Penn volunteers collect books for prison inmates
With Books Through Bars, a local charitable organization, volunteers from the Kelly Writers House will be packing books into boxes, which will then be shipped to inmates.
With Books Through Bars, a local charitable organization, volunteers from the Kelly Writers House will be packing books into boxes, which will then be shipped to inmates.
The key for university libraries is balance between digital and print information. But perhaps in the future, this balance should be reconsidered.
When we make decisions, we should think about the costs and benefits of how our actions impact our greater environment.
After a difficult 0-7 start to conference play, Penn women’s basketball knows that the next seven games can’t be any worse than the first.
The key for university libraries is balance between digital and print information. But perhaps in the future, this balance should be reconsidered.
When we make decisions, we should think about the costs and benefits of how our actions impact our greater environment.
As discussions about the UA budget continue this weekend, we encourage reconsidering the allocation of funds to the Multicultural Scholars Weekend.
This weekend, members of the Penn College Republicans will be attending the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, D.C.
Penn will be looking to break out of the middle of the Ivy pack in its first conference rematches.
While the Bible says to do unto others as you would want done unto you, the Burak brothers often find themselves ignoring this adage on the mat.
The editorial boards of Little Black Book, La Vida Magazine and Mosaic Magazine — three of Penn’s minority publications — have come together to organize Preserving Our Perspectives: A Night With Penn’s Multicultural Magazines, an event that will raise awareness about the publications.
With a complete lineup for the first time in months, the Red and Blue will travel to Towson, Md., for the Shelli Calloway Invitational, where they will take on the Tigers, Cornell, Temple, and Ursinus.
Wharton professors conducted analyzed the New York Times' "most e-mailed" list. Study results revealed that positive articles were more shared than negative ones, and that awe-inspiring and “useful” pieces were also highly popular.
The theme for this year’s Penn Humanities Forum is “Connections,” which addresses not only the increasing human connections taking place in the world, but those between the different humanities departments at Penn as well.
This spring, the Panhellenic Council and the Interfraternity Council will be implementing what they term the “menu system” of updated educational programs for new members.
In line with the Year of Water theme, Penn Reading Project coordinators announced that the 2010-2011 book selection will be The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World of Human Waste and Why It Matters by Rose George.
The Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs of the Government of India awarded a $2 million grant to the University on Thursday to support Penn’s Center for the Advanced Study of India.
Dan Senor, former U.S. senior foreign policy advisor and current adjunct senior fellow for Middle East Studies on the Council on Foreign Relations, spoke Wednesday night at Hillel about his New York Times best-selling book Start-Up Nation: The Success Story of Israel’s Economic Miracle.
For some students, curling is more than just an Olympic novelty.
When a student feels he or she cannot discuss an issue dominating the national political dialogue, something has gone wrong.