Fling profitable for local businesses
As students gear up in preparation for Spring Fling, local businesses prepare for increased traffic and revenue, as well as hundreds of belligerent students.
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As students gear up in preparation for Spring Fling, local businesses prepare for increased traffic and revenue, as well as hundreds of belligerent students.
Sorry, Hill freshmen, but next year you may no longer be able to afford to swipe in for a quick snack.
Look out for some new soup options offered at 1920 Commons in the next few weeks.
When you rely on a computer program to select your housing for the next year, you might panic if it crashes.
Each spring, freshmen and sophomores who join fraternities and sororities are faced with the question of whether or not they are going to live in their chapter houses for the next school year.
Hill Field will no longer be used for Quidditch practice.
After over 30 years, Gregory College House will finally get renovated.
1/22/12: Houston Hall raises price of pasta, salad
When someone throws out food at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, it doesn’t go to a landfill, but instead to a pig farm in New Jersey.
As soon as next week, students will have a new convenient option for breakfast, lunch or dinner on campus.
Come this Valentine’s Day, students will be able to purchase gourmet cupcakes for their friends from a local dessert boutique using their Dining Dollars on campus.
At the start of last semester, Penn’s Green Campus Partnership expanded its Eco-Reps program into the athletics department. The program — which has already been instituted in college houses, Greek living, Hillel and academic departments and offices — is now working to raise awareness for environmental issues and encourage sustainable behavior in the athletics community.
The environmental impact of Hey Day may not be something most students think about.
The new gateway to Penn’s campus on Walnut Street is intricate, both in its design and the technology within.
Starting in 2015, there will be a new option for off-campus living.
With President Barack Obama’s re-election, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will likely stay in place for another four years, despite roaring opposition from Republicans.
Learning the secrets to landing a consulting job is the last thing students might expect to do on a Friday afternoon.
Students may not need their PennCards to vote this November, but the future of voter IDs has yet to be decided.