UA to launch common funding application for students
Students struggling to find funding for their events may soon find an easy solution.
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Students struggling to find funding for their events may soon find an easy solution.
For the first time since 2004, Penn’s incoming class has elected a female president, the Nominations and Elections Committee announced on Friday.
Roughly forty student groups were relieved of their debt Wednesday night.
On Wednesday night, the Student Activities Council reset the debt clock for all SAC-funded student groups and lifted the moratorium preventing new groups from receiving funding.
The Institute of Contemporary Art will soon host more than just new art.
From academics to advising and contraceptive use, the Undergraduate Assembly meeting on Sunday night covered a lot of bases.
Music will soon be in the air again as the Social Planning and Events Committee hosts its third concert of the year next month.
While meal times for college freshmen are often irregular, many had their first taste of midnight breakfast on Sunday night.
While Democrats and Republicans are campaigning for the upcoming presidential elections, Penn freshmen will be starting campaigns of their own.
Although the school year has just started, the holidays already seem to be on everybody’s minds — especially the Undergraduate Assembly’s.
A twisted hairpin, a brushstroke on blank canvas, a colorful clay pot — in modern art, everyday objects and people take on new symbolism.
It was business as usual at the first Undergraduate Assembly general body meeting of the semester on Sunday night, during which two internal elections took place.
Plenty of games will be played at this year’s Fall Fest, which will boast a Monopoly theme.
Sophomores and juniors will be flying high on Sept. 16 as part of this year’s Skimmer, which will offer free hot air balloon rides.
A campus-based bike share system is becoming more of a possibility at Penn.
Tuesday evening, over 2,500 freshmen and transfer students escaped the rain and huddled into the Palestra for the University’s 272nd Convocation.
There will still be jobs in journalism for the students who seek them — at least, according to four Penn professors.
Their story started out soft, with a barely perceptible rhythm. However, it was not long before Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology’s Raiymer Auditorium was resounding with beats and voices of “From Brooklyn Beats to Beirut Streets,” a performance given Thursday night by the Human Writes Project.
Not long after the return of two mummies from the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology’s “Secrets of the Silk Road” exhibit to China earlier this month, British travel writer Colin Thubron came to talk about his own travels along the ancient trade routes. Thubron, who was invited by the Penn Museum and the Penn Humanities Forum, spoke on Saturday to a crowd of about 150.
Cupcakes are generally a treat for the taste buds, even if not for one’s waistline. On Saturday, cupcakes were abound as two dozen Penn and Drexel University students competed to come up with the best cupcake decorations as part of a fundraiser for the Ronald McDonald House.