Higher education round-up: Dec. 6
Check out stories around higher education from this week
Check out stories around higher education from this week
The family allege that Penn physicians enrolled researcher Jeffrey H. Ware, who died from brain cancer in 2011, in a study without consent.
After coming out last season alternating wins and losses, Penn men’s squash has shown improvement this year by winning its first two matches over quality opponents.
If freshman guard Tony Bagtas can run the team this crisply in a baptism-by-fire situation at Villanova, the offensive reins of this program should stay in his hands.
The family allege that Penn physicians enrolled researcher Jeffrey H. Ware, who died from brain cancer in 2011, in a study without consent.
After coming out last season alternating wins and losses, Penn men’s squash has shown improvement this year by winning its first two matches over quality opponents.
The Quakers are fresh off their biggest Big 5 road victory in a long time and now play host to Long Island Brooklyn, a struggling team they blew out of the water, 54-40, last season in New York.
The men and women of Penn swimming will be competing in the Total Performance Invitational at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio. The invitational will last three days from Thursday to Saturday and will be just the second time that this year’s squad competes outside of the standard Ivy League dual meet.
Villanova was looking for a challenge when it returned to start Big 5 play. It didn’t get one from Penn.
The co-founder of Call to Men, an association that fights violence against women, spoke at Penn. He discussed the ways the concept of manhood affects both men and women.
Yesterday, Hillel teamed up with other student groups to present One Day, a campus-wide celebration of Jewish culture.
A group including Penn affiliates has been meeting at the Annenberg Public Policy Center to evaluate current presidential debate logistics.
The unique positioning of the three high rise dorms creates a wind tunnel, where wind travels at increased speeds, creating a wind tunnel.
Officials from Yale University and New Haven toured local campuses and University City to see how the Philadelphia colleges encourage investment in their surrounding communities.
American Express offered a $10 credit to those who spent more than $10 at participating retailers.
When we lie about our numbers, we simply reinforce those tired gender stereotypes and the problematic binary that establishes women as either promiscuous or prudish.
But I’ve been fed too many movies and stories where couples say to each other, “I can’t live without you,” or “I’d die without you.”
When any empathetic person views the perpetual fear of living in the West Bank — or Intifada Israel, for that matter — pure outrage is difficult to suppress.
There are natural comparisons in life, and it’s hard not to compare Penn to Drexel, Villanova and Harvard.