Gutmann takes a stance against bullying
Gutmann released a video Friday afternoon as part of the national It Gets Better Project, a video campaign to prevent suicide among lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students.
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Gutmann released a video Friday afternoon as part of the national It Gets Better Project, a video campaign to prevent suicide among lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students.
Organizers of the Laramie Residency at Penn hope the presentations will spark discussions about bullying of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students on campus.
Following the Saturday arrest of Interfraternity Council President and Wharton senior Christian Lunoe, the IFC is making preparations for the possibility that he will resign.
Last Friday, the Latino Coalition elected its new board members. Wharton sophomores Angel Contrera and Dionicio Herrera will serve as chairman and vice-chairman for 2010-2011, respectively.
With the 2010 midterm elections now over, many students living illegally in the United States look toward the lame-duck congressional period as a time when their dreams might come true.
Wharton alumnus Raynard Kington is used to breaking the mold. Earlier this year, he became the first openly gay president of Grinnell College, one of the nation’s top liberal arts colleges. He is also the first black individual and first physician in the role.
Scott Davenport believes that everyone should have the freedom to marry.
For 1997 College graduate Audrey Stein, becoming a writer did not require courage — it was something that she needed to do.
Love Your Body — a simple mantra, yet many Penn students find it difficult to practice on a daily basis.
While Penn is one of the most gay-friendly universities in the country, the athletic community here is arguably lagging behind.
Five undocumented immigrants joined the freshman class this year, according to La Casa Latina, the cultural resource center for Latino students.
College junior Lorna Bernhoft was injured from a 15-foot fall at an off-campus house early Tuesday morning, according to University spokeswoman Lori Doyle.
“You are loved” — this is the message that students will be chalking all over campus today as part of a national campaign to prevent suicide among lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students.
It’s great to be gay at Penn, according to Newsweek, the publication that recently ranked Penn as the most gay-friendly college in the United States.
The DREAM Act, which would allow undocumented student immigrants to attend college, enlist in the military and become permanent U.S. residents, failed to pass as an amendment to a federal defense spending bill Tuesday afternoon.
The Blarney Stone, a bar and restaurant at 3929 Sansom St., was ordered to close on Monday by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board. The restaurant will reopen Tuesday at 11 a.m., according to owner Kevin Kearney.
With on-campus recruiting in full swing, an increased number of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students are using LGBT networks within companies to help them navigate the job market.
A California federal judge’s recent ruling that “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” is unconstitutional put “one more nail in the coffin” of the policy which prevents openly lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals from serving in the military, according to Director of the LGBT Center Bob Schoenberg.
The Lambda Alliance, Penn’s umbrella organization for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community, will be working with the Admissions Office to expand its outreach to LGBT students admitted under early decision this fall.
Penn professor and 1996 College graduate Salamishah Tillet was raped twice as an undergraduate at Penn.