The Crimson aren't the best lacrosse team in the Ivy League, but they look like it against Penn. In a back-and-forth game, Harvard scored the final three goals, including one only a minute into overtime, for the 7-6 win over Penn. It is the third time in three years the Quakers have lost to Harvard.
9/11 10th Anniversary Issue
Attention, class: Introducing . Professor Kumar? Kal Penn, famous for playing the fast-food-chasing, pot-smoking slacker Kumar in the 2004 film Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle, is slated to teach two undergraduate courses in the University's Asian American Studies Program during the spring 2008 semester.
Baseball: Signs of life, but more of the same
For the fourth time in five opportunities this season, the Quakers' top reliever blew a save.
'Daily Show' actor to host ComFest
Three years after Stephen Colbert came to campus, the man who replaced him on The Daily Show is following suit. Daily Show correspondent Dan Bakkedahl will host the Ninth Annual Mask and Wig Intercollegiate Comedy Festival on April 9 and 10, officials from The Mask & Wig Club and the Social Planning and Events Committee said.
Attention, class: Introducing . Professor Kumar? Kal Penn, famous for playing the fast-food-chasing, pot-smoking slacker Kumar in the 2004 film Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle, is slated to teach two undergraduate courses in the University's Asian American Studies Program during the spring 2008 semester.
Baseball: Signs of life, but more of the same
For the fourth time in five opportunities this season, the Quakers' top reliever blew a save.
U. puts emphasis on local hiring
A resident of Southwest Philadelphia, Cheryl Thomas has been working at the Starbucks Coffee in 1920 Commons for two years. Ethel Gurley is a janitor with Penn Facilities and has been working at Penn for over five years. She says she "loves it." In all probability, neither would have been on campus 10 years ago, had the University and the Health System not made a concerted effort to hire more minorities and women from the surrounding community.
W. Lax: Quakers know where their bread is buttered
Defense may win championships, but offense can win games. The Penn women's lacrosse team proved that on Saturday, defeating Cornell 14-9 in a high-scoring affair on Franklin Field. Unlike their previous two wins when they gave up a combined nine goals, the No.
Annenberg construction delayed
Penn has given the old Hillel building a two-month reprieve. Facilities officials have pushed back the demolition of the building and construction of the new facility for the Annenberg Public Policy Center to mid-May in order to minimize the impact on students during the school year.
A lack of loans, all to increase affordability
Tuition may have gone up, but Penn officials are doing their best to make the University more affordable.
With the deck stacked against them, Fencers still beat the house
MADISON, N.J., March 25 - Competing shorthanded against anyone is difficult, but with the way the NCAA Fencing Championships are set up, it can spell disaster for a team's chance at a title. The Quakers faced just this predicament during the past four days in Madison, N.
Fighting crime, one bike at a time
Penn Police officials want to interact with more West Philadelphia youth - before they commit crimes. Despite juvenile arrests in connection with two of the four robberies that occurred in the Penn Police patrol area in February and high juvenile-crime rates citywide, Division of Public Safety officials say their proactive approach to the issue is working to curb juvenile crime on and near campus.
Current claims mud, tree limbs, W. Rowing
First-year women's rowing coach Mike Lane was looking to rock the proverbial boat in his team's opening race of the spring. The bigger surprise was that the Schuylkill River did more of the rocking than was planned. At Saturday's Connell Cup, an event that hosted Yale and Columbia, the current, which registered at 15,000 cubic feet per second, swept tree limbs, plants, mud and other types of debris into the water.
IMF exec highlights global economy's risks
As a leader of one of the world's most influential financial institutions, Rodrigo de Rato's advice has far-reaching consequences. The managing director and chairman of the International Monetary Fund spoke at Huntsman Hall Friday, emphasizing the need for leadership to adapt to the new nature of risks in the world economy.
Editorial | Getting all the facts
A full investigation is needed before the University is accused of discrimination.
Daniel Schwartz | Opinion Art
Daniel Schwartz is a College freshman from Decatur, Ga. His e-mail address is schwarm@sas.upenn.edu.
Baseball: Lone bright spot almost finishes even brighter
The Quakers kneeled on the top step of the third-base dugout. Freshman righthander Todd Roth was on the mound, and the scoreboard behind him revealed the list of zeros for Columbia: no runs, and more importantly, no hits. Roth pushed the count full with two outs in the bottom of the seventh, and he was one strike away from a no-hitter.
Sports Briefs
Three top-10 finishes highlight tourney win Both Penn golf teams were in action this past weekend. The men's squad competed in the George Washington Invitational and the women competed at the William and Mary Invitational in Williamsburg. The men's team won its tournament, beating out 24 teams.
Ali Jackson | Suffering from a mid-mid-life crisis
Although 18 and 21 bring a host of new experiences, turning 20 is the true, traumatic entry point into adulthood for many students.
LSAT rules, essay set to change for June test
Students hoping to study law now have a few more rules to memorize. The Law School Admission Council recently announced changes to the LSAT, including restrictions on items students can bring to the tests. These changes will take effect starting in June, the next time the test will be given.








