The Gold Standard | The two-year plan
Penn should offer special programs for students who wish to study for two years and then head off to join the workforce.
Penn should offer special programs for students who wish to study for two years and then head off to join the workforce.
Although Penn professes a “commitment to diversity" on its website, its statistics on standing minority faculty may reflect a different reality.
Echoing the theme of UMOJA’s Black Heritage Week, “Touch the Sky,” Russell Simmons focused primarily on spiritual enlightenment when he spoke on campus Friday.
Harvard proved to be too much to handle on Saturday, taking down both the men’s and women’s squash teams at the Ringe Courts.
Although Penn professes a “commitment to diversity" on its website, its statistics on standing minority faculty may reflect a different reality.
Echoing the theme of UMOJA’s Black Heritage Week, “Touch the Sky,” Russell Simmons focused primarily on spiritual enlightenment when he spoke on campus Friday.
At an event where excess is celebrated, just one wing proved to be the difference between winner and loser.
The ninth annual Wharton Women Business Conference, titled “Leadership: Transformed & Redefined,” was held Friday at the Inn at Penn.
Senior wrestler Scott Griffin had a triumphant return from injury this past weekend, taking his first two bouts via major decision victories and picking up a forfeit win against Princeton.
With the theme of “Extra, Extra! Read All About Her: Women in Media and Politics,” this year’s Women’s Week will examine the history of women in media and how that role has progressed up to the present day.
Jillian Pirtle, Miss Black Pennsylvania 2011, visited Penn Medicine’s Heart and Vascular Center Friday for National Wear Red Day, a part of the American Heart Association’s Go Red For Women campaign designed to empower women to take charge of their own heart health.
A group at the School of Engineering and Applied Science invented AutoPlug, a way to connect cars’ electrical hardware to the internet.
Last Friday, Penn in Washington — the newly minted on-campus branch of the summer program — brought 54 students to Washington, D.C. for the day to expose them to employment opportunities and provide advice on getting jobs and internships.
Sunday marked the beginning of RecycleMania, the annual eight-week competition between Penn and over 600 colleges across the U.S. and Canada.
The women's basketball team lost to Harvard in double overtime, 88-84, on Saturday — the first time both men and women went into double overtime the same night.
On Friday, a crowd of all ages packed into Stiteler Hall to hear a panel discussion jointly sponsored by the Middle East Center, Center for Africana Studies, the African Studies Center and the Department of History on the popular uprising in Egypt.
Saturday's loss set a thick fog over campus — for the fans, at least. But the Quakers are focused as they look to Tuesday's matchup with Princeton.
Penn’s game against Harvard Saturday had everything you could want, except for the one thing the Quakers wanted: a win.
It’s been said many times that winning will bring the fans back to the Palestra. So here we are, with a Big 5 win followed by three consecutive Ivy wins.
In a 78-47 drubbing of Dartmouth Friday night, Penn showcased what it is capable of when firing on all cylinders with an excitement and intensity that has not been seen in several years.