UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Global Program July 25 — August 5, 2016 Following in Franklin’s Global Footsteps

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Table of Contents

Welcome Letter ...... 2 GL Program Core Instructors and Senior Staff Members ...... 3 Global Leadership Program Introduction ...... 4 Global Leadership Program Participants ...... 6 Global Leadership Program Chaperones ...... 11

Global Leadership Program Daily Schedule

Monday, July 25 ...... 12

Tuesday, July 26 ...... 13

Wednesday, July 27 ...... 14

Thursday, July 28 ...... 15

Friday, July 29 ...... 16

Saturday, July 30—Sunday, July 31 ...... 17

Monday, August 1 ...... 18

Tuesday, August 2 ...... 19

Wednesday, August 3 ...... 20

Thursday, August 4 ...... 21

Friday, August 5 ...... 22

Phone Numbers and Information Sheet ...... 23

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July 25, 2016

Dear Global Leadership Participant,

Welcome to Penn! On behalf of ourselves and the Global Leadership Program Faculty Committee—Professors Avery Goldstein, Michael Horowitz, and Edward Mansfield—we are delighted to have you with us at the University of Pennsylvania. We have been preparing for your arrival for many months and are delighted to finally meet you in person.

Over the next two weeks, you will have a unique opportunity to learn about and discuss important issues of leadership in and the U.S. with faculty, students, local and national leaders both at the University of Pennsylvania and in the City of Philadelphia. As one of the oldest and most influential universities in the U.S., Penn has been a leader in higher education for 270 years. Moreover, Philadelphia has been the setting for many historic and current events related to leadership in the . As you may know, the Declaration of Independence was written and signed in Philadelphia in 1776. During your visit this year, 240 years later, the Democratic Party will hold their Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia to select their candidate for President of the United States.

We have planned a busy schedule of classes, site visits, cultural excursions and social activities to introduce you to the U.S. and to important issues of leadership from a U.S. and a global perspective. I hope what you learn here, and what you teach us, will help future leaders in both our countries collaborate to address global challenges.

Enjoy your stay!

Nora E. Lewis Vice Dean, Arts and Sciences Professional and Liberal Education

John J. DiIulio, Jr. Frederic Fox Leadership Professor and Professor of Political Science Faculty Director, Fox Leadership International

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Global Leadership Program Core Instructors and Senior Staff Members

Chuck BRUTSCHE Dr. Merritt T. COOKE Associate Director, Assistant Director, Robert A. Fox Leadership Fox Leadership International; Program Founder, China Partnership of Greater Philadelphia

Euria CHUNG Dr. John J. DiIULIO, Jr. Associate Director of Operations, Frederic Fox Leadership Professor Robert A. Fox Leadership and Professor of Political Science; Program Faculty Director, Fox Leadership International

Dr. Avery GOLDSTEIN Dr. Michael HOROWITZ David M. Knott Professor of Associate Professor of Political Political Science; Science; Deputy Director, Faculty Director, Center for the Perry World House Study of Contemporary China

Chih-jen LEE Nora LEWIS Deputy Executive Director, Vice Dean, Robert A. Fox Leadership Penn College of Liberal and Program Professional Studies

Dr. Hope LOZANO-BIELAT Bingqing MENG Resident Senior Fellow, Fox Research and Service Fellow, Fox Leadership International Fox Leadership International

Xinglin PAN Joseph P. TIERNEY Tsinghua University-Penn Executive Director, Graduate Fellow, Robert A. Fox Leadership Fox Leadership International Program

Cheng YAO Global Leadership Fellow, Fox Leadership International and Penn College of Liberal and Professional Studies

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Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), the world-historic scientist, inventor, and statesman, founded The University of Pennsylvania, known as Penn, in 1740, as America’s first major nonsectarian institution of higher learning. Today, Penn is a renowned Ivy League school with a beautiful urban campus in America’s first capital, historic Philadelphia. Penn is consistently ranked among America’s top universities, and often ranked first in many fields.

Penn’s Founding Father signed all three of the America’s founding documents (the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the Constitution) as well as The Treaty of Paris. Indeed, Franklin was the best known and most beloved American of his time in Europe and other parts of the world. A brilliant international diplomat, he preached that all peoples had civic and moral duties beyond their own respective national borders, and

practiced a principled but pragmatic brand of global leadership.

In September 2015, two global leaders, Pope Francis and President Xi Jinping, each visited the United States. In addressing a Joint Session of Congress, the Pope observed:

Our world is increasingly a place of violent conflict…We are asked to summon the courage and the intelligence to resolve today’s many geopolitical and economic crises. Even in the developed world, the effects of unjust structures are all too apparent. Our efforts must aim at restoring hope, righting wrongs, maintaining commitments, and thus promoting the well-being of individuals and of peoples.1

During President Xi’s September 2015 visit to America, he echoed words from a speech he gave in China concerning today’s Chinese people, words that would apply equally well to the peoples of most other nations:

They want to have better education, more stable jobs, more income, reliable social security, better medical and health care, improved housing conditions and a beautiful environment. They hope that their children will have sound growth, good jobs and more enjoyable lives.2

————————————— 1. His Holiness Pope Francis, Address to a Joint Session of the United States Congress, September 24, 2015. 2. Xi Jinping, “The People’s Wish for a Good Life is Our Goal,” speech at the press conference of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the 18th CPC Central Committee, November 12, 2012, as excerpted in Xi Jinping, The Governance of China (Foreign Languages Press, 2014), p. 4.

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The 21st century’s global leaders must be prepared to search for principled yet pragmatic paths to international peace and cooperation while meeting major civic challenges ranging from energy sustainability to public health, environmental protection to economic opportunity.

Penn’s Global Leadership Faculty Committee represents leading scholars with Penn’s Fox Leadership International Program, Center for the Study of Contemporary China, Christopher H. Browne Center for International Politics, and Perry World House. These scholars work closely with Penn’s College of Liberal and Professional Studies to craft academically rigorous but practical programs to help equip and empower students, executives, and others for present or future roles as ethical and effective global leaders.

Penn’s Global Leadership offerings range from single-day sessions to month-long residential programs. While carefully tailored to the particular interests and needs of each group of students or leaders, each Penn Global Leadership offering reflects Franklin’s bedrock internationalist beliefs and so are designed and intended to:

(1) Promote international/sub-national cooperation,

(2) Stimulate cross-national learning,

(3) Foster inter-cultural understanding and interpersonal community-building, and

(4) Explore multiple-sector (governments, , and non-governmental ) approaches to solving social, civic, and economic problems, both domestic and international.

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Global Leadership Program Participants

Zheng BI Zicong CAI Beijing Normal University Beijing Normal University

Yanyue DENG Zhuoying DENG JESIE—Group A JESIE– Group A Forestry University Changzhou University

Xinyue FANG JESIE—Group A Yujing GAO of Chinese Beijing Normal University Medicine

Wenjun GONG Yilin GU JESIE—Group A JESIE—Group A Soochow University Huaiyin Normal University

Xin GUAN Suyue HUANG JESIE—Group A JESIE—Group A Soochow University University of Technology

Aojie JU Chengyu LI Nanjing University Nanjing University

Xuwan LI Chuyi LIU Beijing Normal University JESIE—Group A Taizhou University

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Global Leadership Program Participants

Rongting LIU Lei LU JESIE—Group A JESIE—Group A China University of Mining and Technology

Minwen LU Xiaodan LU JESIE—Group A Beijing Normal University Soochow University

Fan MO Xin MO Beijing Normal University Beijing Normal University

Zhuoqian PAN Zixian PAN JESIE—Group A JESIE—Group A Huaiyin Normal University Nanjing Medical University

Wei PENG Muyao QI Nanjing University JESIE—Group A Nanjing Normal University

Yuhang QIAN Haojun QIN JESIE—Group A Beijing Normal University Nanjing Medical University

Tingting QIN Wenwei REN JESIE—Group A Beijing Normal University Nanjing University of Finance & Economics

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Global Leadership Program Participants

Dandan SHAN Ruixian SHENG JESIE—Group A Nanjing University Soochow University

Qingyi SHI Anli SUN JESIE—Group B JESIE—Group A Nanjing Normal University

Bo SUN Xiaohan SUN JESIE—Group B Beijing Normal University Suqian College

Yue SUN Yuheng SUN JESIE—Group B JESIE—Group A Soochow University Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine

Xiao TAN Chen TANG JESIE—Group B JESIE—Group B Nanjing University of Posts and of Telecommunications Technology

Jingwen TANG Antian WANG JESIE—Group B JESIE—Group B Nanjing Tech. University Nanjing Normal University

Hongyuan WANG Kaiyan WANG Beijing Normal University Beijing Normal University

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Global Leadership Program Participants

Qianying WANG Xinyue WANG Beijing Normal University JESIE—Group B Nanjing Normal University

Yixuan WANG Tong WEI JESIE—Group B Beijing Normal University

Yaling WU Xi WEI JESIE—Group B JESIE—Group B Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology

Qiuyi XIE Li XIU JESIE—Group B Beijing Normal University Nanjing Normal University

Mingze XU Yilin YANG JESIE—Group B Beijing Normal University Nanjing University of Science and Technology

Siyi YUAN Xueyu ZANG Beijing Normal University JESIE—Group B Jiangsu University of Technology

Aimin ZHANG Lu ZHANG Beijing Normal University JESIE—Group B Soochow University

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Global Leadership Program Participants

Chengyi ZHAO Chenxu ZHAO Nanjing University Beijing Normal University

Yiqi ZHAO Xiaoyu ZHEN JESIE—Group B JESIE—Group B Nanjing University of Nanjing Agricultural University Finance & Economics

Wanting ZHOU Yuting ZHOU Beijing Normal University JESIE—Group B Hohai University

Haining ZHU JESIE—Group B Xuzhou Medical University

Not Pictured

Yiling CAO Yichi FANG Nanjing University Renmin University

Siheng HUA Jing WANG Renmin University Nanjing University

Wei ZHANG Xiaomeng ZHAO Nanjing University Nanjing University

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Global Leadership Program Chaperones

Ningyan HU Beijing Normal University Chaperone

Renjun SHAN Beijing Normal University Chaperone

Dong WANG JESIE Chaperone

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Global Leadership Program Daily Schedule

Monday, July 25

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

9 AM—10:40 AM JESIE: English Language & U.S. Session [Williams Hall 214 & 216]

10 AM—12 PM BNU, Renmin, Nanjing: Orientation & PennKey Setup [Cohen Hall 402—249 South 36th Street]

11 AM—1 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

1 PM—4 PM Global Leadership: Theory, Practice, and Purpose

[Cohen Hall 402—249 South 36th Street]

Dr. DiIulio and Dr. Cooke

 Benjamin Franklin’s Legacy as America’s “First Global Leader”  “Global Leadership”: Basic Definitions, Key Questions, and the “5, 4, 3, 2, 1” of

Leadership Science  China’s Early 21st Century Global Leadership: Opportunities, Problems, and Successes  Leading America/Leading China: Cross-Cultural Definitions, Differences, and Similarities

Breakout Sessions [Williams Hall—255 S. 36th Street]

 DiIulio-Pan: BNU [Williams Hall Room 23]  Brutsche -Meng: JESIE A [Williams Hall Room 25]  Tierney-Yao: JESIE B [Williams Hall Room 27]  Cooke-Chung: Renmin & Nanjing [Williams Hall Room 29]

5 PM—7 PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

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Tuesday, July 26

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

8 AM—9 AM Renmin & Nanjing: Breakfast with Dr. DiIulio

[Leadership Hall 2nd Floor—3814 Walnut St.]

9 AM—10:40 AM JESIE: English Language & U.S. Culture Session [Williams Hall 214 & 216]

11 AM—1 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

12 PM—5 PM Leadership Case: Energy & Environmental Policy in America/China, Part I [Cohen Hall 402]

Dr. Cooke and Dr. DiIulio

 Leading U.S.-China Cooperation in Energy & Environment (a 45-year bi-national retrospective)

 Co-leading the Global Action Plan to Address Climate Change (a 25-year global retrospective)  Current Dimensions of Leadership Challenge:  Global level: UN-SDG, COP, WBCSD, etc.  National level: Similarities and Differences (or, 同床异梦,‘Same Bed, Different Dreams’)  Sub-national level: Fast growing role of cities and other sub-national players  Case Study (PHL-TEDA EcoPartnership) and Wrap-Up (U.S.-China EcoPartnership Lessons Learned)

Breakout Sessions  DiIulio-Pan: Renmin & Nanjing [Williams Hall Room 29]  Brutsche-Meng: JESIE B [Williams Hall Room 27]  Tierney-Yao: JESIE A [Williams Hall Room 25]  Cooke-Chung: BNU [Williams Hall Room 23]

5 PM—7 PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

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Wednesday, July 27

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

8 AM—9 AM BNU: Breakfast with Dr. DiIulio [Leadership Hall 2nd Floor—3814 Walnut St.]

9 AM—10:40 AM JESIE: English Language & U.S. Culture Session [Williams Hall 214 & 216]

11 AM—12 PM Lunch [at Houston Market]

12:15 PM Meet for Field Trip [Leadership Hall Courtyard—3814 Walnut St.]

12:30 PM— FIELD TRIP: Energy & Environmental Policy in America/China, Part II 5:00 PM

Dr. Cooke and All Instructors and Senior Staff Members

12:30 PM Depart from Leadership Hall 1:00 PM Philadelphia Navy Yard Orientation, Will Agate, Vice President of the Philadelphia Industrial Development Corporation 1:30 PM Walking Tour of the Navy Yard Central Green, 5-acre “community heart”

of the Navy Yard, and URBN Shop 543 2:15 PM Depart Navy Yard for Venice Island, Manayunk 3:00 PM Overview Presentation of the Philadelphia “Green City, Clean Waters” Project, Venice Island Performing Arts Center 3:45 PM Walking Tour of Venice Island Pumping Station and The Circuit’s

Schuylkill River Trail 4:30 PM Depart Venice Island, Manayunk and return to Leadership Hall via Belmont Avenue (Fairmount Park)

5 PM—7 PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

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Thursday, July 28

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

8 AM—9 AM JESIE A: Breakfast with Dr. DiIulio [Leadership Hall 2nd Floor—3814 Walnut St.]

9 AM—10:40 AM JESIE: English Language & U.S. Culture Session [Williams Hall 214 & 216]

11 AM—12 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

12 PM—5 PM Leadership Initiatives on Reducing Extreme Poverty and Improving Education [Cohen Hall 402] Dr. DiIulio and Executive Director Tierney

 Leadership on Extreme Poverty in America/China: Successes, Failures, and Lessons  Leadership on “Food Insecurity” in America/China: What Works?  Leadership on “Homelessness” in America/China: What Works?  Leadership on “Youth Violence Reduction” in America/China: What Works?

 Leadership on Educational Reform in America/China: Successes, Failures, and Lessons Breakout Sessions

 DiIulio-Pan: JESIE A, “Food Insecurity” [Williams Hall Room 25] with Special Guest Leader Ms. Lizanne Hagedorn  Brutsche-Meng: Renmin & Nanjing, “Homelessness” [Williams Hall Room 29] with Special Guest Leader Dr. Dan Treglia  Tierney-Yao: BNU, “Educational Reform” [Williams Hall Room 23] with Special Guest Leader Mr. Nick Torres  Cooke-Chung: JESIE B, “Youth Aid Panel,” [Williams Hall Room 27] with Special Guest Leader Mr. Michael Cleary

Ms. Lizanne Hagedorn, Dr. Dan Treglia, Mr. Nick Torres, Mr. Michael Cleary, Director of Finance and Fox Research and CEO, Education Plus Supervising Attorney, Administration, Service Fellow Academy Cyber Charter Juvenile Diversion and Nutritional Development School Youth Violence Services Reduction Programs

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Friday, July 29

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

8 AM—9 AM JESIE B: Breakfast with Dr. DiIulio [Leadership Hall 2nd Floor—3814 Walnut St.]

Leadership Lessons and Learning: Tailored Site Visits

 BNU (Tierney-Pan): Kensington Health Sciences Academy Philadelphia High School Summer Program Meet at 9 AM at Leadership Hall Courtyard 9:15 AM – 12:30 PM (on-site 10 AM – 12 PM) 2463 Emerald St, Philadelphia, PA 19125

 JESIE B (Brutsche-Cooke): Juvenile Probation at Family Court Meet at 9:15 AM at Leadership Hall Courtyard 9:30 – 12:30 PM (on-site 10 AM – 12 PM) 1515 Arch St, Philadelphia, PA 19102

 JESIE A (Chung-Meng): Honickman Learning Center A Nutritional Development Services Site Meet at 10:45 AM at Leadership Hall Courtyard 11:00 – 2:30 PM (on-site 11:45 AM – 1:45 PM) 1936 N Judson Street, Philadelphia, PA 19121

 Renmin & Nanjing (Tierney-Yao): Francis House of Peace A Project H.O.M.E. Shelter Meet at 12:45 PM at Leadership Hall Courtyard 1:00 – 4:00 PM (on-site 1:30 – 3:30 PM) 810 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107

11 AM—3 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

5 PM—7 PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

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Saturday, July 30

7 AM—8 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

FIELD TRIP: BNU, Renmin, Nanjing to Washington, D.C.

8:00 AM Depart University of Penn at 40th and Locust 11:15 AM National Mall Washington, D.C. 5:00 PM Depart National Mall Rest Stop for Dinner 8:00 PM Arrive at 40th and Locust

FIELD TRIP: JESIE to Hershey Park and Shopping Outlets

8:00 AM Depart University of Penn at 39th and Spruce 10:00 AM Hershey Park 4:30 PM Tanger Outlets 8:30 PM Arrive at 39th and Spruce

Sunday, July 31

11 AM—2 PM Sunday Brunch [1920 Commons]

5 PM—7 PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

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Monday, August 1

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

9 AM—10:40 AM JESIE: English Language & U.S. Culture Session [Williams Hall 214 & 216]

11 AM—12 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

12 PM – 5 PM Leadership Case: The Eldercare Crisis in America/China, Part I [Cohen Hall 402] Dr. DiIulio and Executive Director Tierney with Global Leadership Fellow Cheng Yao and PEACE Fellow Xinglin Pan

 How American Leaders Have Handled the Crisis  How Chinese Leaders Have Handled the Crisis  The 2016 Penn Initiatives on Eldercare in China  Collaborative Leadership/Servant Leadership and a New Eldercare Model for China?

 Tailored Focus Group Discussions/Interactions  Pan-Meng: JESIE A and Renmin & Nanjing [Williams Hall Room 25]  Yao-Cooke: JESIE B and BNU [Cohen Hall 402]

5 PM—7 PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

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Tuesday, August 2

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

9 AM—10:40 AM JESIE: English Language & U.S. Culture Session [Williams Hall 214 & 216]

11 AM—1 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

1 PM – 4 PM Leadership Case: The Eldercare Crisis in America/China, Part II Penn School of Nursing Science (SON) Lectures/Presentations regarding Eldercare in U.S. and China [Fagin Hall Room 116—418 Curie Boulevard]

Penn School of Nursing Dr. Bradway and Dr. Neisser-Frankson

Dr. Christine Bradway, Dr. Cheryl Neisser-Frankson, Associate Professor of Lecturer and Course Gerontological Nursing Director, Nursing Care of the Older Adult

5 PM—7 PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

Time TBD BNU Dinner [Bok Garden Patio, Fisher-Bennett Hall 419]

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Wednesday, August 3

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

10:30 AM—12:30 PM Leadership Case: The Eldercare Crisis in America/China, Part III [Cohen Hall 402]  Student Oral Presentations and Group Proposals: “How Would You Lead on China’s Eldercare Crisis? 3 Main Proposals”

12:30 PM—3 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

5 PM—6:15 PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

6:30 PM—8:30 PM Evening Presentation [Cohen Hall Terrace Room]

China - U.S. Partnerships for Educational Advancement and Cultural Exchange P.E.A.C.E. A Music and Performing Arts Celebration

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Thursday, August 4

7 AM—10 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

9 AM—10:40 AM JESIE: English Language & U.S. Culture Session [Williams Hall 214 & 216]

11 AM—12 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

12 PM—5 PM LEAD Case: Why International Conflict Happens, and How to Avoid It [Cohen Hall 402] Facilitator: Dr. Lozano-Bielat Instructor: Dr. Horowitz

 The Leader Experience and Attribute Descriptions (LEAD) Dataset, 1875-2004  LEAD applied to America, China, and China-American Relations Today  Millennial Chinese/Americans and Global Leadership: Prospects and Pitfalls

 Tailored Focus Group Discussions/Interactions  DiIulio-Meng: JESIE B and BNU [Cohen Hall 402]  Tierney-Cooke: JESIE A and Renmin & Nanjing [Williams Hall Room 25]

5 PM—7 PM EVENING: SPECIAL DINNER SESSION AND GUEST LECTURE [Cohen Hall Terrace Room]

Professor YU Yongda, Tsinghua University School of Public Policy & Management

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Friday, August 5

7 AM—9 AM Breakfast [1920 Commons]

9 AM—10:30 AM Leadership Revisited: China, America, and Choosing Our Global Future [Houston Hall— Hall of Flags]

SPECIAL MORNING SESSION moderated by Dr. Lozano-Bielat:

Dr. Goldstein, Dr. Cooke, Dr. Gadsden, Dr. DiIulio, Professor Yu Concluding Plenary Panel Featuring Leading American and Chinese Scholars

Dr. Avery Dr. Merritt T. Dr. Amy Dr. John J. Professor YU GOLDSTEIN COOKE GADSDEN DiIULIO, Jr. Yongda David M. Knott Assistant Director, Executive Frederic Fox Professor, School Professor of Political Fox Leadership Director for Leadership Professor of Public Policy Science; Faculty International; Global Initiatives, and Professor of & Management, Director, Center for Founder, China Penn Global Political Science; Tsinghua the Study of Partnership of Faculty Director, University Contemporary China Greater Philadelphia Fox Leadership International

11 AM—3 PM Lunch [Houston Market]

5 PM—7PM Dinner [1920 Commons]

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PHONE NUMBERS AND INFORMATION SHEET

Residence Hall: Harrison College House 3910 Irving St, Philadelphia, PA 19104

RAs: Aster Sun Kia Lor (215) 713-8012 (651) 447-9734

Residential Director: Manda McElrath (559) 901-1091

Meal Plan: Breakfast: 7 AM—10 AM Class of 1920 Commons, 3800 Locust Walk, Philadelphia

Lunch: 11 AM—3 PM Houston Market at Houston Hall, 3417 Spruce Street, Philadelphia

Dinner: 5 PM—7 PM Class of 1920 Commons, 3800 Locust Walk, Philadelphia

Sunday Brunch: 11 AM—2 PM Class of 1920 Commons, 3800 Locust Walk, Philadelphia

Student Health Service: (215) 746-3535 3535 Market St, Philadelphia, PA 19104

Penn Police for Emergencies: (215) 573-3333 or dial 511 from any campus phone

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