UA addresses student life, climate
The Undergraduate Assembly gathered Monday night for the last official meeting of the year.
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The Undergraduate Assembly gathered Monday night for the last official meeting of the year.
*This article appeared in the 2007 Joke Issue
The Senior Class Board announced last week that the class trip to Atlantic City during senior week will be cancelled if behavior at this year's Hey Day does not improve.
Campus minority groups are beginning to take sides on the two-week old controversy surrounding the alleged racial profiling of a black male College student.
Spring Fling directors announced yesterday that just over 500 of the 2,000 available guest passes have been sold, about the same number that had been sold at this time last year.
Last Wednesday at the University Council meeting, role call may have gone a little something like this:
On Sunday night, the UA passed three student life-related proposals, all of which could benefit students in the near future.
If you weren't able to get Ben Folds and Third Eye Blind tickets during the initial sale, the Social Planning and Events Committee is giving you a second chance.
With Spring Fling less than two weeks away, the campus is gearing up for a fun - but safe - weekend of music and partying.
Voter turnout may be at a record high of 41.4 percent, but the message of the voters hasn't changed: They like the status quo.
Candidates running for student government will have to hold their breaths for another day.
About 60 people gathered Sunday night in Huntsman Hall for the weekly Undergraduate Assembly meeting. On the agenda: a contingency budget request, Locust Walk repairs, improvements to Penn InTouch and dining.
Voting seems a lot less tedious when it comes with cotton candy.
Key points from the Undergraduate Assembly's meeting on Monday night:
Penn students should expect more than a semi-charmed life during this year's Spring Fling.
Despite contention among the student body, University officials are standing by their decision to bring the controversial Norman Finkelstein to campus, saying that funding does not translate into endorsement.
Nearly 100 students gathered Sunday night for what is normally a 40-person, two-hour affair: the weekly Undergraduate Assembly meeting.
Officials from the Nominations and Elections Committee announced today that, since spring 2006, there has been an increase in the number of students who have received the necessary numbers of signatures to run for student-government positions.
Get it while it's hot: Starting today, 665 copies of The New York Times will be available for free around campus.
Most people rely on nurses to draw blood, give shots and take temperatures at the doctor's office.