LT's: French bistro with an urban twist
Urban Paris night club meets a quaint bistro along the Seine in a remarkable blend of fine dining and an intoxicating atmosphere -- and it's right in Penn's own backyard.
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Urban Paris night club meets a quaint bistro along the Seine in a remarkable blend of fine dining and an intoxicating atmosphere -- and it's right in Penn's own backyard.
Despite less-than-optimal weather conditions for the second year in a row, students kicked off Spring Fling a week early with free food and entertainment.
What was once an old toy store hidden on a quiet street in Old City now offers any food connoisseur a variety of fine cuisine with an urban twist.
It's 11 p.m. the night before a large final paper is due, and students are in dire need of someone to edit their three-page introduction down to a single page. The professor is long gone by now, and the teaching assistant is off doing his or her own research, leaving the student with few options.
Imagine a place where students can play squash with their suitemates, go to dinner with all of their closest friends and watch a screening of a movie in the theater -- all without having to leave their dorm.
At football games, loyal Penn fans sing "The Red and the Blue" and throw toast onto Franklin Field after the third quarter.
From packed crowds at Irvine Auditorium to large numbers of undergraduates signing up for Professor Stephen Gale's class on terrorism, Penn's initial response to the Sept. 11 attacks and subsequent events in Afghanistan have prompted the creation of a series of additional programs to provide undergraduates with a greater understanding of international affairs.
After a semester of preparing to certify students with computer skills, administrators have both identified a director and secured funds for the new program.
For the first two years at Penn, many undergraduates wander aimlessly from class to class, undecided about their choice for a major.
With the creation of Penn's Memorial Scholarship Fund, announced yesterday, the University will work to fund the education of those whose family members were victims in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Listening to orchestral music in Zellerbach Theater, Penn administrators and federal officials came together to honor crime prevention experts from around the world -- and to celebrate the opening of the new Penn criminology center.
To his students, English Professor Peter Stallybrass is the most engaging scholar of Shakespeare at Penn. Among his colleagues, he is one of the best scholars in Renaissance literature.
For the first time in eighteen months, History Department Chairman Jonathan Steinberg can open his windows for a breath of fresh air.
From donation tables in Houston Hall to Greek coffeehouses, Penn students have already collected over $15,000 to help the relief efforts in New York and Washington following last week's deadly terrorist attacks.
Joining four more of Penn's finest scholars, Arthur Waldron deemed Tuesday's unparalleled and unimaginable terrorist attacks the most catastrophic intelligence failure since the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941.
The spread of information, while always important, is deemed especially so now.
One mother frantically called her daughter, worried that Independence Hall and the surrounding area would be the next American landmark to be attacked by terrorists. A grandmother who does not even drive a car offered to come pick up her granddaughter to take her away from the city.
The English Department has entered a new era with changes to the College Writing Program and the hiring of additional faculty -- and with those changes comes a new leader.
Reaffirming its commitment to writing and undergraduate education, the College of Arts and Sciences has commissioned a faculty task force to re-evaluate the College Writing Program and will be conducting a national search next year for a new program director.
One year after the College of Arts and Sciences implemented the pilot curriculum, administrators and students are starting to take a step back and examine the potential strengths and weaknesses of the fledgling program.