Spruce Street Plaza to open this December
A parking lot in front of the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania is getting spruced up.
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A parking lot in front of the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania is getting spruced up.
Some students moving into their on-campus housing before classes began were greeted with more than just newly cleaned rooms.
Two “bridges” now sit along Locust Walk.
Wednesday, students will finally be able to enjoy the newly renovated 1920 Commons.
A touch of green was added to the Quaker Red and Blue this summer.
“If you can ignore the planes flying overhead, it looks like you could be transported back in time,” said David Barnes, associate professor in the Department of History and Sociology of Science, describing his first visit to Lazaretto.
As a few undergraduates are still in the process of finalizing their housing plans for next school year, some are considering the option of living in their Greek chapter house.
Greek leaders from all around campus gathered in the Ben Franklin ballroom at the Sheraton on 35th and Chestnut streets to celebrate the accomplishments of their peers last night. The awards ceremony was part of Penn’s annual Greek Week, which ends this Saturday.
The flavor of the week is Greek.
“Now shimmy!” yelled the instructor to the 25 girls, who then proceeded to shake their shoulders vigorously. Pants, giggles and exclamations of “Zumba is so fun!” echoed through Houston’s Hall of Flags.
Penn students got the dirt on Philadelphia’s soil cleanliness this weekend.
“What’s holding us back?” asked sisters from Multicultural Greek Council African-American interest sorority Delta Sigma Theta.
This year, Penn is celebrating the 66th anniversary of the world’s first computer.
When College and Wharton junior Anand Gopal received an email from College junior Rebecca Yee about the newest Greek organization on campus — biological honors society Phi Sigma — he admitted he was a bit hesitant.
When College junior and Zeta Psi brother Anthony Diepenbrock watched an early interview with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, he thought something was amiss.
For some, joining a fraternity or sorority at Penn could mean breaking the bank.
“Can we choke you?” joked the self-defense instructor before asking the 25 seated girls whether they were up for a live demonstration of an attack.
A Burmese crystal ball, a cat mummy and an Etruscan helmet are among some of the objects that visitors to the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology could one day call their own.
Penn’s Panhellenic Council is opening its doors to the newest members of the Greek community.
Interest in joining fraternities among Penn students is on the rise.