The Daily Pennsylvanian selected as newspaper Pacemaker award finalist
The Associated Collegiate Press has recognized The Daily Pennsylvanian as a newspaper Pacemaker award finalist.
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The Associated Collegiate Press has recognized The Daily Pennsylvanian as a newspaper Pacemaker award finalist.
This story is developing and will continue to be updated.
Anna Tsing, an author and anthropology professor at the University of California at Santa Cruz, delivered a lecture for the Wolf Humanities Center's Dr. S.T. Lee Distinguished Lecture Series in the Humanities as the opener to this year's forum on keywords.
From high in the stands of Franklin Field’s 52,593-seat stadium, a jersey number is often the only thing differentiating one Penn football player from another.
It was a crisp November day at Franklin Field when his last drive began, with a crackle in air and a century-old rivalry on the line.
On Tuesday evening, across Philadelphia, people gathered to watch the first presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President and 1968 Wharton graduate Donald Trump. From the on-campus watch parties to the debate spin room, see how The Daily Pennsylvanian photographers captured a night filled with anticipation, excitement, and emotion.
For the first time since campus turmoil erupted last fall, a Penn president sat down for an interview with The Daily Pennsylvanian to address the tumult of the past year and articulate the University's path forward.
Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters marched to the National Constitution Center on Wednesday night, demonstrating near the building for around two hours while the presidential debate took place inside.
For months, Penn has pushed to cut Amy Wax’s salary and strip her of University honors. But it can’t seem to stop the controversial University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School professor from bringing a white nationalist to campus.
Penn was ranked the fourth worst school for free speech according to a September report released by FIRE.
Penn ranked fourth-worst for free speech on college campuses in a recent report released by The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.
A week after Penn men’s soccer returned to Rhodes Field in electrifying fashion, Penn women’s soccer ultimately couldn’t replicate the magic.
Last Saturday, Aug. 31, marked an unofficial national holiday — one so steeped in American tradition that it may as well appear on the calendar — the first full Saturday of college football. And while football fever swept campuses across the country, eight of the nation’s oldest programs remained dormant.
Penn offers a variety of health and wellness resources to students as they navigate their undergraduate experience.
The Mason on Chestnut, an off-campus residence near Penn’s campus, has faced management changes, failed inspections, and resident dissatisfaction since 2020, when development company CSC acquired and renovated what was formerly International House Philadelphia. An eight-day shutdown due to a Cease Operations Order is the latest incident in the building’s tainted history.
The Mason on Chestnut, a popular off-campus residence that houses many Penn students, received a Cease Operations Order from the City of Philadelphia on June 11 due to multiple city code violations, resulting in an eight-day shutdown.
On June 6, the Penn administration shared new temporary open expression guidelines related to campus events and demonstrations with the University community.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — In a season where it was never expected to make it this far, Penn baseball was counted out for the last time.
Penn has upheld sanctions against University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School professor Amy Wax following her history of discriminatory remarks and two years of disciplinary proceedings with little precedent.
University leadership correctly recognized that the recent encampment protest placed many members of the Penn community “under threat.” Reading now how the story is trying to be twisted through mental gymnastics is dangerous, not only to the community members who have been under threat but also to the students who are being led to believe that breaking the law is acceptable. Reading statements from the Penn chapter of the American Association of University Professors throughout the year — as well as their press conference that paid so much attention to the police who cleared the encampment, and no attention to how we got there — is a remarkable interpretation of the facts of the case, and especially breathtaking from scholars who claim to have expertise in critical thinking. Professors, to me, are individuals whom students should look up to as those who search for the truth. But, reading statement after statement throughout the year, disappointingly, it seems that the truth for AAUP-Penn is full of misstatements and highly biased interpretations.