Hey Day moved back to a Friday for 2009 | Interactive feature
This year, most juniors and seniors will celebrate Hey Day without missing classes.
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This year, most juniors and seniors will celebrate Hey Day without missing classes.
On March 11, a state House committee approved House Bill 300, which, if passed in the Senate, will ban discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity in Pennsylvania.
This week, the Penn Women's Center is celebrating its 35th anniversary with several service projects to benefit the Women Against Abuse shelter, Philadelphia's sole domestic-violence center.
As of 2007, 33 million people were infected with HIV internationally, according to AVERT, an international HIV and AIDS charity. For decades, researchers around the globe have been working to alleviate this annually growing number of people infected with the disease.
To recruit more lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and ally students to Penn, the LGBT Center and the Office of Undergraduate Admissions have begun reaching out to Gay-Straight Alliance groups at local Philadelphia high schools.
While Penn students are expected to be proficient in English, no such requirement is made for their parents.
One of the major complaints about the required freshman meal plan is that there is nothing to do with the inevitable unused meals at the end of the semester.
Poet, author, civil rights activist and "Phenomenal Woman" Maya Angelou will speak this evening at 6:30 in Irvine Auditorium.
A Lambda Law protest of the national "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy last Thursday raised recurring questions of the presence of military recruiters and the Reserve Officer Training Corps on campus.
The Student Activities Council General Body will vote Feb. 18 on whether to fund Penn's Athletes and Allies Tackling Homophobia.
Since it was passed in 1993, the Clinton administration's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy has prevented open members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community from serving in the military due to claims of persecution and forced resignations.
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The University's health-insurance policy may be in violation of its nondiscrimination policy, many members of the Penn community say.
Sharing a cultural heritage doesn't mean students hail from the same country.
Carlos Rivera-Anaya, 2005 alumnus and chairman of the United Minorities Council in 2004, may have graduated, but he still raids the kitchen at the Greenfield Intercultural Center.
Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy continues to live on in members of the Penn and greater Philadelphia communities.
Comedians may be more effective than politicians in addressing the tensions surrounding the current conflict in the Middle East.
Although a Democrat has never held the position of Pennsylvania Attorney General, that could change this year.
Law & Order is the second longest-running primetime drama in television history, and yesterday Penn students could've killed for the chance to meet one of the writers responsible for the show's success.
In honor of the United Nations' International Day for the Eradication of Poverty last Friday, 2005 Wharton alumnus Gabriel Mandujano examined the poverty issue just blocks away from central campus.