It is often said that college students tend to be overwhelmingly liberal - and it seems this is true of college professors as well. A recent study conducted by Penn State University professor Matthew Woessner and Elizabethtown College professor April Kelly-Woessner found that people who identify themselves as conservatives are simply less likely to pursue a doctorate.
9/11 10th Anniversary Issue
A shot at love - with a grad student?
The gloomy days are over for graduate students who are single and ready to mingle. They can find their true love - at speed dating. The Graduate and Professional Student Assembly organized its first speed-dating event on Friday evening at the Graduate Student Center.
No Carolina blues for W. Lax
With 14 seconds remaining and the score tied at North Carolina, Penn senior attacker Melissa Lehman made one final drive to the goal. She reared back and ripped off a shot. The ball bounced its way into the corner of net, giving Lehman a hat trick and the Penn women's lacrosse team an 8-7 win Saturday.
Cold weather, failed bunts doom Quakers
Baseball coach John Cole got exactly what he asked for when he scheduled the Quakers' home opener for February, the earliest it's been in years. Friday's scheduled doubleheader was delayed over 90 minutes because of frost on the infield dirt. When Penn and West Chester finally took the field at Meiklejohn Stadium to play only one game, it was 35 degrees.
A shot at love - with a grad student?
The gloomy days are over for graduate students who are single and ready to mingle. They can find their true love - at speed dating. The Graduate and Professional Student Assembly organized its first speed-dating event on Friday evening at the Graduate Student Center.
No Carolina blues for W. Lax
With 14 seconds remaining and the score tied at North Carolina, Penn senior attacker Melissa Lehman made one final drive to the goal. She reared back and ripped off a shot. The ball bounced its way into the corner of net, giving Lehman a hat trick and the Penn women's lacrosse team an 8-7 win Saturday.
The men's lacrosse team was determined not to squander another three-goal lead. After Villanova closed within one goal with under two minutes left, the Quakers were able to stave off a comeback, holding on to win 7-6 on Saturday at Franklin Field. "We made some mistakes at the end, we made some mistakes during the game to keep them in the game, but the bottom line is we did what it took to win and that's what's important," coach Brian Voelker said.
Students create LA Times business plan
The Los Angeles Times may be able to take a tip or two from four Wharton seniors on how to increase its profits. The undergraduate Wharton team placed second at the University of Southern California's annual Marshall International Case Competition, in which participating teams have to solve a real world business problem in 24 hours.
Donations to U. up, but not alum participation
Universities around the country are richer than ever, but the money is not necessarily coming out of alumni's pockets. Contributions to colleges have reached $29.75 billion in 2007 - the highest ever - but the amount of that contribution that comes from alumni has decreased by 1.
Opinion Art | Daniel Schwartz
Daniel Schwartz is a College sophomore from Decatur, Ga. His e-mail address is schwartz@dailypennsylvanian.com.
'Not very happy' with result at Heps
Fifth place was not what the Penn men's and women's track teams had in mind for this weekend's Heptagonal Indoor Championships at Cornell. Despite several impressive individual accomplishments, both teams fell short of the podium. The women finished in fifth with a total of 45 points, 69 behind first-place Princeton.
Junior pleads guilty in hacking scheme | Interactive Feature
In federal court Friday Engineering junior Ryan Goldstein pleaded guilty to helping a hacker crash the School of Engineering and Applied Science's server in February 2006. Goldstein pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting another person to gain unauthorized access to a protected computer, a federal misdemeanor.
Radio station attracts big-name artists, few students
The Philadelphia music community has a vital hub just a few blocks from campus, though many Penn students don't know about it. In the past three months, Counting Crows, Ingrid Michaelson, Feist, Rilo Kiley and Iron and Wine have performed or recorded in-studio interviews at WXPN radio, a professionally run, University-owned radio station located at 30th and Walnut streets.
News Brief: Lawyers want student murder case dismissed
Attorneys for Irina Malinovskaya, the Wharton undergraduate accused of killing her ex-lover's girlfriend in 2004, have filed motions to have the case dismissed. Malinovskaya has faced three trials in the case, all of which have ended in hung juries. Delaware state prosecutors have not said if they will seek a fourth trial.
Even though Los Angeles is a long way from Philadelphia, Penn has a small claim to Hollywood fame in actor Kalpen Modi, who teaches as an adjunct professor in the Asian American Studies Department this semester. Last night, the Asian American Studies Department, the South Asia Center and the South Asia Society co-hosted a question and answer session with Modi called "A Conversation with Kal Penn" in Houston Hall.
NCAA bids likely for eight Penn fencers
NCAA bids likely for eight Penn fencers It was a weekend of mixed results for the men's and women's fencing teams. They competed in the NCAA Regionals on Saturday in Madison, N.J., along with Princeton, Temple, Penn State, Haverford, North Carolina, Drew, Duke, Johns Hopkins, Stevens and Fairleigh Dickinson.
Brown hands Penn worst Ivy loss ever
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - On another night, it might have been a setback. But when leading scorer Tyler Bernardini fouled out after just 18 minutes on Saturday night, Penn had already disappointed in so many ways that one more hardly mattered. Brown shredded Penn's defense, shot a remarkable 64 percent from the field, led by as many points as 39 and put a 75-43 beatdown on the Quakers (11-17, 6-5 Ivy), producing the largest margin of defeat Penn has ever endured in an Ivy League game.
Road woes at Yale end, though barely
By David Bernstein Staff Writer davidkb@dailypennsylvanian.com NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Even amid Penn's elite teams and Ivy titles of the past few years, Yale's John J. Lee Amphitheater has carried a bit of mystique for the Quakers. Before this season, four of the past six contests there ended in upset victories for the Bulldogs.
Beating top teams too tall an order
It's not often that the Penn men's tennis team faces a former Israeli champion, the No. 40 singles player and the No. 23 doubles team in the nation, all in one weekend. But in matches Friday and Saturday against Maryland and No. 43 Louisville, the Quakers saw their toughest competition all year.
Editorial | Responsible development
It's time for Campus Inn to check in to its new home at 40th and Pine streets. Plans by developers to build an 11-story hotel at the corner of the two streets - on land leased to them by the University - have faced strong opposition from some community members.







