Vet School combats statewide shortage
Penn's School of Veterinary Medicine is making an effort to curb a national and statewide shortage of some types of veterinarians.
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Penn's School of Veterinary Medicine is making an effort to curb a national and statewide shortage of some types of veterinarians.
The sentencing of former Economics professor Rafael Robb, which was scheduled for yesterday, was postponed out of defense concerns that a vigil for his dead wife would affect the hearing.
A new report released last week by the National Association for College Admissions Counseling stated that college admissions offices should de-emphasize applicants' SAT and ACT scores when deciding whom to admit.
Along with new classes and a greater workload, many students came back to school facing something else unwanted - a new layout for their Facebook accounts.
Come fall 2009, University City will likely see a more aesthetically pleasing, pedestrian-accessible Market Street.
When College sophomore Pamela Putnam was deciding which classes to take this fall, she knew she wanted to take a Political Science course along with her pre-med ones.
Legal experts are divided over whether universities are common targets in discrimination lawsuits.
Two former employees of the University filed discrimination lawsuits against Penn over the summer.
Student Health Services physicians performed 100 more exams yesterday than they do on a typical day as Penn athletes flooded in to get their physicals.
The psychiatric records of former Economics professor Rafael Robb and his murdered wife, Ellen, were released to both prosecutors and Robb's defense attorneys over the summer.
It is "unrealistic" to expect people who can vote and serve in the military "not to be able to take a drink," says Penn President Amy Gutmann.
Federal prosecutors announced last week that they are indicting former Marketing professor Scott Ward on two additional child pornography charges.
The number of DUI arrests made in Philadelphia has increased this year as a result of increased vigilance by the city's police department.
Thanks to a policy of Penn's Division of Public Safety, if you've failed to properly lock up your bicycle on campus, you may find it waiting for you in the custody of the Penn Police.
Owen Walker - the New Zealand teenager who admitted to hacking into the School of Engineering and Applied Science's server in February 2006 - was fined more than $11,000 Tuesday in a New Zealand court, according to The Associated Press.
According to a recent Standard and Poor's newsletter, Philadelphia Media Holdings, LLC -- the company that owns The Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News and prints The Daily Pennsylvanian - has lately been experiencing financial difficulties.
Eric Furda, Penn's incoming Dean of Admissions, recently made two senior appointments to the admissions office.
The College Board, the same company that brings students the SAT and AP exams, has launched a pilot program that will offer universities lists of the names and contact information of low-income, high-achieving high-school students.
The preliminary yield rate for the class of 2012 fell to 63 percent, leading the admissions office to utilize its waitlist more extensively this year.
The judge in the case of former Economics professor Rafael Robb agreed earlier this month to review the psychiatric records of his late wife, Ellen, before Rafael Robb's sentencing.