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Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025
The Daily Pennsylvanian

Amy Gutmann


For many Penn students, Hangify has become the first resource when figuring out what to do on weekends. Merv Arnold-Lyons, a College senior and the company’s founder and current CEO, has no plans for slowing down anytime soon.

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On a brisk Monday night at Rhodes Field, the Quakers played nearly flawless soccer. From a statistical standpoint, Penn dominated the box score in every column except the one that mattered most: the final score.




(Left to right) Ethan Dombroski, Merv Arnold-Lyons and Sierra Hirt are some of the people who currently run the popular campus app Hangify.

For many Penn students, Hangify has become the first resource when figuring out what to do on weekends. Merv Arnold-Lyons, a College senior and the company’s founder and current CEO, has no plans for slowing down anytime soon.














For the fifteenth straight season, Penn men's soccer was recognized by the National Soccer coaches Association of America for their academic strength. Their team G.P.A. last year was 3.03.

The floodgates have opened. Six days ago, Penn men’s soccer was in dire straits. The team had failed to score a goal in five of its six matches in 2015, and found itself winless with Ivy play looming. Consider the script flipped.


Junior attacker Elise Tilton scored the game-winning goal for Penn field hockey as the Quakers improved to 2-0 in Ivy play.

Make it seven in a row for Penn field hockey. Entering their match on Saturday on a six-game winning streak, the Quakers went head-to-head with Ivy League opponent Harvard up in Cambridge, Mass., and came out on top, 2-1, in an intense overtime contest. The first half proved to be challenging for the Red and Blue (7-1, 2-0 Ivy) as they were initially forced onto the defensive.



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