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Friday, April 24, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian

9/11 10th Anniversary Issue

The Daily Pennsylvanian

Put on some salsa shoes and get ready for a week-long fiesta. Latino Coalition, the umbrella group for all Latino groups on campus, is organizing the 26th annual Festival Latino from March 30 to April 5. Packed with events designed to entertain and educate the Penn community, Festival Latino is "a way for Latino students to bond and illustrate the diversity and richness of their cultures," said Wharton sophomore and chairman of the Latino Coalition Rami Reyes.


Last week the University notified officials in the Asian American Studies department that their budget, which was decreased for this academic year, will likely remain at the same lower level for the 2008-2009 academic year. This decision, however, has received negative feedback from many students and department officials.

It's uncertain if Wharton undergraduate Irina Malinovskaya's recent motion to dismiss murder charges against her will succeed, legal experts say. Malinovskaya, who allegedly bludgeoned her ex-boyfriend's then-girlfriend to death in 2004, has already been tried three times, each resulting in a mistrial.

The Latest

It's not an uncommon scenario. You're waiting in line for the $2.50 egg white sandwich at Bui's Food Truck, and an unshaven man in scruffed-up Timberlands, reeking of stale cigarettes, asks you for change. Sister, can you spare a dime? Will you help a brother out? God bless.

The New Zealand teenager accused of working with a Penn student to hack a Penn server in 2006 has pleaded guilty to all charges. Owen Walker, 18, pleaded guilty in a New Zealand court to accessing a computer system with the intention of dishonestly obtaining payment for the installation of adware, accessing a computer system without authorization and other related offenses, according to Computerworld, a New Zealand news site.

What is wrong with Penn's education, and how can it be fixed? These are the questions the Student Committee on Undergraduate Education wants students to consider during its annual education week. Wharton and College junior Zach Fuchs, chairman of SCUE, explained that education week, which runs from March 31 to April 4, will allow students to think critically about their education instead of just following the University curriculum.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

What is wrong with Penn's education, and how can it be fixed? These are the questions the Student Committee on Undergraduate Education wants students to consider during its annual education week. Wharton and College junior Zach Fuchs, chairman of SCUE, explained that education week, which runs from March 31 to April 4, will allow students to think critically about their education instead of just following the University curriculum.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Last week the University notified officials in the Asian American Studies department that their budget, which was decreased for this academic year, will likely remain at the same lower level for the 2008-2009 academic year. This decision, however, has received negative feedback from many students and department officials.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

It's uncertain if Wharton undergraduate Irina Malinovskaya's recent motion to dismiss murder charges against her will succeed, legal experts say. Malinovskaya, who allegedly bludgeoned her ex-boyfriend's then-girlfriend to death in 2004, has already been tried three times, each resulting in a mistrial.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Students unsatisfied with campus dining and printing are in for a treat. The Undergraduate Assembly unanimously passed two proposals at Sunday night's meeting tackling complaints about inefficient dining halls and expensive printing. n With its Dining Proposal, which has been in the works since last year, the UA seeks to create a series of "baby steps" for Penn Dining to improve the quality of food and service.


Gable hits 300 yet again

For Steve Gable, 300 means more than just a number or a movie or an upper-level college course. It is a benchmark, a measuring stick for success in one of his passions and the paradigm of perfection in the other. Gable, the Quakers' sophomore second baseman, is the product of what he calls a "bowling family.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

There are few who doubt that a new South Street Bridge is needed, and fast. From the cracked pavement to the corroded metal, everything about this 85-year-old structure demands renovation. In certain areas, the metal has worn away so much that pedestrians are given an unintended look at the Schuylkill River below.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

For graduate students doing research in a single subject area, funding is often easy to obtain. But for those like third-year Penn Law student Matthew Erie, whose work spans multiple disciplines, support is much harder to secure. "As a student of legal anthropology, I am often applying for funding that is mainly anthropological, and I must 'argue' the importance of law," Erie, who is concurrently studying at Cornell and Tsinghua University Law School in Beijing, wrote in an e-mail.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Yesterday, representatives of each fraternity and sorority at Penn put their Ivy League educations to the test. This year's Academic Bowl - which celebrated the culmination of Greek Week - challenged each team's knowledge of Penn, pop culture and politics.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

The gossip Web site Juicy Campus maintains that it has not violated any laws, despite allegations of consumer fraud from law-enforcement officials in two states. Authorities in New Jersey and Connecticut are trying to determine whether Juicy Campus violates consumer-fraud laws by not enforcing its posted terms and conditions and by misrepresenting its policies to users and advertisers.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

I was sitting in Van Pelt the other day when I noticed the girl in front of me procrastinating on Facebook, looking at photo albums. Pretty normal and I usually wouldn't give it a second thought, except she was looking at pictures of me in a friend's photo album.


Baseball salvages lost weekend

Midway through yesterday afternoon at Meiklejohn Stadium, the Penn baseball team was staring a completely fruitless weekend dead in the face. Having lost and tied in their two Saturday games against Yale - the nightcap was suspended due to darkness in extra innings - the Quakers had started off the Sunday twinbill with yet another loss to Brown.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

This early in the season, the mound is no place for freshmen. Tell that to the trio of young right-handers who stifled Penn's opponents this weekend. Freshmen Jeremy Maas, Paul Cusick and Sam Gilbert combined to pitch 20 innings over three games and gave up zero earned runs - one unearned run on Maas against Yale the only blemish.


Princeton leaves Penn at break point

Just one match into the Ivy League season, the men's tennis team's season is still far from over. But after losing 5-2 to No. 71 Princeton in front of a boisterous crowd at Levy Tennis Pavilion, Penn's chances of winning the Ivy League title are already fading.



The Daily Pennsylvanian

For the Penn gymnastics team, the journey may be over for all but one. Junior Jordan Brewer will find out tomorrow whether her score is good enough to join teammate Marissa Rosen - who has already qualified - at NCAA Regionals. But for the rest of the Quakers, the season ended Saturday in Williamsburg with a sixth-place finish in the Eastern College Athletic Conference Championship.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

With all the attention the presidential primaries have received in recent months, it's hard not to be thinking about New York Sen. Hillary Clinton, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama and Arizona Sen. John McCain. But the candidates for U.S. president aren't the only positions up for grabs in Pennsylvania's April 22 primary - Pennsylvania residents will also vote for a number of local, state and federal positions.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

For the women's golf team, 13 days is all it takes to finish the spring season. The Quakers tee off at the Hoya Invitational today - just one week after their opener - for their last tournament before Ivy Championships. "Several Ivy League schools competing so it will be a nice gauge for us to see where we are and what we've done with our spring break," coach Francis Vaughn said - although he said the same thing before last weekend's First Market Bank Invitational, at which his squad finished 17th out of 20.