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(11/02/11 2:02am)
In the search for course management options other than Blackboard, Penn Libraries is pilot testing Sakai, a site whose central functions include the ability to create dynamic websites for student groups and researchers.
(10/27/11 2:16am)
While he was a student at Penn, Larry Maltz spent his free time in the library. But unlike other students, he wasn’t poring over statistics or chemistry — he was reading. For fun.
(10/25/11 3:13am)
1974 Wharton graduate Leo Levinson could very well owe his 40-year career in advertising to an order of General Tso’s.
(10/24/11 12:19am)
On Saturday afternoon, people passing by 34th Street between Walnut and Chestnut streets stopped at the sight of Penn students tackling each other on broomsticks.
(10/21/11 11:35pm)
By 4:30 p.m. on Oct. 21, most Eric Cantor protesters had emptied out of Huntsman Hall and began marching eastward back into Center City. That morning, amid reports of anticipated protesters and discrepancies over the attendance policy, Cantor canceled his Wharton Leadership Lecture scheduled for Friday afternoon in Huntsman.
(10/19/11 1:50am)
Despite serving Penn students for nearly all of last semester, Kitchen at Penn’s closure last May became permanent after its owners failed to find a permanent space.
(10/14/11 1:18am)
Vote Robert Hsu for Class of 2015 president! I am organized, responsible and passionate, and I want to make our experience at Penn the best ever!
(09/29/11 1:52am)
It’s not every day that you wash your hands next to Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban and MC Hammer.
(09/19/11 2:15am)
A microwave that plays YouTube videos, phone apps that tell you where to go for dinner and a website that turns tweets into poetry — these were just some of the many creations to emerge from Towne Building this weekend during PennApps, Penn’s bi-annual hackathaon.
(09/16/11 6:53am)
As Harvard’s Rob Steinberg launched the ball into the air, a hush fell over the 40,000 spectators at Franklin Field. The buzz in anticipation of the second half had subsided, and a brief hesitation was all that remained.
(09/15/11 5:12am)
Men’s club soccer captain Ben Wang recalls a spring day last year when field space was so limited, the team held practice on varsity baseball’s batting cage field.
(09/12/11 2:11am)
Soon, flying robots and ancient Roman farms will be part of the latest Penn research projects to receive funding from the National Science Foundation.
(08/31/11 1:45am)
Over the next week, Penn’s newest sorority will move into its first house on campus.
(07/28/11 8:19am)
Penn has developed a concrete plan to increase diversity in its faculty.
(07/28/11 8:12am)
Penn will soon launch the world’s first undergraduate engineering curriculum that studies networked technologies such as Facebook and Google.
(07/07/11 7:34am)
After a recent Google search of my name, I came across a disturbing realization. Just a few months serving as Executive Editor of The Daily Pennsylvanian, I had unwittingly accumulated a page of unwanted contributions in articles that I did not realize would show up on the Internet and attracted a slew of unwanted commentary about my handling of the job.
(05/26/11 3:07am)
A robot has one new skill under his metal belt thanks to Penn researchers.
(04/28/11 3:38am)
You know what feels like it happened forever ago? The College Search.
(04/27/11 11:38pm)
You know what feels like it happened forever ago? The College Search.
(04/20/11 9:55am)
On Tuesday, April 19, The Daily Pennsylvanian published a guest column written by College of Liberal and Professional Studies student Christopher Abreu. In it, he described his run-in with two instances of racism on Penn’s campus and suggested that minority students shouldn’t come to Penn. The next day, more than 200 students and faculty members dressed in black joined hands on College Green in a silent protest against racism. Printed below are several letters we received responding to racism on campus, including one from Penn President Amy Gutmann.