The Harvard Crimson's site targeted in apparent hack
The Harvard Crimson, Harvard University's student newspaper, was hacked earlier today and all signs point to The Harvard Lampoon, an undergraduate humor publication, as the source of the breach.
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The Harvard Crimson, Harvard University's student newspaper, was hacked earlier today and all signs point to The Harvard Lampoon, an undergraduate humor publication, as the source of the breach.
Former Vice President Joe Biden will speak at Harvard University’s Class Day, an annual ceremony for seniors the day before commencement, Harvard announced Wednesday.
Fossil Free Penn members said Monday they remain hopeful even after a four-day sit-in at College Hall last week yielded no concrete agreement with the administration to move forward with divestment.
Mental Wellness Week, which started on Monday and continues until Saturday, may be just the antidote to your stressful week: a weeklong series of mental health-focused events, which include therapy dogs, stress balls and quizzo.
About 130 students gathered in the lobby of College Hall on Thursday for a mass sit-in at 6 p.m. in the hopes that the large crowd would make it difficult for administrators to issue citations, following an incident Wednesday night when 13 members of Fossil Free Penn were allegedly “written up” for refusing to leave the building after closing.
Thirteen students from Fossil Free Penn were "written up" Wednesday evening by the administration after refusing to leave College Hall when the building was scheduled to close, according to College sophomore and sit-in co-coordinator Zach Rissman and College senior Gavi Reiter.
Anxiety over water quality on campus can make some students opt for alternatives to the tap.
Penn Medicine’s new partnership with the Princeton HealthCare System is part of a national shift toward incorporating small hospitals into larger health systems that aims to make care more accessible to people in all geographic areas, Penn experts say.
After four students died by suicide in the 2013-2014 school year, Counseling and Psychological Services convened to tackle the state of mental health at Penn.
When Van Pelt Library preservation assistant and conservation technician Sibylla Benatova’s oldest son started kindergarten at the Penn Alexander School in 2014, she began donating selections from her 7,000-volume children’s book collection to his classroom.
Karen Glanz, a professor of biostatistics and epidemiology, just started her four-year term on the Advisory Council for the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute after being appointed to the position by former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Sylvia Burwell this past November.
Counseling and Psychological Services at the University of Pennsylvania is in the process of hiring four new staff members to extend its hours to evenings and weekends and to expand its outreach by placing full-time clinicians in professional schools.
A batch of cookies set off a kitchen fire alarm in the Mask and Wig hall of Riepe College House, prompting an immediate evacuation of all Riepe residents around 9:56 p.m. on Sunday night during the Super Bowl football game.
Career Services launched the new Quaker Career Wardrobe initiative this year, which collects new or gently used professional clothing for students who otherwise could not afford them.
A student-run abortion rights group, Penn for Reproductive Justice, officially launched today on Locust Walk, offering information on the global gag rule, also known as the Mexico City policy, and ways to get involved in the new club.
The recent shift of on-campus recruiting for summer internships from the spring to the fall semester has caused significant changes in which students participate in the study abroad program and when they choose to do so.
Penn and Carnegie Mellon University researchers received a five-year $14 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation to establish a University Transportation Center, which aims to use technology, policy and planning to ensure safe and efficient mobility of people and goods in the 21st century.
The influenza virus has officially hit the Philadelphia area, bringing with it much harsher symptoms than in previous years that are already affecting students on campus.
Reach-A-Peer Helpline officially launched its new Lean On Me 24-hour text message service at an event Sunday, making it the third service — after the calling service and the letter service — that RAP-Line offers for peer support.
The Digital Penn Museum launched this January, revealing a single portal to access a comprehensive database of the museum’s collections, archival films and lecture videos. The site brings together content that previously existed in scattered locations, while also continuing to add new content from the archives.