First Black Ivy League Business Conference held at Penn
2016 is a year of firsts and on Friday, Nov. 11, the Black Wharton Undergraduate Association started another: the first ever Black Ivy League Business Conference.
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2016 is a year of firsts and on Friday, Nov. 11, the Black Wharton Undergraduate Association started another: the first ever Black Ivy League Business Conference.
As 1968 Wharton graduate Donald Trump rose to the top of the field of Republican presidential candidates, his Penn classmates said they watched with dread.
“They’re just kids,” “No justice,” “No peace.”
In November, I urge members of the Penn community to vote for Hillary Clinton as the next president. Such a vote should not be treated as a vote for the “lesser of two evils” but rather as a vote for a seasoned politician who has spent her career fighting for women’s and children’s causes.
At the mere age of 18, Wharton freshman Jordan Williams and Georgetown freshman Brandon Iverson already have experience running multiple businesses together — and a clothing line that promotes entrepreneurship is just their latest.
Everyone from Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf to the University administration has commented on the flyers posted around campus this week that included an email protesters decried as an example of rape culture.
Playing to a nearly full lecture room in Huntsman Hall, Planned Parenthood President Cecile Richards addressed millennial voters in another attempt by the Clinton campaign to reach out to the youth at the University.
The White House recently announced that Malia Obama will be attending Harvard in 2017, after a gap year. This is great news for nobody, because Harvard is objectively the worst Ivy and hogs all the children of presidents. But it seems like her college plans are definite, so we can't do anything. What don't seem definite, however, are Malia's plans for the gap year – so check out the suggestions we've provided below.
As the school year draws to an end, Penn’s Class of 2020 is preparing to transition to college life this fall. The Daily Pennsylvanian caught up with three incoming students to talk about how they decided to come to Penn.
Nostalgia alert! On Wednesday April 20th, the Penn Museum will be answering our personal call to bring back the 90s by organizing their own version of Nickelodeon's Legends of the Hidden Temple. If you happen have no idea what the show is (it originally aired from 1993 to 1995, after all), Legends of the Hidden Temple was a game show based on the Indiana Jones movies, in which pre-teens competed in a series of physical and mental tasks that took place inside a "Mayan temple." Despite some high-key cultural appropriation, the show definitely deserved more than its two-year run, and now the Penn museum is giving it a one-day revival-- but only for adults ;)
College sophomore Taylor Hamilton is turning his passion for drawing into a platform for social activism.
As we wait anxiously to find out who’s headlining Fling, we have a lot of questions. Will it be another EDM artist? Will the dancing penises return for a cameo? Only time will tell. For now, we can only hope that whoever it is will better than the following craftspeople:
A Penn student has combined her love of fashion and business to create good-humored apparel, from plays on popular logos to photos of Penn landmarks.
Imagine coming here from a country where you, a well-off expat, were used to a lifestyle that was pretty exorbitant and exceptional by most standards. Chances are you were living a world away from the typical local life. Locals went to different schools, sometimes spoke a different language and could tell instinctively that you were not one of them. Not just because you were of a different race, but also because of the way you carried yourself — loud and large, Western-sounding and oblivious to the norm.
Around 2:30 a.m. Sunday morning, two men robbed a Penn-affiliated man near 41st and Pine streets at gunpoint, the latest in a string of West Philadelphia robberies.
Mayday, mayday! Word on the street is that a number of Penn’s most prestigious student groups – fraternities and sororities – have had somewhat disappointing numbers for their pledge classes this semester. We get it: competition is fierce, but maybe you should’ve had free Chipotle at your first rush event instead of Qdoba. Have no fear, though. UTB is here to help you out. Here are 20 ways to get more totally awesome pledges for your #PC16:
Penn’s research labs have consistently missed their deadlines to report the results of their clinical research studies. The labs are required by Public Law 110-85 to publish their results to ClinicalTrials.gov within 12 months of the completion of their studies or face fines from the National Institutes of Health.
Iztaccihuatl is a South Philadelphia BYO that serves as a regular Mexican restaurant during the day and a "glorified hall party" for twerking teens at night.
At this year’s Boys and Girls Clubs of America gala held in Washington, D.C., College freshman Whitney Stewart was named National Youth of the Year. The ceremony, held annually for the past 70 years, included BGCA alumni such as Denzel Washington and was the culminating point in Stewart’s seven year-long commitment to the organization.
While many teens spent the summer balancing internships, classes and beach outings, one Penn student was busy questioning a foreign head of state.