11-02-21 Election Day 2021 (Jesse Zhang).jpg
Posters encouraging Penn students to vote hang on the ARCH building on Nov. 2.
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Posters encouraging Penn students to vote hang on the ARCH building on Nov. 2.
The ARCH voting location on Nov. 2.
"Dude With Sign", a social media influencer with 7.7 million followers on Instagram, was on Penn's campus seen here at the intersection of 34th and Walnut Street.
Penn's Information Systems and Computing has "identified vendor software bugs" that have been affecting AirPennNet's performance.
Students protesting in front of Castle on Sept. 28.
Frank Lapinski launched the Summer Solar Initiative this summer.
One of the panelists, scientist Mariana Socal, cited that about one in four Americans have trouble affording drugs.
Remnants from Hurricane Ida brought severe flooding to Philadelphia on Sept. 2, causing the Schuylkill River to overflow.
The Schuylkill River Trail was submerged underwater due to flooding, as seen on Thursday morning.
Eco-anxiety, defined by Healthline as "persistent worries about the future of Earth and the life it shelters", can be debilitating, but it doesn’t have to be. With the right mindset, we can harness our anger and anxious energy to save ourselves and our environment.
Uber and Lyft compare the price surges during the pandemic to a simple supply and demand problem. However, with their monopolization of this industry, it is much more complicated than that.
Wharton professor Eric Orts, who is now running for the upcoming 2022 elections for the United States Senate in Pennsylvania, first thought about entering the race after the election of Donald Trump in 2016. (Photo from the Wharton School)
Washington-based newspaper Roll Call reported that Penn alumnus Conor Lamb will announce his candidacy for Pennsylvania’s soon-to-be vacant Senate seat on Aug. 6
Death is not a subject to be exclusively thought of in academia or when covered in frosty sheets on deathbeds; it is also something that you can talk about with your friends on a walk to Commons.
Scam emails from fraudulent Penn email addressed, primarily sent to incoming first years, appeared to come from current professors or Penn alumni and contained information about paid internships or potential job and research positions in attempts to acquire students' personal information.