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Due to a recent $100,000 federal appropriation to nonprofit campus safety organization Security on Campus, security administrators at Penn will receive additional training on complying with regulations for reporting on-campus crimes this summer.
On Dec. 28, former Penn lecturer and Indiana University assistant professor Don Belton, 53, was discovered dead of stab wounds in his kitchen, according to an article published Dec. 30 in the Indy Star.
Incidents of crime in December dropped by 23 percent compared to December of last year.
Sarah Jane Littleford '09 was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship Monday.
Last month, Penn School of Dental Medicine expanded its involvement with the local Philadelphia community by launching a new initiative promoting oral health.
On Monday morning, students came together to advocate acceptance of all religions, ethnicities and orientations. They were responding to a protest against Hillel launched by the Westboro Baptist Church — a group widely known for its anti-Semitic and homophobic views.
As a result of a letter Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) recently issued to ten top medical schools, the School of Medicine examined its current policies regarding "medical ghostwriting” and other forms of plagiarism.
Wednesday night, the United Minorities Council elected Wharton and Nursing junior G.J. Melendez-Torres the new chairman and College junior Jacqueline Chaudhry vice chairwoman.
For School of Design students Sahar Moin and Stephanie Ulrich, possibilities for urban development extend beyond the city limits of Philadelphia or New York.
This year, Penn produced no domestic Rhodes scholars this year.
The second installment of Career Services’ “The State of Things” panel series examined the impact of the current economy on careers in the nonprofit sector yesterday.
The infamous “wind tunnel” between the high-rise college houses may soon come to serve a practical purpose.
For third-year Penn Law student Andrew Bingham, music — once a pastime — has opened up new professional possibilities.
In response to prolonged elevator delays, Harrison College House residents and staff have drafted a petition urging Penn President Amy Gutmann and other relevant administrators to resolve what the petition calls a “serious problem that threatens the health, safety and academic well-being” of residents.
In light of the languishing job market, increasing numbers of undergraduates are being driven to reevaluate their post-graduation plans — which for some means applying for scholarships instead of jobs.
In fewer than three years, the Law School’s Pepper Hall will be replaced by a new, larger building, the University announced at last week’s trustees meetings.
Given current economic conditions, it comes as no surprise that undergraduates are more nervous about job prospects than ever.
A recent York College of Pennsylvania study indicates that a sizable percentage of college graduates fail to exhibit professional conduct in the workforce.
The idea of stitching circuitry into clothing may seem like a concept gleaned from the pages of a science-fiction novel set centuries into the future.