Freshman Footsteps | Reflecting on semester’s end
“I didn’t do anything over the break, which is why I’m drowned in work at the moment,” said Wharton freshman Shiv Kapoor in a familiar refrain, repeated by students all over campus.
Below are your search results. You can also try a Basic Search.
“I didn’t do anything over the break, which is why I’m drowned in work at the moment,” said Wharton freshman Shiv Kapoor in a familiar refrain, repeated by students all over campus.
College freshman Miles Hodges didn’t initially plan to “do the whole college thing.”
The Ivy League is technically an athletic conference, but to most of the country and beyond, the name connotes so much more.
Unlike most freshmen he knows, Shiv Kapoor — a Wharton freshman from New Delhi — was not nervous for his first midterm last Thursday.
When asked what he hoped to gain from participating in the Battle of the Bands at the Social Planning and Events Committee’s first Fall Festival this Saturday, College sophomore and member of the band, Redheads Are Trouble, Drew Samoyedny joked, “We want to be sex icons.”
While studying abroad in Barcelona, Spain last spring, College senior Madeline Kronovet was not particularly surprised to find herself being mugged at 4 a.m. on her way home from an evening out with friends.
In retrospect, Shiv Kapoor, a Wharton freshman from New Delhi, decided that having a roommate would have made his move-in experience to Riepe College House a little easier.
Penn prides itself on a diverse campus, representing many ethnicities and nationalities throughout both undergraduate and graduate programs.
Penn students are becoming famous for not eating - or rather, for donating their uneaten meals to the homeless.
Although many agree that Penn is supportive of the Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender community, two students are trying to increase that support in the School of Dental Medicine.
Wharton sophomore Eduardo Mayoral starts each morning by reading not The Daily Pennsylvanian or The New York Times, but El Tiempo, a Colombian newspaper, online.
Going off to grad school can seem like entering a foreign country - especially to those coming from one.
For some potential Penn applicants, dropping the standardized testing requirement may result in the difference between an acceptance and a rejection.
According to a new study, black students who are either first- or second-generation American are overrepresented at selective colleges and universities, compared with those whose families have resided in the United States longer.
For 2007 College alumna Sophia Termini, the Miss Philadelphia Pageant last week was a great way to help pay for med school, but she will never repeat it.
*This article appeared in the 2009 joke issue.
Yesterday evening, Penn students took back the night.
With their teams struggling to accumulate Ivy League championships, Penn athletes combined forces for a greater cause at the Pride Games on Hill Field Sunday - and still didn't come away with first place.
Tonight, 66 lucky lesbian gay bisexual transgender students will have the chance to either screw or be screwed.
During spring break, a dozen graduate students in the School of Design went to China to preserve history.