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After a year of scavenger hunts and pie-eating contests, the Yen cohort has come out on top.
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After a year of scavenger hunts and pie-eating contests, the Yen cohort has come out on top.
A small, dimly-lit room in the corner of Rodin College House offered a haven last night for students trying to cope with Monday's tragic shootings at Virginia Polytechnic Institute.
When Virginia Tech sophomore Ashley Roe left school yesterday, the campus, normally bustling with 26,000 students, was "a ghost town."
After 19 years of work, Penn has installed the final piece in an 18,700-foot jigsaw puzzle.
When it comes to expanding the study of warfare, professors may be fighting an uphill battle.
Robert Baldi lived in Hill College House for only the first few days of his freshman year before moving out.
For the lucky residents of Mayer Hall, laundry troubles may be a thing of the past.
Incoming freshmen will no longer have to rely on chat rooms or online videos to figure out which college house to apply to.
Penn has given the old Hillel building a two-month reprieve.
Three years after Stephen Colbert came to campus, the man who replaced him on The Daily Show is following suit.
Transgender students at Harvard University may not have to jump through hoops for housing accommodations anymore.
A male freshman was injured at the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity house over the weekend and is currently undergoing medical treatment at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
In a city covered with over 2,700 murals, Penn's walls remain strikingly blank.
At Yale University, bright ideas don't necessarily require that much energy.
Philadelphia's Independence Mall is getting a face lift, with a bit of a Jewish flair.
Before connecting students to the Internet, Penn computing officials may need to connect with students first.
Pennsylvania's biotechnology industry may soon receive a revitalizing shot in the arm this year.
When it comes to global warming, Earth sciences professor Robert Giegengack gets heated up about people playing politics.
Last night, Rodin College House residents were given specific instructions: Close the windows, shut the bedroom door, go to a lounge-less floor, and listen up.
For 800 unlucky students on Jan. 27, the Medical College Admissions Test proved a test of nerves rather than a test of knowledge.