Keeping the peace with your landlord
After spending their freshman year living in dorms, many Penn students opt for the more independent life of an off-campus apartment. But as they begin their hunt, many are unprepared to deal with landlords.
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After spending their freshman year living in dorms, many Penn students opt for the more independent life of an off-campus apartment. But as they begin their hunt, many are unprepared to deal with landlords.
Moving off-campus can be a daunting task, but one office is ready to lend students a hand.
Penn is moving closer to cutting the wires on its existing Internet service.
College sophomore Natalia Rimolo's summer internship search lasted all of one week.
Nine years ago, then-College senior James McCormack was shot at 42nd and Pine streets. He had left his girlfriend's apartment to go grocery shopping at 9:30 p.m. when a man demanded his car keys. When McCormack refused, the man shot him in the stomach and fled.
"Ivy League Grind: It's the Naked Truth," screeched the headline on the front page of yesterday's Philadelphia Daily News.
Wharton senior Nathaniel Stevens thought his online marketing firm was getting off to a nice start. By October, he had nearly 20 steady clients and was generating enough revenue to pay four full-time employees.
So long as they were not previously over the e-mail quota, students in the School of Arts and Sciences got a nice bit of news in their inbox last Friday.
[Gustavo Centeno/The Daily Pennsylvanian] Matthew Waddell, a recent graduate of the Engineering School, and Candace Morris, a College senior, talk about their experiences searching for jobs this semester. Both are currently waiting for potential
Looking over one of his older articles posted online, Computer and Information Science professor Fernando Pereira was surprised to find a surge in downloads.
As College senior Candace Morris and 2005 Engineering graduate Matthew Waddell stand in the McNeil Building, dressed in their best business attire, they check their resumes one last time and wonder, "Where will I be next year?"
Thanks to a $9.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, the Penn Center for Molecular Discovery will open tomorrow.
Harvard university will finally take definitive action regarding the representation of females among its tenured faculty.
Since January last year, the percentage of standing female faculty at the University increased from 26.7 percent to 27.3 percent. When the School of Medicine is disregarded, the percentage grew from 28.7 percent to 29.8 percent.
As performing arts groups gear up for their spring performances this week, many clubs are looking to the Web as a cheap and effective means of getting information to the student body.
After fighting the Nazis, George W. Bush and bad cuisine, the French are ready to take on the real enemy: Google.
An earlier start to the school year, longer exam and reading periods and more breaks may be in store for students during the fall semester in future years.
As military technology continues to improve, more and more robots are being used for surveillance and search and rescue missions.
An electronic window has opened for those who want to read scholarly journal articles, conference papers, technical reports and dissertations written by Penn faculty and students.
Though unknown to many, the Office of Off-Campus Living is solely devoted to helping students make the transition to living outside of Penn's dorms.