Chi Omega returns to chapter house ahead of schedule
Chi Omega is returning home.
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Chi Omega is returning home.
The newest trends in Philadelphia fashion will hit the runway tomorrow.
Penn has jumped on the spontaneous dance party, hip-thrusting, crazy costume, viral video bandwagon that is the Harlem Shake.
Each year newly minted doctors and potential sorority sisters go through a similar recruitment process.
The international music community lost one of its great conductors on the morning of Feb. 8, when Penn alumnus James DePreist died at the age of 76 from heart attack complications in his home in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Twenty-five Penn students helped save 108 lives yesterday.
While hosting an unregistered party is still prohibited, the consequences for doing so have undergone some structural changes.
After 35 years, Alpha Sigma Phi is back.
Clio, the Greek muse of history, has found her way into the Penn Museum.
Sometimes even seven hours of board games isn’t enough. This is the case for members of the Penn Gamers Club.
Penn undergraduates aren’t the only ones who have the chance to participate in Greek life on campus.
Last night, a new group of fraternity brothers was welcomed into Penn’s 164-year-old Greek community.
Penn’s chapters of Sigma Phi Epsilon and Alpha Psi recently lost their tax exempt status as nonprofit institutions.
The Chi Omega chapter house is empty.
Two New York University students had a bet. One said that the team from Wharton would win, and the other wagered that one of the other 14 competing universities would. The members of the Wharton team settled that bet, coming home with the first-place title and a six-foot check for $10,000.
Getting a job doesn’t need to be any more complicated than it already is. For minority students at Penn, however, issues of diversity and cultural awareness are an additional consideration on top of the standard struggles of networking, applying and interviewing for jobs.
More than 200 students got to put a face to a name frequently found in their introductory international relations textbooks last night.