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Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian

Amy Gutmann


With March Madness in full swing, many are wondering exactly how much the best college coaches are earning. While the NCAA does not allow players to make "money off licensing their names and likeliness" to maintain the nonprofessional nature of the games, the same does not apply for coaches.

The Latest

Controversy continues to surround the Rolling Stone piece on an alleged gang rape at the Phi Kappa Psi house at the University of Virginia.  Following concerns over the legitimacy of the story given the fact that the magazine had not confirmed the story with any other sources, Rolling Stone announced it will publish an "external review" led by Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism Dean Steve Coll.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Controversy continues to surround the Rolling Stone piece on an alleged gang rape at the Phi Kappa Psi house at the University of Virginia.  Following concerns over the legitimacy of the story given the fact that the magazine had not confirmed the story with any other sources, Rolling Stone announced it will publish an "external review" led by Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism Dean Steve Coll.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

With March Madness in full swing, many are wondering exactly how much the best college coaches are earning. While the NCAA does not allow players to make "money off licensing their names and likeliness" to maintain the nonprofessional nature of the games, the same does not apply for coaches.













The Quakers upset NCAA ranked Cornell this Friday, playing exceptionally well and leading Big Red for a majority of the game. This was an especially meaningful victory for the Quakers, who have been plagued with loses all season. 

The Palestra

Athletic Director M. Grace Calhoun has been making a lot of changes in her first year at the helm of Penn Athletics. On Tuesday, Calhoun — after long discussions with the Wharton marketing department — announced that the Quakers would be re-branding the athletic programs as the Penn Red and Blue and adopting a new tree-based mascot. “No, I don’t see any similarity to [Stanford’s athletic program],” Calhoun said when asked of her decision. When it came down to it, Penn athletics decided it needed more of a natural mascot.



Palestra photos for Hinkle Fieldhouse comparison column.

PHILADELPHIA — She had no idea where she was. Freshman Ilana Bernstein ventured out Wednesday afternoon, looking to find "yet another boring history recitation." But what she found was more shocking and appalling to her than any TA could ever be: a Penn sporting event. "It was honestly the most scarring thing I've seen at Penn," Bernstein said.