Second Spring Fling opener announced
Spring Fling is going to be a riot.
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Spring Fling is going to be a riot.
Deliberation of a single amendment to transfer funds from the Social Planning and Events Committee Spring Fling Carnival budget to the Skimmerfest budget kept the Undergraduate Assembly in session until past midnight during Sunday night’s annual budget meeting, leading other student government branches to question UA efficiency.
There will be magic in the air for Spring Fling this year.
Instead of holding its originally scheduled budget amendment meeting this past Sunday, the UA met privately in a closed caucus regarding an unsuccessful petition to impeach the UA president. The meeting contributed to a postponement of the annual budget process, leaving other branches of student government without an official budget allocation until March 23.
Each year the Undergraduate Assembly completes its budget negotiations before spring break to avoid the political infighting that can characterize election season.
There is a reason Beyonce is unlikely to ever headline Spring Fling.
The Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement for the District of Philadelphia will “likely” be on campus during Spring Fling again this year, continuing last year’s presence of undercover officers, Vice President for Public Safety Maureen Rush said.
One class at Penn celebrates Black History Month every month.
Can I take your picture?”
“Can I take your picture?” One Penn student shields her camera from the flurries falling from the sky, waiting for a group of tourists to respond.
As midterm season tumbles along, the College of Arts and Sciences is undergoing its own evaluation.
At their meeting on Sunday, the Undergraduate Assembly debated whether Penn should divest from its investments in tobacco companies. The University Council in engaged in an ongoing discussion of tobacco divestment. Legal Studies and Business Ethics professor Diana Robertson and philosophy professor Michael Weisberg brought the topic to the floor of the UA, encouraging the members to support the ban on Tobacco divestment. Some peer institutions like Harvard and Stanford have policies against investing in tobacco companies. Penn does not, making it the only one of the top five medical schools in the country to lack a tobacco restriction, Weisberg said. Penn has not divested its assets since 2006, when the University withdrew investments from seven oil companies operating in Sudan in response to the genocide being committed in Darfur. Weisberg said that tobacco companies engineer cigarettes to be more addictive and target children aged 13 to 17 in their advertisements. “The term ‘moral evil’ should be applied here,” Weisberg said. “It is something that conflicts with University values.” Engineering freshman Alex George said that tobacco companies’ actions are not a “moral evil,” but rather natural to an economic market. “By dissociating ourselves, we lose something — mostly financial returns,” George said. University Council will discuss divestment at a meeting next week. The UA also added a new member to its ranks. Following the resignation of College junior Danielle Golub, her seat will be filled by College junior Kyle Webster. Related: "Penn receives $20 million to fund Tobacco Center":http://www.thedp.com/r/22f9b9cc
The Wharton Undergraduate Giving Society wants you to “pay it forward.”
Last week, the Student Committee on Undergraduate Education elected College junior Lucas Siegmund as its new chair. The DP sat down with him to find out more about SCUE’s plans for the semester.
Everyone has a Barry in his life – that ruthlessly crude friend who lacks any semblance of a filter.
At its meeting on Sunday, the Undergraduate Assembly discussed the proposition of a new pre-orientation program dedicated to research.
Brush up on your disco and practice your peace signs – Spring Fling is going to be a groovy blast from the past.
They gather in Houston Hall about twice a month bearing baked goods and boxes of tissues.
The UA discussed the current state of student mental health and potential improvements for the Penn system of mental health services at its first meeting of the semester on Sunday.
Don’t ask for this year’s full Feb Club schedule. It’s a secret.