Quaker Nation | Racism allegations against lightweight rowing
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Also, welcome to the new Quaker Nation!
Penn Medicine researcher Carl June was honored with the 2024 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences during its 10th annual awards ceremony in Los Angeles on April 13.
Eight individuals close to the Penn rowing program described a pattern of racist remarks made by members of the men’s lightweight rowing team, as well as an allegedly inadequate response to these incidents by the University.
Also, Penn Against the Occupation was banned from campus.
Two Penn students received the 2024 Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans, which offers up to $90,000 in graduate school funding for immigrants and children of immigrants.
In classic five-by-five, give this DP mini crossword a go.
As my time in college reaches a close, I want to share a parable about a fisherman and a businessman who serendipitously meet:
It’s been a long time coming, but the Jane and David Ott Center for Track and Field is finally here.
On Apr. 9, 2022, Black students were egged, denigrated, and called racial slurs at an off-campus Penn party. Though the incident was reported to Penn Police, the aggressors were never discovered. Instead, Penn gave a donation to Penn’s Black Student League (BSL). This funding came just two years after Penn Student Government’s donation of $250,000 to Black student programming: with $150,000 dedicated to UMOJA, a funding board and umbrella organization for constituent Black student groups.
The Penn Relays, hosted annually by the University of Pennsylvania at Franklin Field, has long been one of the most important events within the global track and field community.
The Penn Relays, held at Penn’s Franklin Field, is an esteemed event that has witnessed some of the most spectacular moments in track and field history. Established in 1895, it has become a stage for athletes to showcase their skills and for fans to experience thrilling races. Let’s take a journey through some of the top moments that have defined this iconic meet.
The Penn Relays, the oldest track and field competition in the United States, has had plenty of time for records to be set and reset. And for the 128th running of the Penn Relays set to take place from April 25-27, the competing athletes are poised to reset a plethora of records.
Penn track and field has found plenty of success this year, with three coaches being recognized in the Mid-Atlantic Region with coaching honors, and the women's team being crowned champions at the Ivy League Heps this past indoor season after taking home nine Ivy titles. Furthermore, seven athletes represented the Red and Blue at the NCAA Division I Indoor Championships. With that in mind, here are four Quakers to keep an eye out ahead of this year's Penn Relay Carnival.
Philadelphia is home to many iconic professional sports venues: Citizens Bank Park, Lincoln Financial Field, and the Wells Fargo Center, to list a few. But what many people may not know is that Penn has played an integral role in contributing to the city’s storied sports history.
With less than two months to go until the U.S. Olympic Trials, Penn men's swimming and diving junior breaststroker Matt Fallon's chances of securing a ticket to Paris this summer are looking more and more promising.
You never want to be on the wrong side of a rivalry game. Unfortunately for No. 13 Penn men's lacrosse, that’s just where it found itself yesterday.
In classic five-by-five, give this DP mini crossword a go.
In an offseason that has seen Penn men’s basketball lose two of its starting guards to the transfer portal, Drake Bulldogs men’s basketball sophomore guard Ethan Roberts announcing his commitment to the University is welcome news.
A day after Metro Boomin electrified Penn with his Spring Fling performance, No. 14 Penn women’s lacrosse brought the same energy to Franklin Field as the team recognized its eight graduating seniors for their contributions to the program.
The University revoked Penn Students Against the Occupation of Palestine’s status as a registered student group on April 19, a spokesperson told The Daily Pennsylvanian.