granted. Activities such as video games, which often require the player to rely heavily on their sense of sight, are nearly impossible to participate in for those with significant visual impairments. However, a group of Drexel students from the College of Computing and Informatics aims to change that with a self-designed video game known as Project Goalball, a video game created specifically for the visually impaired.

The game of Goalball was contrived in 1946 to help rehabilitate World War II soldiers with sight related injuries. The overall gameplay is simple; three-person teams attempt to throw a ball, which contains bells so that the players can gauge its location audibly, into the opposing team’s goal. It was included in Toronto’s 1976 Paralympic Games, and has been an event in every Paralympics since.

The Drexel group, which is advised by computer science professor Jeff Salvage, consists of TJ Heiney, Cho Gyn Min, John Frankel, Buzz Lakata, Colton Terrace, Jordan Stone, Ryan Crim, Richa Bhartia, and Ryan Smith.

The idea for this project came from Overbrook School for the Blind where a student there approached one of Drexel’s professors, Professor Salvage, about turning one of their favorite activities into a digital game. That activity was Goalball,” the team said in an email interview.

While video games exist that visually impaired individuals may be capable of playing, thanks to certain included audio options that can be toggled on or off, most games are still targeted towards individuals with full capability of sight. Video games made specifically for the blind, if any do exist, are very few in number – the Project Goalball team thinks that they may even be the first to create one. As this is the case, the game is programmed with specific features to make navigation as easy as possible for the players.

“The game contains audio based menus that help visually impaired players navigate to various parts of the game, including a tutorial. At the same time we include high contrast text menus for partially visually impaired players. Players can start or join games from our game menu, which uses a Drexel based server to host the games that our users can connect to. The actual game is played between two teams of three where each team has a left wing, a right wing, and a center,” the team explained.

Project Goalball uses a combination of sounds transmitted through the players’ headphones and vibrations given off by the controller to indicate to the player when they can pick up the ball and where it is in relation to the goal. The rules of the game are fairly simple.

“The players have a ball dropped in the court on one of the sides and they must grab it, position themselves to aim a throw, and bowl the ball at their opponents. As the ball comes towards you, you must try to either dive in front of it, or pick it up before it scores. This game goes back and forth until the time runs out and the team with the most points is the winner. If there is a draw, the game will go into overtime,” the developers elaborated.

For several months, the development team has been working with students from the Overbrook School for the Blind to develop and beta test the game itself.

“During our 9 months working on this project we have made over 10 trips to the Overbrook School for the Blind. While there we gathered requirements and suggestions in the first few trips. In later trips, we tested various [versions] of the games with the students there. The feedback we received from the students, teachers, and other faculty at Overbrook has made the game what it is today,” the team stated.

Project Goalball isn’t available to be played by the public just yet, but the team says whoever takes the reigns following their graduation will hopefully bring it to that level.

“We created an early concept of what a tournament system for the game would be. The next group that works on Project Goalball will expand this functionality and host an International Goalball Tournament at Drexel. This will allow players all over the world to play one of their favorite games together,” the team explained of their plans for the game’s future.

“The team is glad to have given something back to the community. We would also like to see Project Goalball act as a call to action for other developers to begin work on games that are more accessible. We hope that the game introduces new players to the wonderful sport of Goalball and brings the wider Goalball community together in brand new ways,” the developers expressed.

The exact time when the game will be available is unknown, but in the meantime, the Project Goalball team will continue their work on perhaps the first video game for the visually impaired.

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Triangle Talks with Charles Ramsey

Charles Ramsey served as the Police Commissioner of Philadelphia from 2007 to 2015 and has been involved with law enforcement since he started as a cadet in the Chicago Police Department. He began working for Drexel Jan. 25, 2016 as a Distinguished Visiting Fellow of the Lindy Institute for Urban Innovation, a new cross-university strategic initiative that aligns Drexel’s academic work with the real-world need for urban revitalization. He is also affiliated with the Department of Criminology and Justice Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences.

Triangle Talks: Why did you choose to get involved at Drexel?

Charles Ramsey: It all had to do with the amount of respect I have for President Fry. I had the occasion to meet with him about another issue and I mentioned that I was planning to retire, and he and I began to talk about possibilities. It was very clear to me that Drexel would be a place where I would really enjoy working.

TT: What sort of work do you do for the urban strategy planning?

CR: Well, I have not clearly defined that, but I have been to a few meetings. There is a great deal of expansion going on in Drexel. The University is already doing a tremendous amount of work in community service in West Philadelphia and Mantua. Getting the young people here engaged and involved and being a part of that is something that I really truly look forward to, because Drexel is a major anchor here in West Philadelphia, but it’s surrounded by a lot of very challenged neighborhoods.

TT: What sort of change have you made for the criminology and justice department?

CR: I have been available to guest lecture for some of the professors here to directly engage students, answer questions. I think it’s very important — particularly in today’s environment where law enforcement is under a lot of scrutiny — to talk about these issues, and how we build relationships with the community that we serve in a positive way, and how we get positive information out to the public. All of this has brought up interesting questions and dialogue with students. Crime is a very real thing and we should ask how we address it without alienating the community at large.

TT: What was the most compelling question you have been asked by a student?

CR: Questions about use of force, particularly deadly force. They are a great concern to all of us— not just to the community, but to those of us who belong to the law enforcement organization. I think we have to realize that there are a lot of violent crimes taking place in the street: shootings, illegal use of handguns, assaults, homicides and things like that. Police confront the individual responsible for committing those crimes and often times, unfortunately [officers have] to resort to deadly force or, in some cases, are actually shot or killed themselves. You know, I served as police commissioner of Philly for eight years, and during that time I had eight officers killed in the line of duty. Five of those officers were shot to death.

It’s a very real issue that we have to deal with. We focus a lot on making sure officers don’t use unnecessary force and use deadly force only as an absolute last resort.

We need the public to understand some of the issues that we’re up against, but that’s not to try to make excuses for some of the incidents that have occurred across the country when they’re just unexcusable. There’s no reason for an officer to have fired a shot on an undeserving individual. But there has to be balance in the discussion as well.

TT: How can we fight against police discrimination and racial discrimination?

CR: One of the training methods that you see in police departments across the country is something called “Fair and impartial policing.” It really deals with implicit bias. Everybody has a bias of some kind— the question is how to manage them so they don’t interfere or influence us when we do our job. That’s the kind of training that is taking place in police departments. Also, holding police officers accountable when they do exhibit behaviors that might show that they’re biased against particular individuals, by gender, sexual orientation or race.

TT:  What would be the main differences between the crime problems of Philadelphia and Washington D.C.? Have you also worked on a campus in DC?

CR: In D.C. we had several colleges and universities located right in the city— Catholic University, American University, Georgetown, George Washington and Howard University. So coming here into Philadelphia I was no stranger to having major college campuses in an urban environment and all of the issues that are associated with that. But I’ve never directly worked on a campus before.

TT: What was your best experience when serving as a police commissioner?

CR: I think my best experience was when I started to see our efforts pay off in reduction in crime. For three straight years, last year and the two years prior to that, we had record lows in terms of the number of murders and assaults dating all the way back to the mid-1960s. Anytime you can have an impact and see the result, it’s very satisfying.

TT: What do you think we, as Drexel Students, can do to solve or contribute to public safety on campus?

CR: I mean be alert, be aware of your surroundings. If you see a student going through some kind of psychological stress, and it looks like perhaps it could be a dangerous situation, just alerting people so we can get them the proper care and help that they may need to get them through that particular time is important.

Don’t be afraid to notify the university police about this guy hanging around on campus that doesn’t look like they really belong there. I think that that’s probably the biggest thing that students can do.

TT: Where is your favorite place on campus?

CR: Well I haven’t found a favorite place on campus yet. I’m still learning. I still need a map in some cases. So it’s a little too early to have a favorite spot.

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Week of Writing celebrates the art of written composition with 17 events

The act of writing is unique in that it serves as both a practical tool and a form of artistic expression. It is often utilized for the former purpose, but the latter deserves equal recognition — at least, that’s how the Drexel University Department of English and Philosophy feels. That’s why they dedicate one week out of every academic year to the appreciation and analysis of writing in its many forms, more commonly known as the Week of Writing (WoW).

From May 9 to May 13, the Department of English and Philosophy hosted its ninth annual WoW. This year, WoW consisted of a series of events, including marathon readings and panel discussions, many of which took place in the Drexel Bookstore.

“One of the main goals of the Week of Writing is to bring people here so that students hear voices that they don’t normally hear,” Kathleen Volk Miller, co-editor of Painted Bride Quarterly and one of the main organizers of WoW, explained.

The first day of WoW included a couple of two hour chunks devoted to marathon reading, in which students, faculty and guests had the chance to read their work aloud. Some of these individuals are slated to be published in the 2016 edition of the 33rd Anthology, published yearly by the Drexel Publishing Group (DPG).

Also taking place on Monday was a panel entitled “And Beneath Such Quiet: The Elegy in the Modern World.” The panelists, which included Julia Kolchinsky Dasbach of the University of Pennsylvania and fiction writer Cheryl Sucher, offered an analysis of the elegy, the form of poetry dedicated to mourning the deceased.

“They said that basically, as artists, they’re creating a new perspective out of all the pain … they thought that creating art out of pain allowed us to move forward instead of moving back,” Caitlin McLaughlin, media coordinator for Drexel Publishing Group, recounted from the elegy panel.

On the more practical side, a panel regarding occupational opportunities in technical communications took place Tuesday, May 10. “Free Speech: Writers, Campuses, and Words in Conflict,” followed soon after, addressing the controversial topic of the first amendment with regards to writing. That night, at the Dornsife Center for Neighborhood Partnerships, “This is Writers Room” brought attendees together for an innovative kind of workshop — one where the attendees design their own discussion.

Wednesday’s topics included the role of writing in healing, writing comedy and the changing quality of television. “Writing About Science” preceded “Legible Pictures: Using Writing with Drawing and Drawing with Writing” to close out Thursday’s events.

“For me it’s about the panelists. Kathy and many of the professors in the English Department have contacts throughout the professional world and they agree to come and share their expert opinions with the students. It’s beautiful,” Marshall Warfield, associate director of the DPG and co-editor of 5027mac, described.

Friday included a morning discussion on sports writing, an iteration of the Painted Bride Quarterly’s interactive writing competition “Slam, Bam, Thank You Ma’am!,” and readings from contributors to the Maya Literary Magazine.

“If you take a look at the schedule of events, and look at the bios, you might after a while go ‘holy hell, there are some pretty accomplished people here,’” Warfield continued.

More information about this year’s WoW events can be found at www.5027mac.org.

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Drexel EMS recognized as one of the best in the nation for their services

The National Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Foundation (NCEMSF) has officially recognized Drexel University’s Emergency Medical Services organization as one of the best in the nation. Specifically, the NCEMSF’s EMS Ready Campus program has awarded Drexel EMS with the Bronze recognition. Only eight other schools have received this accolade since 2015 when the award was established.

The Drexel EMS group, formed in 2010, is a student run-organization that works with the Department of Public Safety. Members are frequently tasked with responding to medical emergencies on campus and often arrive ahead of ambulances and other emergency response.

“Drexel EMS is a licensed quick response service (QRS) at the basic life support (BLS) level under the Pennsylvania Department of Health. We cover from 30th Street to 36th Street, Chestnut to Spring Garden. We cover a variety of incidents: traumas, intoxicated persons, drug overdoses, fires, elevator entrapment and the list goes on,” Hendrik Bilek, chief of Drexel EMS, explained in an email interview.

Drexel EMS responders are often asked what their duties consist of during the course of a regular shift —however, according to the chief, there really is no such thing as a regular shift.

“There is no ‘typical day’ in EMS. The only constant is the fact that you never know what is going to be your next call or assignment,” Bilek, a junior nursing major, said.

“Drexel EMS is really a toolbox full of resources for the Drexel community with everything from emergency response, disaster preparedness, CPR and EMS education, community service and blood drives,” Bilek continued, further describing the situations in which emergency medical services are required.

In the past, Drexel EMS has provided coverage for Drexel-based events such as Fall Fest and Spring Jam, and they have hosted several blood drives on campus through the American Red Cross. During a regular shift, responders on duty patrol campus and may be dispatched by the Drexel Police Department to any emergency situations that arise. Even though the organization carries out such significant duties, all members are unpaid and responders are accepted strictly on a volunteer basis.

“This recognition goes to show our organization’s dedication to improving the safety of our campus and surrounding community by being truly prepared to handle large scale situations that may affect our campus at any time,” Jennifer Rios, Public Relations Officer for Drexel EMS, said in an email interview.

In regards to the recent NCEMSF commendation, Bilek attributed the success to the dynamic and hard-working network of volunteer responders who compose Drexel’s EMS unit.

“Drexel EMS is proud to have achieved this award and recognition. It is a testament to the strong membership we have that really goes above and beyond in everything they do. We love to set Drexel above the rest when it comes to EMS,” Bilek said.

With such a distinctive set of responsibilities, it is easy to distinguish Drexel EMS from most other extracurricular activities that are based at the university. Bilek, however, argues that when it comes down to the passion of those involved, the organization isn’t so different after all.

“Drexel EMS is very similar to most other collegiate EMS organizations. Sure there can be differences in policies and membership but collegiate EMS as a whole is really a close knit community of students who love helping their communities in the area of pre-hospital emergency medicine,” Bilek explained.

Rios agreed with Bilek about the community-based nature of the organization. “Because of the work that we do, this allows our members to make special connections with each other by having this dedication and passion for emergency medicine and helping others in common. I feel that our organization is very accepting of all of our members and most of our members would describe our organization as ‘one big family,’” Rios stated.

More information about Drexel EMS can be found on their website, http://www.drexelems.org/.  In the case of an emergency, Drexel Public Safety can be reached at 215-895-2222.

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Alumni Weekend 2016

Drexel University will host Alumni Weekend 2016 May 6-7.  A number of events have been organized for the alumni such as a temporary beer garden in Perelman Plaza and a cocktail gathering at the Academy of Natural Sciences.

Alumni who graduated in 1966 or before will be deemed “Golden Dragons” and will be treated to an exclusive cocktail luncheon Friday afternoon. Members of the Class of 1991, who may remember when Drexel broke the record for making the world’s largest ice cream sandwich the year of their graduation, will be celebrating their 25-year reunion as “Silver Dragons.”

An outdoor picnic, called Drexel Fest, will also be held in Perelman Plaza on Saturday from noon to 2 p.m. This event will be child-friendly and will include games such as Baggo, Ladder Golf, Washers and Kanjam.

“Drexel After Dark” will close out the weekend on Saturday evening. For this event, the three floors of the Main Building will become a nautical getaway, styled as a luxury cruise ship complete with shuffleboard, a dance floor and a host of other activities. Pop rock band She Said Sunday will see the visitors off at this final event.

Those looking to keep up with the events of alumni weekend can track it on social media by following posts tagged with #DrexelAW16.

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HIV researchers receive $75K grant

A group of researchers at the Drexel University College of Medicine (DUCOM) have received $75,000 from the Campbell Foundation to aid their pursuit of a functional cure for HIV. The Campbell Foundation is a nonprofit organization based out of Fort Lauderdale whose mission is to assist in the funding of HIV and AIDS related research.

The team that has received this award is led by Irwin Chaiken, Ph.D. He and his group of researchers are focused primarily on halting the spread of the virus through the patient’s body once they have become infected. This is a technique known as viral suppression. The group is also working on targeting latent infected cells. These are human cells that are infected with HIV, but are not yet expressing the viral proteins. Every HIV virion contains a certain protein (known as Env) on its surface which allows it to infect otherwise healthy human immune cells. Chaiken’s group hopes to synthesize a class of molecules that can attack and disable this surface protein. Such a molecule is classified as a peptide inhibitor.

The inhibitor would be introduced to the virus through a liposomal delivery method. A liposome is a very small membraneous sphere that drugs can be inserted into prior to delivery to the virus. Using a liposome as a vehicle for delivery would allow for better protection of the drug as it enters and makes its way through the body. It is this project specifically for which the Chaiken group is receiving the Campbell Foundation grant money.

These liposomes can also be designed in a way that allows special proteins to be stored on their surface which can recognize and bind to HIV viruses and HIV-infected cells. This makes the liposomal delivery system highly specific and efficient. Instead of just injecting a drug into the body to freely float around, the delivery system could be able to deliver the drugs directly to the problematic cells and viruses.

Oral drugs have already been created to treat the most widespread type of HIV (HIV-1), but these must be taken daily in order to be effective. If the Chaiken group’s research is successful, it could provide a long-acting antiretroviral treatment for those infected with HIV. Depending on the effectiveness of this proposed long-acting treatment, patients may have the option of receiving dosages at less frequent intervals.

Rachna Arora, Ph.D., is the lead researcher for the liposome project. In an interview with The Triangle she explained that the project has been ongoing since the fall of 2014. Working off of various grants until the Campbell grant was secured a year after the application process started, the project was Arora’s personal research focus. She also explained that she is very excited to begin the next stages of the liposome project, which will lead into in vivo testing for several molecules. She explained that the great thing about using a liposome delivery mechanism is that the liposome structure and chemical makeup mirrors that of human cells, making them nontoxic.

This is also true for the inhibitors themselves, according to Adel Ahmed, Ph.D., another researcher in the Chaiken group. In the studies done so far, although they have been in vitro for the most part, the inhibitor molecules have been non-toxic. Ahmed functions as the group’s peptide chemist, and is credited with synthesizing the inhibitors being employed by Arora’s liposome delivery system. He also expressed excitement for the continuation of the project, and to see results from testing in vivo systems.

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Featured this week: Feeling the Bern

Rachael Ferry: The Triangle

Rachael Ferry: The Triangle

Senator Bernie Sanders took to the microphone the evening of April 25 at the Daskalakis Athletic Center (DAC) of Drexel University to promote his bid for the United States presidency. This rally, “A Future to Believe In,” took place one day before the Pennsylvania primary April 26.

Actors Kendrick Sampson and Susan Sarandon were the first to speak, each offering their ringing endorsement of senator Sanders. Just before 9 p.m., the senator emerged, and was met with a deafening wave of cheers from the 1,200 people in the attendance. With the indoor space completely filled, hundreds more remained outside. A large screen with a live feed from inside the DAC was playing for those seated outside.  

Sanders addressed a multitude of national problems during the next hour, including the reality of climate change.

“Let me just tell you what I have heard from scientists all over our country and all over our world. The debate is over; climate change is real. Climate change is caused by human activity and climate change is already causing devastating problems in this country and all over the world,” Sanders said.

Rachael Ferry: The Triangle

Rachael Ferry: The Triangle

The Vermont senator also spoke of the importance of equal pay for both men and women.

“When we talk about pay equity, women will no longer be forced to work for 79 cents on the dollar. Women of this country want the whole damn dollar – and they’re right,” Sanders stated.

Sanders stressed his views on the corruption on Wall Street. He referred to the multiple speaking engagements for which his opponent, Hillary Clinton, was allegedly compensated $225,000 per speech by major corporations such as Goldman Sachs.

“I don’t want to give a speech for two and a quarter [$225,000], I don’t want to give a speech for two dollars – I am prepared to go to Wall Street for nothing,” Sanders said.

“And the reason I would like to go to Wall Street is to tell them face to face that their greed and their recklessness and their illegal behavior has destroyed the lives of many, many Americans,” he continued.

Midway through the senator’s speech, an attendee fell unconscious. Sanders stopped immediately and did not resume speaking until the individual was carried out by Drexel Emergency Medical Services. Following that event, he went on to discuss his plan to make tuition free for public colleges.

“Young people are asking me, ‘how does it happen that after we go out and get this good education, we find ourselves 30, 50, 70 thousand dollars in debt?’” Sanders said.

“The world has changed, education has changed, that is why when we think of public education today, we have got to be talking about making public colleges and universities tuition-free,” he continued.

In conclusion, Sanders expressed to the crowd the importance of their votes.

Rachael Ferry, The Triangle

Rachael Ferry, The Triangle

“Tomorrow morning, right here in Pennsylvania, you have an enormously important democratic primary. And what I have learned from this campaign so far, is that when voter turnout is high, we win. And when voter turnout is low, we lose. So tomorrow, let us see in Pennsylvania the highest voter turnout in the history of the state. Let the great state of Pennsylvania come forward and say ‘we are joining the political revolution,’” Sanders said.

Following the rally, some attendees remained outside, discussing the Senator’s speech and sharing their views about his proposed agenda. Francis Schlosbom, a resident of Media, Pennsylvania who was also present at both the Reading and Temple University Sanders rallies, offered his opinion.

“His focus on individuality, and the power of one, is really, really resonant with me because it’s about being yourself and he supports you no matter what – no matter your gender, your race, all that. So that encouragement of individuality and support of you purely based off of how you function as a person is amazing to me, and that really resonates with me,” Schlosbom stated.

West Chester University student Rhianon Morgan contrasted the ambience of the Sanders rally with the vibe of a Donald Trump rally.

“I go to West Chester, Trump was there…it’s just a totally different atmosphere. It feels tight in a way, over there [at West Chester University Trump rally], because it feels like there’s so much negativity, but when you come to a Bernie event, there’s a positive feel,” Morgan explained.

In the official results of the Pennsylvania primaries Clinton won the Democratic primary nomination, and that Trump won the Republican nomination in Pennsylvania. In Philadelphia specifically, Sanders took 36.97 percent of the votes, with Clinton winning 62.60 percent. Roque Rocky De La Fuente won only 0.43 percent of the votes. Trump took 57.45 percent of the votes in the Republican primary. For all of Pennsylvania, Clinton took majority with 55.59 percent of democratic votes, with Sanders receiving 43.55 percent. Trump won the state in Republican votes, coming in at 56.76 percent.

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Bernie Sanders rally to be held at Drexel

Presidential Candidate Bernie Sanders will be holding a rally at Drexel University’s Daskalakis Athletic Center (DAC) at 3301 Market St. on April 25. The event, officially titled “A Future to Believe In GOTV Rally,” will begin at 8 p.m., and doors will open at 6 p.m. Special guests at the rally will include Susan Sarandon and Kendrick Sampson.

The event will be open to the public at no cost. Admission will be first come, first served and those interested are encouraged to RSVP. The organizers ask that for security purposes, those who attend should not bring bags and should bring few personal items.

Those interested in attending can RSVP at https://go.berniesanders.com/page/event/detail/rally/4wzlp.

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Drexel mourns loss of alumnus Jamal Morris

Photo courtesy: The Philadelphia Inquirer

Photo courtesy: The Philadelphia Inquirer

Drexel University Class of 2011 graduate Jamal Morris was struck by an unidentified hit-and-run driver April 16. The 27-year-old passed away on April 18 at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center after he succumbed to his injuries. Morris’s family is asking that the driver turn themselves in.

“As a mom, I am pleading with the person who hit my son. I forgive you. So you need to know that I forgive you. Please come forward,” Morris’s mother, Channabel Latham-Morris, told The Inquirer.

A press conference with Captain John Wilczynski of the Philadelphia Police Department took place outside of Penn Presbyterian Medical Center April 19. At this conference, Wilcynzski stated that Morris was riding a red Chainboard bike when he was struck.

“It looks like seven people will get an organ from Jamal,” Morris’s mother said at the conference, referencing his status as an organ donor.

Morris received his bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Drexel’s College of Engineering. He served as a piping designer at Amec Foster Wheeler and as a Temporary Recreation Aide at the University of Pennsylvania’s Pottruck Health and Fitness Center.

Anyone with information on this incident is encouraged to contact the Accident Investigation District at 215-865-3180.

Drexel’s Counseling Center is available to any students who may need assistance dealing with the loss of Morris. Students can reach out to the counseling center by calling 215-895-1415 during normal business hours or 215-416-3337 outside of normal business hours.

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