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Thursday, June 25, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian
The Daily Pennsylvanian

Penn researchers have completed research on a vaccine that may lead to the prevention of certain types of tumors, specifically breast tumors, according to Reuters. The research was presented this weekend at a meeting hosted by the American Association for Cancer Research.


Henry Kissinger, secretary of state during Vietnam, said last night that the current war in Iraq echoes the earlier conflict. "Americans want to compromise, but to our enemies, compromise equals defeat," he said.

Penn is becoming an increasingly difficult place for top students to get into. But it's also getting more and more difficult to get faculty members to stay. "The aggressiveness with which schools compete with each other has definitely increased over the years," Wharton Deputy Dean David Schmittlein said.

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Some students got a taste of poverty yesterday at a "hunger banquet" held in Houston Hall. As attendees walked into the room, they were handed a card that placed them into one of three socioeconomic groups for the night: high income, middle income or low income.

Swans may live the first third of their lives alone, but when these birds find a partner, they stay together for life. The same is true of SWANS - Strong Women Achievers, No Spouse - Christine Whelan, author of Why Smart Men Marry Smart Women, said yesterday in a talk held for about 40 at the Penn Bookstore.

There's a new all-guys club at Penn, but it's not another frat. These guys want to talk sexual assault, and how to help its victims. Twelve students from Penn and Drexel University this semester started up the West Philadelphia chapter of 1in4, an all-male peer-education group that focuses on teaching college men about sexual violence.


A club for men, tackling sexual assault

There's a new all-guys club at Penn, but it's not another frat. These guys want to talk sexual assault, and how to help its victims. Twelve students from Penn and Drexel University this semester started up the West Philadelphia chapter of 1in4, an all-male peer-education group that focuses on teaching college men about sexual violence.


Kissinger draws parallels between Iraq and Vietnam

Henry Kissinger, secretary of state during Vietnam, said last night that the current war in Iraq echoes the earlier conflict. "Americans want to compromise, but to our enemies, compromise equals defeat," he said.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Penn is becoming an increasingly difficult place for top students to get into. But it's also getting more and more difficult to get faculty members to stay. "The aggressiveness with which schools compete with each other has definitely increased over the years," Wharton Deputy Dean David Schmittlein said.


All crammed in

All crammed in

By Zoe Tillman · Nov. 15, 2006

An everyday nuisance for Penn students turned fatal last month at Ohio State University. On Oct. 20, OSU freshman Andrew Polakowski of Erie, Pa., was killed when he tried to pile into an overcrowded elevator in a dorm on campus. The packed elevator - which had exceeded its maximum weight limit - began to move with the doors still open, and Polakowski was crushed between the elevator and the floor.


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Up against a wall

By Zoe Tillman · Nov. 14, 2006

The stucco wall on the west side of the Kappa Sigma fraternity house is, to be blunt, ugly.



Nanotech Pie

Nanotech Pie

By Uri Friedman and Leanne Ta · Nov. 14, 2006

How it's done Today a parking lot; tomorrow a nanotechnology research building that could cost upwards of $80 million. That, in a nutshell, is the present and future of a space near 33rd and Walnut streets. The lot, which sits next to the Laboratory for Research on the Structure of Matter, is slated to hold the new facility as part of Penn's eastward expansion.






Playing with fire

Playing with fire

By Toby Hicks · Nov. 14, 2006

Abbie Feinberg (white shirt) and other members of the Amorphous Jugglers practice their fire- juggling techniques on College Green near Van Pelt Library on Saturday.





'Times' editor on balancing safety and freedom

On a cold December morning last year, The New York Times Washington Bureau chief, Philip Taubman, was personally asked by the president not to publish a story revealing the existence of a secret domestic eavesdropping program.


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HUP first in Phila. to adopt imaging system The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania has become the city's first hospital to use a new type of imaging technology that can provide detailed, 3-D images of patients' hearts. Because the computing tomography technology is faster, it can take a more accurate picture of the heart - which is constantly in motion.