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Freshman student-government candidates thought that popular networking site facebook.com would be a good campaigning tool.
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Freshman student-government candidates thought that popular networking site facebook.com would be a good campaigning tool.
There's no better way to kick off the voting season than with free food.
Student leaders are taking precautions to ensure that the next round of elections to a University governing body will proceed with less friction than last spring.
One key for one Quad seems to be the new policy for the three college houses lining Spruce Street.
One member of a group of student government leaders representing the Ivy League has decided to detach itself from the pack.
For the first time since arriving on campus a week ago, members of the Class of 2009 are officially freshmen.
Each branch of student government has brainstormed new ways to reach out to the 2,468 incoming freshman and thousands of returning students that will traverse Locust Walk this fall.
According to former Penn President Judith Rodin, five women contract HIV every minute -- two-thirds of them in Africa. Sex trafficking is the third-largest source of profit in illegal trade after drugs and weapons. Around the world, women face threats to their health.
It's never too late to find the career of your dreams, even if you need a second undergraduate degree to start it.
Students who take advantage of the free printing services in the McNeil Building and David Rittenhouse Laboratories will be disappointed beginning on April 18.
Nursing students had a chance to see another side of their school dean Thursday as they shared finger foods and conversation at Dean Afaf Meleis' Center City row home.
Nathan Smith isn't your typical College House dean. He likes to screen obscure Japanese movies for students, he loves the TV show Gilmore Girls and he has long, golden ringlets -- or at least he did until Sunday afternoon.
Nursing students will be resuscitating themselves this week with free pizza, ice cream and matching T-shirts.
On a typical afternoon, Locust Walk is filled with students walking, running and stumbling to class. Groups cluster together to chat, and bikes roll by here and there.
Over the past few years, changes to the federal funding of faculty research have left some Penn officials satisfied with their situation and others apprehensive about the future of research.
Forget school nurses. At Sayre Middle School they are going to be a thing of the past.
With high numbers of Sayre Middle School students facing obesity, diabetes and a lack of after-school activities, many Penn students and staff actively been lending a hand to the West Philadelphia school.
Marking the two-year anniversary of the war on Iraq, the Penn Anti-War Group organized an antiwar gathering yesterday afternoon -- consisting of a booth manned by a few individuals on Locust Walk.
For first-year School of Social Work graduate student Kevin Roach, community service means a new wardrobe and a lot of publicity.
For senior citizens living in west and southwest Philadelphia, "LIFE" begins around 70.