Prameet Kumar | ‘Shutting down the debate’
Just a year ago, Penn professor Ania Loomba co-wrote a letter to The Daily Pennsylvanian in defense of the controversial Penn Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Conference.
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Just a year ago, Penn professor Ania Loomba co-wrote a letter to The Daily Pennsylvanian in defense of the controversial Penn Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Conference.
You start on the corner of 42nd and Walnut, at the two-bedroom apartment you rent with a friend. The first thing people notice when they enter is the ceiling. It’s almost 20-feet high, with crown molding. You didn’t know what crown molding was before you moved in.
President Barack Obama’s campaign is doubling down in the city with a new office in West Philadelphia, around the intersection of 52nd and Walnut streets.
With no major disputed races on the ballot in yesterday’s Pennsylvania primary, few voters went to the polls on or near campus.
Leaders of many political groups on campus, in the city and across the state expect low voter turnout in today’s Pennsylvania primary, especially among young people.
As the administration announced the appointment of the 14th Penn Integrates Knowledge professor yesterday, some biomedical researchers have been expressing their frustrations with the program.
A week before the state primary, Republican frontrunner Mitt Romney gathered support among Tea Partiers in Philadelphia yesterday.
In an effort to improve college affordability and access for low-income students, some legislators are looking to the internet.
Washington isn’t the only hotbed for the healthcare debate.
Bowing to student pressure, the University announced Tuesday that social activist Geoffrey Canada will no longer be this year’s Commencement speaker.
Dartmouth College President Jim Yong Kim, President Barack Obama’s unexpected nominee to head the World Bank, is being praised for the fresh outlook he can bring to the organization.
Penn and other major local nonprofits, which once made millions of dollars in voluntary payments to Philadelphia, pay nothing today.
Some bioethics experts are criticizing Penn’s dismissal of the research misconduct charges levied by a psychiatry professor against two of his colleagues in the department.
In his State of the Union address last month, President Barack Obama implored colleges and universities to decrease the cost of getting a degree.
At first, the political ad seems typical.
Half a century ago, 60 percent of all patients who died at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania received autopsies.
Jon Huntsman Sr.’s financial backing of his son’s presidential bid has laid bare concerns of potential coordination between super PACs and presidential candidates.
Scott Ward, the former Wharton professor of Marketing currently serving time for transporting child pornography, had his request for a reduced sentence denied late last month.
The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions conference held this weekend exposed a wide gulf of disagreement among Penn professors on opposite sides of the issue.
Mitt Romney coasted to a victory in the Florida primary yesterday, reclaiming his title as the frontrunner of the Republican presidential race.