One has to wonder why a Serbian rower who barely knew the rules of football would want to join the Columbia squad, or why the Lions would want him on their team. Well, it helps when he's 6-foot-7 and over 300 pounds. A disgruntled member of the Columbia crew team, Stefan Savic wanted out, but he also wanted to remain a Lion.
Amy Gutmann
A trend of innovation creeps up on campus
It may seem like all Wharton students are starting their own companies before they graduate, but it turns out their community is not as large as it appears.
Eagles strike, but Quakers rain supreme
Wet and wild - and for the Penn men's soccer team, a win as good as any other. Despite a sloppy first-half, an early deficit and pouring rain, the Quakers topped American 2-1 last night at Rhodes Field.
Stetson Departure | Search begins for new admit dean
The search process to find a permanent replacement for former Dean of Admissions Lee Stetson, who abruptly resigned at the end of August, has taken its first steps.
A trend of innovation creeps up on campus
It may seem like all Wharton students are starting their own companies before they graduate, but it turns out their community is not as large as it appears.
Eagles strike, but Quakers rain supreme
Wet and wild - and for the Penn men's soccer team, a win as good as any other. Despite a sloppy first-half, an early deficit and pouring rain, the Quakers topped American 2-1 last night at Rhodes Field.
News Brief: Design professor wins book prize
Anita Berrizbeitia, a professor at the Penn School of Design, won the Foundation for Landscape Studies 2007 J. B. Jackson Book Prize for her work, Roberto Burle Marx in Caracas: Parque del Este,1956-1961. The 120-page book, published by the University, looks at the garden designs of Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx.
Football Notebook: Onetime starting QB unlikely to return
After starting the first three games of the season, it became clear that Robert Irvin's right shoulder had never fully recovered from offseason surgery, and now it looks like Irvin could be shelved for the remainder of the season.
Opinion Art | Amira Fawcett
The sex tapes and sordid details of Ivy League life, all aired online
One male student was written about for allegedly taping a video of himself having sex. In another university, a female keeps a public diary of her sexual escapades. And then there are the groups of students who find themselves in all sorts of trouble after plagiarizing or burning flags.
Interactive Feature: Crime Log
Weekly crime log with interactive map
Harry Lee | Complaining: a guide
Avoiding weirdos is often easy, even though they crowd this world. But at Penn, you can get stuck with blossoming freaks as roommates every semester. School acts like a greenhouse for oddities, which thrive once removed from parental shadows. How can you deal with your roommates' peculiar ways and odd beliefs? For example, many weirdos believe that were they not to leave thickets of pubic hair in the shower, others would die from frustrated curiosity about its length, color and curliness.
To frisk or not to frisk?
Nutter's proposed stop-and-frisk policy may get a little pat-down search of its own. Philadelphia's City Council passed a resolution last week announcing its intent to look into the potential implementation of the controversial stop-and-frisk policing strategy.
Student Murder Trial: Judge's emergency delays proceedings
WILMINGTON, Del. - The murder trial of Wharton undergraduate Irina Malinovskaya has been postponed until at least Monday due to an emergency in Judge James Vaughn's family. The cause of the emergency was not known, but Vaughn called a recess yesterday morning in the middle of the testimony of Sergey Dedov, Malinovskaya's boyfriend at the time of the death of Irina Zlotnikov, the then-girlfriend of Malinovskaya's ex-boyfriend, Robert Bondar.
Against Hens, F. Hockey can count on momentum and McGuin
The last time the Penn field hockey team faced off against Delaware was in 2004. On its way to an Ivy League Championship, the Quakers pulled off a 2-1 thriller against the then 14th-ranked Blue Hens. Three years after Penn's historic season, it once again has its sights set on an upset.
M. Soccer: Chalk up the win to the men in the middle
Coaches are fond of saying that defense wins championships. Naturally, it wins some games along the way, too. Last night against American, Penn supported the old adage, providing a backbone of play that allowed the Quakers to add one more win to its season total.
Opinion Board | Take health seriously
When it comes to combating HPV, Penn's student health-insurance program needs a shot in the arm. Human papillomavirus, the leading cause of cervical cancer, is expected to kill another 3,700 American women this year. But with the development of Gardasil, a vaccine that protects against four most dangerous types of the virus, scientists have finally found a way to halt the spread of this frighteningly common sexually transmitted disease.
Alum, attorney discusses babies, Britney
Before launching what would become an illustrious legal career, Gloria Allred graduated from Penn with "a diploma in one arm and a baby in the other." As a part of its Leadership Lunches series, Fox Leadership brought the renowned civil-rights attorney to the table in Leadership Hall yesterday for an intimate lunch and discussion of her career and education.
News Brief: U. researchers test kidney cancer drug
Researchers at the School of Medicine and the Abramson Cancer Center will lead a nationwide trial of anti-cancer drug combinations in patients with advanced kidney cancer, according to a Penn Medicine press release. "This trial takes three proven drugs, and combines then into two drug combinations," Medicine Keith Flaherty said in a statement.
Meredith Aska McBride | Reclaiming the walk of shame
"Orgasm is the body's natural call to feminist politics," wrote feminist author Naomi Wolf. Go out and sit on Locust Walk on a Sunday morning, though - are Penn's women just not getting any satisfaction? Why won't anyone make eye contact? We're all familiar with the walk of shame: The endless march across campus in f***-me pumps and clothes that are clearly not meant to be worn in daylight, paired with sex hair and morning breath.








