Admissions | Early's out for elite schools, but 'double-dippers' not an issue
With Harvard and Princeton holding out until the spring, could a binding early-decision acceptance to Penn be not so binding?
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With Harvard and Princeton holding out until the spring, could a binding early-decision acceptance to Penn be not so binding?
Instead of orientation seminars and sorority rush events, Florida State University student Callie Broughton spent her freshman year eating paella in Spain and riding camels in Morocco.
Sometimes, it's not very good to give, or to receive.
Philadelphia Runner, a local specialized running store located on 16th and Sansom streets, will open a second store next to the Inn at Penn in December.
Last fall, College senior Jesse Benton was searching for housing. He realized he had two options: save money by living further away from campus, or splurge for a spacious apartment closer to school.
Radian Apartments, the highly touted complex designed to provide more housing for undergraduates, released its apartment pricing for its fall opening last week, and rents for the complex are slated to be among the highest in the area.
Though thrust into the limelight rather suddenly, Interim Dean of Admissions Eric Kaplan is no stranger to Penn's admissions office.
After Fadeke Agboke walked out of her Penn admissions interview two years ago, she thought her responses were dull and her chances of getting in were slim.
High-school students who hate the alphabet soup of admissions testing may instead opt to Zinch.
A change in admissions deans notwithstanding, Penn continues to maintain that early decision is here to stay.
Scientists often joke that, instead of having a genie grant three wishes, they'd just prefer three grants.
Part two in a four-part series
Most Wharton undergrads take their summer jobs and turn them into a career.
It's back to the top five.
Long before her expected arrival, the audience had already packed the Kelly Writers House Seminar Room, buzzing with anticipation for Jamaica Kincaid's reading last evening.
The man who singlehandedly made the theory of evolution a household name when he published On the Origins of Species had his 198th birthday celebrated yesterday at the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
Although Japanese geishas have not traded their traditional dancing for the flying kicks of martial arts, the title of Veronica Chambers' newest book, Kickboxing Geishas, describes the changing roles of Japanese women in modern society.