Listen on Spotify | Google Podcasts On this episode of Penn, Daily, hosts Isabella Simonetti and Alec Druggan interview Rosie Nguyen, on the process of graduating from Wharton during the COVID-19 pandemic. Hosted by Alec Druggan and Isabella Simonetti. Edited by Isabella Simonetti. Produced by Alec Druggan. Podcast art by Ava Cruz.
Fall 2013 Undergraduate Assembly Elections
Senior Column by Sam Yellowhorse Kesler | “What are perfect places, anyway?"
Penn is still not perfect, but it’s filled with perfect places.
Attempted robbery prompts Tuesday afternoon UPennAlert
DPS issued an all-clear at 2:16 p.m. for a return to normal activity.
Editorial | Penn should introduce a preventative mental health care model
In light of the COVID-19 global pandemic and the immense stressors it produces, Penn should adopt a proactive rather than reactive stance towards mental health.
Senior Column by Sam Yellowhorse Kesler | “What are perfect places, anyway?"
Penn is still not perfect, but it’s filled with perfect places.
Attempted robbery prompts Tuesday afternoon UPennAlert
DPS issued an all-clear at 2:16 p.m. for a return to normal activity.
Virtual commencement honors Class of 2020 after tumultuous spring semester
Penn President Amy Gutmann was joined by commencement speaker and award-winning author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, as well as 1999 College graduate and Grammy-award winning musician John Legend, to congratulate the Class of 2020.
Penn Admissions and Kite and Key unveil first live, virtual tour in the Ivy League
Each tour is capped at 50 students, and led by two Kite and Key tour guides and up to four admissions officers to ensure all questions asked through the Zoom platform’s chat feature are answered.
Class of 2020 looks forward to in-person May 2021 commencement
Penn President Amy Gutmann announced in an email to the Class of 2020 that deans, professors, classmates, family, and friends would also attend the postponed ceremony.
Agatha Advincula | Don’t squander the right to vote
No one is morally impure for accepting Biden as the clearest way forward.
Two Penn professors receive $200,000 Carnegie Fellowship for media research
Professors Sarah Jackson and Duncan Watts will receive $200,000 grants for research projects that focus on pertinent issues facing society. Jackson and Watts are the sixth and seventh Penn professors to receive the award in the Carnegie Fellows Program's six year history.
Emilia Onuonga | Betsy DeVos’s new Title IX regulations do not support survivors
Although Betsy DeVos does not require it of Penn to support survivors, Penn must require it of itself.
Goldner and Evanchick drafted by Philadelphia Barrage
Depsite being drafted, Adam Goldner intends to return to Penn for a fifth year to play lacrosse and add a concentration in Wharton.
In a new course this fall, students will create and study the history of digital fakes
The English and Cinema Studies departments are offering a new course this fall, titled "Fakes, Forgeries, and Forensics in Digital Media."
Guest Column by Louis Lin | What graduation means for FGLI students during the pandemic
Ever since Penn first announced there would be no in-person ceremonies this year, I have been thinking about what graduation means as a first-generation, low-income student, and what it means for my family.
A look back at the most historic moments at Franklin Field
Home to Penn football for 126 years, Franklin Field is one of the most storied and hallowed gridiron venues in the entire country.
Senior Column by Sarah Fortinsky | To Eric Jacobs, the one who made the DP home
My graduation from Penn coincides with Eric Jacobs’ retirement from the DP after four decades as general manager. From the start of my time at Penn, I’ve known Eric to be the DP’s guiding light.
By voting in the upcoming primary election, students at Penn will be able to make a difference in who represents our communities in Congress and the state legislature. One person, one vote is perpetually under threat and this year is no different, if not more than ever before.
Brandon Ferguson was arrested and charged with four counts each of aggravated assault, simple assault, and recklessly endangering another person.
While the newly announced celebration is on May 22 and 23, 2021, it will not directly conflict with the Class of 2021's commencement — which is currently scheduled for May 17, 2021.


















