The wait ends for potential Class of 2009
Deferred from the early applicant pool, Abby Coven was in shock when she finally found out online yesterday if the University had accepted her.
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Deferred from the early applicant pool, Abby Coven was in shock when she finally found out online yesterday if the University had accepted her.
It's remarkable how much West Philadelphia looks like Romania these days -- on the Internet, anyway.
Actor and activist Martin Sheen will address a sold-out Irvine Auditorium today at 8 p.m. as the Social Planning and Events Committee's spring speaker.
Finding a summer job can be stressful for any student, but it has the potential to be even more trying for those hailing from outside the United States.
Although the U.S. Senate approved a budget plan for the 2006 fiscal year that would increase federal student aid last Thursday, additional government money for students is far from certain.
The Daily Pennsylvanian
It is now possible to take an MIT aerospace dynamics class in Antarctica, thanks to one of the newest trends in American higher education.
With a three percent increase in the number of regular applications this year, the Class of 2009 should, like many of its recent predecessors, raise the bar for difficulty of getting accepted.
Controversy continues to swirl around Harvard University President Lawrence Summers, as the school yesterday decided to release the transcript of the now-infamous speech he made on women and science last month.
According to a recent study, students are justified in being upset over the high cost of textbooks.
Penn is roughly $650 million richer than it was 18 months ago, according to a recent study.
Penn Athletic Director Steve Bilsky said that Dartmouth Dean of Admissions Karl Furstenberg's comments about collegiate football programs "shocked" and "appalled" him.
Of the record 3,420 students who applied early to Penn in 2004, 1,170 received good news in the mail over winter break.
In-Ho Oh was killed for petty cash, and nothing more.
The number of crimes reported on campus dropped significantly this year, compared to past years, and reported crime was down in every major category, with the exception of robberies.
The Penn Police completed their investigation yesterday into the mistaken apprehension of a College sophomore, finding that the actions of the involved police officers were "within the parameters of departmental policy."
Three members of the group protesting police treatment of minorities met with President Amy Gutmann, Interim Provost Peter Conn and Chaplain William Gipson yesterday at College Hall, which produced three concrete decisions but did not specifically meet the students' demands.
A group of at least 80 students and a few faculty peacefully marched on College Hall early yesterday morning, demanding to speak with President Amy Gutmann. The group, clad in black clothing, expressed concern about racial profiling as well as the recent mistaken arrest of a black student by Penn Police.
In October 2003, the arrest of Spruce College House Associate Faculty Master Rui DaSilva raised a furor over Penn police policy with regards to minorities and the possibility of racial profiling.
A Penn student is claiming that University police officers exercised unnecessary violence because of his race while mistakenly arresting him for theft in late November.