Previously indebted SAC groups no longer in the red
Although the Student Activities Council moratorium on new student group funding is still in effect, more than one third of outstanding debt among currently recognized groups has been repaid.
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Although the Student Activities Council moratorium on new student group funding is still in effect, more than one third of outstanding debt among currently recognized groups has been repaid.
Prospective students looking for a glimpse into life at Penn now have a new resource — a revamped Office of Admissions website.
With oral arguments on a landmark affirmative action case set to begin in front of the nation’s highest court on Wednesday, members of the higher education world and the Penn community are continuing to express mixed hopes about the court’s ruling.
Since the Student Activities Council instituted a moratorium on funding for new student groups last week, some have offered mixed reactions to the decision and its implications for the future.
While new student groups will not be receiving funding because of the Student Activities Council’s newest moratorium, some already-recognized groups currently owe SAC money back.
While Penn has established itself as a major player in online higher education, the University is not without its competition.
While Penn’s lower placement on the 2013 U.S. News and World Report rankings may seem like a precipitous fall from grace to many, some are arguing that the change will have little to no effect for the University’s reputation or application numbers.
College applicants poring over acceptance rates and comparing their SAT scores to schools’ averages may have been looking at incorrect data for more than a decade.
Prospective students’ paths to campus will now be a couple hundred words longer.
Penn affirmed its commitment to race-based affirmative action earlier this month, as the school co-signed an amicus curiae brief in support of the University of Texas’ affirmative action policy.
The United States Congress extended the 3.4-percent interest rate for subsidized federal student loans on June 29, just two days before the rate was set to double to 6.8 percent.
Beginning this fall, students will have expanded academic options due to the Board of Trustees’ approval of three new programs on June 22.
For many students, moving off-campus promises freedom from communal bathrooms, RAs and strict move-out deadlines.
Future MBA students will soon have an additional section to study for, as the Graduate Management Admission Test will introduce a 30-minute Integrated Reasoning Section starting June 5.
While many students were at home catching up on lost sleep from exam week, nine members of Penn’s chapter of Global Water Brigades were digging trenches in a rural village in Honduras.
As every tour group walks through Franklin Field, prospective students hear about Penn’s varsity, club and intramural sports.
Aspiring playwrights write countless scripts each year, with most only going so far as the author’s computer screen.
Many students might associate 54 straight hours without sleep with reading week or midterms. But from March 16 to March 18, about 60 “hackers” volunteered more than two sleepless nights to try to make the world a better place.
Compared to his brother Rahm, Ezekiel Emanuel flies under the radar in the eyes of much of the American public, but this well-established bioethicist has a track record of his own.
This March, English professor Paul Hendrickson will walk the writing world’s equivalent of the red carpet for his third time.