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(01/26/23 3:26am)
Tenured Penn Carey Law School professor Amy Wax filed a grievance against Dean Theodore Ruger, initiating a counter-complaint to the University’s disciplinary proceedings against her.
(01/21/23 11:05pm)
A point shy from doubling its score from its last time out against Princeton, Penn women’s basketball dominated Yale 79-57.
(01/18/23 11:58pm)
“What if Yale finds out?”
(01/18/23 1:07am)
Barely a day goes by without some breathless thinkpiece about the cataclysmic effects of ChatGPT sashaying its way into the news I read. It’s going to kill coding! It’s going to kill the Common App personal statement! It’s going to, um, kill search engines and replace them with NFTs!
(01/17/23 2:16am)
McDonald’s longtime location on 40th and Walnut streets closed on Jan. 16, paving the way for its redevelopment into a mixed-used office building operated by Penn.
(01/11/23 3:06am)
Multiple floors in Harnwell and Harrison College Houses flooded over winter break due to cracked pipes that resulted from open windows letting in cold air.
(12/08/22 9:01am)
A senior and a freshman. A passer and a shooter. A starter and a finisher.
(12/09/22 8:10pm)
I don’t know what I expected after I watched the October 22nd Pennsylvania Senate debate, and saw Former Lt. Gov. John Fetterman labor through his responses, struggling to defend himself against accusations lodged by his Republican opponent, Mehmet Oz. I knew the world would not respond kindly — try as we might, we are not yet accustomed to the idea that a politician need not be perfectly articulate to succeed at his job. But I didn’t know whether Fetterman’s debate performance would cost him the upcoming election. I was not sure that we, as Americans, were ready to elect a man with an auditory processing disorder to high office.
(12/07/22 3:37am)
What a difference a week makes.
(12/08/22 4:36am)
In 2022, the world saw a myriad of protests erupt, social issues and conflicts arise, and the saliency of the COVID-19 pandemic dissipate. While sitting in lecture halls, playing in the Palestra, and eating in Houston Hall, the Penn community amounted to similar challenges.
(12/06/22 4:06am)
As the University's disciplinary proceedings against Penn Carey Law School professor Amy Wax continue, her classes are seeing lower student enrollment.
(12/04/22 12:00am)
When the La Salle Explorers made their voyage to the Palestra on Saturday afternoon, they discovered an unstoppable force by the name of Jordan Dingle. But in a back-and-forth thriller, Penn’s men’s basketball could not muster enough support for its superstar to send the Explorers home with a defeat.
(11/30/22 4:20am)
Over the past week, protests erupted across China against the government’s stringent COVID-19 lockdown policies after 10 people died in a fire in Ürümqi, China, eliciting responses and comments around the world. The Penn community, roughly 19% of which is composed of international students, responded in kind. With candlelights, blank sheets of paper, and chanting, here is a look into the vigil in solidarity with those protesting in China.
(11/28/22 9:54am)
Thousands more employees have left Twitter following Elon Musk's acquisition of the company, in addition to Musk's recent layoffs.
(11/22/22 3:34pm)
I was always perplexed when I looked up “University of Pennsylvania” just to find that their expected graduation rate is 4-6 years. 4-6 years? Don’t students graduate in four?
(11/21/22 6:53am)
Finishing off a season with its most wins since 2010, Penn football had a lot of players step up big this season. The Daily Pennsylvanian takes a look at some of the Quakers’ brightest stars on the year.
(11/21/22 5:51am)
PRINCETON, N.J. — Perhaps it was too sunny on Saturday afternoon in Princeton for the stars to align for Penn football, but the team’s future is decidedly bright.
(11/18/22 1:47pm)
The Republican-run House impeached Krasner, a Democrat, by a vote of 107-85, mostly along party lines. Krasner was impeached for his policies’ contribution to “record levels of violent crime” in the City of Philadelphia, according to The Wall Street Journal. A trial will be held in the State Senate, also led by the Republican party. The District Attorney's office did not respond to a request for comment.
(11/28/22 6:16am)
In 1993, a Penn first year, Eden Jacobowitz, yelled at a group of Black sorority sisters making noise outside of his dorm: “Shut up, you water buffalo! If you're looking for a party, there's a zoo a mile from here.”