Students form groups to combat bias
Students across the nation are rising up against what they view as strong political biases on college campuses.
Below are your search results. You can also try a Basic Search.
Students across the nation are rising up against what they view as strong political biases on college campuses.
Reiterating the theme of taking back the city "block by block, neighborhood by neighborhood," Republican mayoral candidate Sam Katz and his supporters celebrated the opening of the campaign's new office at 51st Street and Baltimore Avenue Saturday.
As the wind picked up and the rain began to fall yesterday afternoon, students on campus showed relative indifference to the threat of oncoming Hurricane Isabel -- which was later downgraded to a tropical storm. The hurricane hit land on the Outer Banks of North Carolina yesterday afternoon, and the greatest force was scheduled to hit Philadelphia around 10 p.m. last night. Yesterday, Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard to help deal with problems that could arise. By 5 p.m., Isabel had knocked out power to more than a million people throughout Virginia and North Carolina. Still, despite all of the news stories and the constant WeatherBug warnings, students didn't seem worried. According to Freshgrocer store manager Ross Del Romano, the store has been selling more bottled water, batteries and flashlights than normal -- but to neighborhood residents, not Penn students. "Even with [last year's] snow, students didn't care," he said. "Students don't seem to be affected by the weather." Many students did note that they were watching www.weather.com more closely than usual to monitor the storm's progress. Others said they were taking more proactive approaches. Several students, including Engineering senior Pat Pfeifer and College freshman David Back planned to counter Isabel's forces by closing their windows. Wharton sophomore Casey Anderson thought that he might go and purchase a raincoat to combat the downpour. For some students, the prospect of a hurricane is new and exciting. "I'm from Colorado," Back said. "We don't get a lot of rain, even. I'm looking forward to it." Although students are not taking many precautions in anticipation of the hurricane, the University does have a complex plan to combat any damage the wind and rain might cause overnight and tomorrow. From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. yesterday, a large team of Facilities workers scoured the campus looking for potential problem areas, said Tony Sorrentino, executive vice president spokesman. From 4 p.m. on, he said, the Emergency Operations Center will be activated, and Facilities and Safety employees will be reporting to it all night. The EOC keeps tabs on the campus terrain in order to combat many problems as they occur. Facilities Services has also secured all potential debris, including benches and trash cans on campus, and has a supply of pumps, chainsaws and vehicles at the ready in case of emergency, Sorrentino said. The only question that remains unanswered from a University standpoint is whether classes will be canceled today. Sorrentino did not care to speculate, referring all inquiries to the University's Emergency Information Line, 898-MELT. At press time, classes were still scheduled to proceed as normal, and all University offices remained open. College sophomore Alan Blank, however, said he "was pretty confident [classes] should be canceled." Isabel did cause some events yesterday to change venue or get canceled. The Fox Leadership Program postponed its speaker series, and the Social Planning and Events Committee's "Wild Night in Vegas" event was moved from Wynn Commons to the Hall of Flags in Houston Hall. Many students were prepared to sit back and enjoy the wild weather and didn't plan on changing their schedules as a result of the storm. Several fraternities were planning on celebrating the evening with "Hurricane" parties, complete with 40 oz. Hurricane malt beverages. "I don't think it should be that bad," Pfeifer said. "It's supposed to stop raining on Saturday."
President George W. Bush's campaign trail took him through Philadelphia's suburbs this week as he continued fundraising efforts for his 2004 re-election campaign.
Is it possible for a conservative student or doctoral candidate to take a class with a like-minded professor?
Two men were charged yesterday in connection with the Aug. 26 incident that occurred in front of Republican Mayoral Candidate Sam Katz's North Philadelphia campaign office.
Politics has never been a clean sport. Since the dawn of the political party system, candidates and parties have tried every possible tactic to win an election, be it legal or illegal, ethical or unethical.
Shortly after Judith Rodin took the helm of the University in 1994, she began crafting a strategic plan that pinpointed a specific goal for Penn: "Solidify and advance its position as one of the premier research and teaching universities in the nation and in the world."
Sometime late Tuesday night or early yesterday morning, an unknown person threw a brick and what is being described by some as an unlit firebomb through two separate windows in Republican mayoral candidate Sam Katz's campaign office in North Philadelphia, according to Katz spokesman Nathan Raab.
Former Vice Provost and Director of Libraries Paul Mosher was arraigned last Thursday on charges pertaining to possession of child pornography.
Neurosurgery Professor Tracy McIntosh was granted two weeks to reach a plea agreement with the City of Philadelphia after his pre-trial hearing Thursday was continued until May 15, according to his attorney Tom Bergstrom. McIntosh has been charged with raping a 23-year-old woman in his office on September 6. The woman, who is on deferred admission status from Penn's School of Veterinary Medicine, is the neice of one of McIntosh's friends, the Philadelphia Daily News reported. The attorneys are now working on a deal in which McIntosh would plead guilty to some charges and others would be dropped. Bergstrom declined to give details of the negotiations, saying that nothing had been completely resolved yet. "To the extent that we resolve the case, it's certainly not going to include a plea to a rape charge," Bergstrom said. "To the extent that we are successful and both sides are happy, it would be ultimately a plea to something less serious." "If we can't agree, I suppose we'll have to go to trial," he added. According to the Philadelphia Attorney General's website, McIntosh has been "charged with rape, indecent assault, false imprisonment, and related charges for sexually assaulting a woman in his office at the University of Pennsylvania." The victim claims that she was raped after smoking marijuana with McIntosh in his office on campus. McIntosh, a married father of two, has been a professor at the University since 1992, focusing primarily on chemical responses in the brain to traumatic head injury. He has been on a leave of absence since Wednesday.
The preliminary hearing for former Vice Provost and Director of Libraries Paul Mosher -- charged with possession of child pornography -- was postponed until June 26 at the request of the defendant.
A string of random assaults occurred around the 4000 block of Pine Street early Saturday and Sunday mornings, when a large group of West Philadelphia residents between the ages of 13 and 18 allegedly attacked several Penn students and another individual in separate incidents, according to University Police Chief Tom Rambo.
A number of Penn students spent yesterday combining forces with gay-rights groups and others from around Philadelphia to protest recent controversial remarks made by Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.).
The Philadelphia Police Department's investigation into Penn's former vice provost and director of libraries -- which became public last week -- began last summer when he brought his broken laptop to a repair shop and employees found images of child pornography in his files.
Penn's name is hitting local news after an administrator was charged with possession of child pornography -- however, it is certainly not the only academic institution that has been involved in such a scandal.
Former Vice Provost and Director of Libraries Paul Mosher turned himself in to the Philadelphia Police Special Victims Unit late Monday afternoon for allegedly possessing almost 2,000 images of child pornography.
Penn's director of libraries is currently under investigation in a case involving child pornography by the Philadelphia Police Department's Special Victims Unit.
With the future of affirmative action hanging in the balance, the weight of the decision is likely to fall on the shoulders of one woman.
Race relations on college campuses can be volatile and unpredictable -- and Penn, it seems, has learned that lesson the hard way.