Wharton alum sells Milo, Inc. to eBay for $75 million
What started out as a $10,000 award to innovative Wharton School students just became a $75 million deal.
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What started out as a $10,000 award to innovative Wharton School students just became a $75 million deal.
For some Penn professors, the separation between work and home life is barely more than a wall.
This weekend, the Minorities in Nursing Organization accomplished a lot on behalf of children’s health — including getting Dean of Nursing Afaf Meleis onto a dance floor.
Today and tomorrow, anyone crossing Locust Walk will be confronted with signs bearing a straightforward message: “Men get depressed too. MANUP cares. Do you?”
As Engineering freshman Samantha Merritt explained, her entrance into Penn’s Digital Media Design program started simply: with checking a box.
Tuesday night, two students took front and center in Claire Fagin Hall to be recognized for saving a man’s life.
In what looks from the outside like a nondescript part of Levine Hall, students from all four of Penn’s undergraduate schools are championing innovation.
As a number of her classmates work to secure jobs in business, law and medicine, College senior Chloe Castellon is taking a different step toward a professional career: directing an independent film.
Up until his death on Oct. 19 at age 49, 1983 College alumnus Paul Miller never stopped fighting for disability rights.
Just like his classmates in the College of Arts and Sciences, he has to labor over Renaissance literature he doesn’t enjoy and waits eagerly to study an author he actually likes. But unlike most of his classmates, he’s past the age of 30 — and before enrolling at Penn, he spent time in prison.
In some ways, graduates of the School of Nursing’s nurse practitioner programs are going to hold the future of health care in their hands.
This week, a Penn professor helped Stephen Colbert in his quest to “keep fear alive.”
At 10:15 on a Saturday morning, about 50 people circle up in the multi-purpose room of DuBois College House. The group is comprised of Penn students along with middle and high-school students from around Philadelphia.
When told that she might be nominated for Popular Science magazine’s Brilliant 10 list, School of Engineering and Applied Science professor Katherine Kuchenbecker gave an unusual response: she said she didn’t think she deserved the award.
When it comes to reforming national health care, nurses are taking the lead.
Thanks to two major anonymous donations, Penn’s Rare Book and Manuscript Library will begin the first stage of renovations at the end of this month.
Before she was a student in the School of Nursing, sophomore Natasha Rosenberg was the very first Miss Sweetie Poo.
Now is a good time to be a student in the Nursing school — but the tough job market still leaves room for improvement.
Before an audience of congressional staffers and health professionals, School of Nursing student Jorge Roman got to tell his story Tuesday night on Capitol Hill.
Over the past few months, the School of Engineering and Applied Science has been getting a face lift.