Selling rock singles, saving Darfur
While other students were easing into the college experience, Wharton freshman Andrew Dudum was adding two new singles to iTunes.
886 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
While other students were easing into the college experience, Wharton freshman Andrew Dudum was adding two new singles to iTunes.
When the University purchased 24 acres of postal lands on the eastern edge of campus and launched a $3.5-billion fundraising drive in October, Athletic Director Steve Bilsky saw the opportunity to finally revamp his department's facilities.
This week marks the end of Daylight Saving Time. For most college students, that meant sleeping in an extra hour last Sunday morning. This year, however, you might have realized that DST came one week later than usual.
"Dutch Total Football?" Men's soccer coach Rudy Fuller laughed when his team was compared to the 1970s Netherlands teams with their flowing soccer styles, where players were versatile enough to play any position on the field.
L'Oreal thinks Wharton is worth it.
According to a study released by the Lumina Foundation for Education, your dream job could be in danger of being outsourced.
He was the son of a Founding Father, a general in the Indian Wars and in the War of 1812, Governor of the Indian Territory and a Representative and later a Senator from Ohio. And on a March morning in 1841, in our nation's capital, William Henry Harrison was inaugurated "ninth President of these United States!"
Boosting the highest percentage of international undergraduates in the Ivy League and $7.5 million awarded annually in loans to foreign students, Penn - which also admitted its highest percentage of international students early this cycle - has become one of the most internationally diverse schools in the nation.
Yasser El-Halaby wowed the squash world the last four years on his way to four straight individual titles - a feat never accomplished before. However, El-Halaby was just one part of a recent tradition of exceptional international squash players.
By the time the Quakers had a chance to lose, all the bounce had gone out of the ball.
After his team's win over Columbia, Quakers coach Glen Miller offered the usual accolades that a coach gives his team after such a dominating performance.
Penn has accepted 29 percent of early applicants for the Class of 2011, a group that will make up about 48 percent of the total class.
If all goes as expected for the Penn basketball team, its roster will swell to 17 or 18 players next year.
It was another night of pre-exam procrastination. My hallmate showed me her Facebook party album, a stream of male headshots popping up between photos of her babe brigade. Memories of New Student Orientation flashed through my mind, but something was different about these pictures.
Conor Turley, a 6-foot-7 forward from southern California, has rescinded his committment to play basketball for Brown and will instead join Glen Miller's Class of 2011 at Penn.
Recruiting international athletes to come to Penn is like reaching into Forrest Gump's box of chocolates: coaches never know what they're going to get.
Temperatures were expected to drop to 40 degrees at night, and there was a strong chance of rain.
No Penn student won a Rhodes scholarship this year, and the loss may be part of a larger decline of the Ivy League monopoly on major international awards.
Just when we thought we were safe, our friendly neighbor to the north revealed it has more on its mind than Mounties and maple syrup.
Four of the most powerful women in Penn's administration have had to face the difficulties of being among the first minority women in their positions.