College and bank partnerships raise concerns
Penn is among the hundreds of colleges and universities nationwide identified as holding partnerships with banks — agreements that may jeopardize a student’s best financial interests.
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Penn is among the hundreds of colleges and universities nationwide identified as holding partnerships with banks — agreements that may jeopardize a student’s best financial interests.
The subways and trolleys Penn students use to get around are piloting a new technology to reduce energy costs.
Philadelphia had the third-highest stolen cell phone rate nationwide in 2011, with $48 million worth of unrecovered phones, according to mobile security firm Lookout.
A king and queen proudly walked the aisle at Bodek Lounge after a night of African food, music and dance Friday night. This year, the Penn African Student Association assembled in Houston Hall for a semi-formal gala to mark the end of a week-long festival and featured the first ever Mr. and Ms. PASA Pageant.
If The Day After Tomorrow really does come, two graduate students in Penn’s School of Design have a plan they hope will save flooding cities around the world.
A professor in the School of Nursing is looking to promote the prevention of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases among black males through haircuts.
Two graduate students at Penn are looking to use their interest in medicine to improve eye care in Liberia.
One hundred and sixteen years after his arrival at Penn, W.E.B. Du Bois’ contributions and accomplishments have been recognized by the University.
Although most members of Penn’s Class of 2011 saw salary bumps, many graduates of the University’s smallest school could not say the same.
A group of School of Nursing students is looking to increase the visibility of males in the nursing population.
Nursing professionals at Penn are weighing the benefits and costs that may come with hospitals digitizing their patients’ records.
A School of Nursing professor is looking at ways to increase diversity at Penn and nationwide.
From mummies to ancient swords to pottery from the Iron Age, the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology has offered visitors a look far back into the past for over a century and a quarter.
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Would you go back 65 million years to see the extinction of dinosaurs, or would you travel back four billion years ago to discover how life originated? Olivia Judson, author of the award-winning international bestseller Dr. Tatiana’s Sex Advice to All Creation, addressed these possibilities at an event hosted by the Penn Humanities Forum.