Trump's interactions with his alma mater: a timeline
Since 1968 Wharton graduate Donald Trump announced his candidacy for president, he's gotten millions of votes, broken a number of political barriers and made countless inflammatory statements.
Since 1968 Wharton graduate Donald Trump announced his candidacy for president, he's gotten millions of votes, broken a number of political barriers and made countless inflammatory statements.
Very different groups with very different goals will be doing the same exact thing: watching and waiting.
Besides selecting between Trump and Clinton, Philadelphia voters will also have a slew of down-ballot candidates to choose between.
The Daily Pennsylvanian has compared Clinton and Trump’s policy platforms on several key issues that most affect Penn students.
Very different groups with very different goals will be doing the same exact thing: watching and waiting.
Besides selecting between Trump and Clinton, Philadelphia voters will also have a slew of down-ballot candidates to choose between.
With less than a week until the highly anticipated 2016 presidential election, the Clinton campaign is preparing for an intense effort to get out the vote on Penn’s campus as well as across Pennsylvania.
Some Republicans are opting to vote for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, a third party candidate or abstain from the election.
While some students dismiss voting third party as a wasted vote or even a spoiler vote, others cling to candidates like Libertarian Gary Johnson and Green Party nominee Jill Stein as alternatives to the two-party system.
It’s the eternal question — discussed during those testy Thanksgiving dinners and on long car rides — how to engage your parents when they are voting for a different political candidate.
Over the last two years, I’ve had the opportunity to volunteer with a few organizations in West and South Philly, including Penn for Youth Debate, Urban Tree Connection, and HIAS.
You may be anxiously anticipating the end of this election season, but there are plenty of events to get excited about during this last week of craziness.
As many prepare to vote for the first time in the general election Tuesday, Penn students reflect on the long-term significance this election is likely to have on both personal and national scales.
Trends from the last presidential election give insight into how this Election Day will play out.
Harvard Athletics Director Robert L. Scalise has cancelled the rest of the school’s men’s soccer season.
Tesla CEO and 1997 Wharton graduate Elon Musk unveiled the company’s new solar roofs last Friday evening, according to Bloomberg Technology.
Russian punk rock protest group Pussy Riot visited Cornell this past Wednesday, according to The Cornell Daily Sun.
With chants of “no range, no train,” members of the union representing many Yale Police Department officers protested a change in firearm policy outside YPD headquarters on Wednesday, according to The Yale Daily News.
Her most recent paper, “Friends with Academic Benefits,” was recently published in Context, an academic journal published by the American Sociological Association.
On Monday, Engineering graduate student Alfredo "Freddy" Abravanel died "unexpectedly," according to an emails sent to the Engineering community Tuesday morning.