Hillel provides free meals for the homeless
“I can’t prepare it. But I can eat it!” Harold Carter said, diving into his 6 p.m. meal at Hillel this past Sunday.
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“I can’t prepare it. But I can eat it!” Harold Carter said, diving into his 6 p.m. meal at Hillel this past Sunday.
With event titles such as “fiery words,” “flaring dynamics” and “the burning of epithets,” this year’s Unity Week was on fire — or so the theme insisted.
“Hello, my name is Steve Mendell,” College junior and Student Labor Action Project coordinator Rosie Brown said, rehearsing the pitch she aimed to give Penn President Amy Gutmann.
This weekend, the Pan-Asian American Community House will not celebrate its 10th anniversary alone. Alumni are flocking back to Penn to join students in recognizing 10 years of programming, advising, leadership and Asian-American pride.
For the first time in Penn’s history, religious groups will be able to receive funding directly from the University through the student-run Faith Fund.
With the Jersey Shore tainting images of Italian-American culture, the National Italian American Foundation is aiming to shape a more realistic conception of Italian-American pride.
Change is becoming more tangible than ever within Penn’s funding sources.
For UMOJA students, Makuu’s “10 for 10” fundraising initiative is not just about getting donations in increments of 10. It’s about raising $10 million.
After three years on the Latino Coalition board, chairwoman Wendy De La Rosa will finally see her plans materialize.
The Tuesday panel on the post-9/11 experiences of Muslim-Americans was one of many initiatives designed to reach Penn students and groups outside of the Muslim community.
When Critical Writing professor Damon Linker is not teaching students about religion or politics, he is most likely writing about it. Linker’s second book, The Religious Test, was released Monday to echo and expand upon Linker’s writings as senior editor of The New Republic.
For Penn alumnus Peter Gaffney, balancing teaching with the co-direction of his vaudeville burlesque theater isn’t hard — except for when students come to shows featuring his strip act.
College freshman Ronique Forgie “didn’t even know Penn existed” before a gateway program brought her to Makuu, the University’s black cultural center. Forgie is one of many underrepresented minority students who seeks out Makuu during the college application process and falls in love with the University as a result.
School of Medicine initiatives to place more women into top academic positions triumphed this fall with the addition of Ophthalmology chairwoman Joan O’Brien. And with five more department chair spots on the market, Penn Med’s commitment to enhancing faculty diversity is coming into play.
Despite University efforts to ease scheduling conflicts between the start of classes and Rosh Hashanah, some students remain frustrated.
The Seniors for the Penn Fund Kick Off launched before classes even started this year — an indication that Penn seniors have their mind on the money.
“Don’t Let Me Go,” could easily have been written as a plea from Penn to former student Josh Bennett, who graduated from the University this spring.
“Oh god. You found the Twitter?” Wade Dean laughs and shakes his head.
The teenage Paul Orfalea once dared his friends to tie his arms and legs together and throw him in the pool. “And that’s how we did business,” Co-Founder of Kinko’s Tim Stancliffe declared over Chicken Tiki Masala tacos in Leadership Hall yesterday as part of the Fox Leadership series.