Tigers' pool too deep for Penn
In two dual meets in Princeton, N.J., Friday night, the Quakers fell to both the Tigers (193-102) and the Big Red (160.50-137.50).
In two dual meets in Princeton, N.J., Friday night, the Quakers fell to both the Tigers (193-102) and the Big Red (160.50-137.50).
The Quakers came away with a split in their dual meet Saturday in Princeton, N.J., falling 160.5-128.5 to perennial powerhouse Princeton but knocking off typical bottom feeder Cornell, 172-128.
A sexual assault was reported at an off-campus fraternity party early Sunday morning. Philadelphia Police said a woman reported that the rape occurred on the 4000 block of Walnut Street.
Penn finished fourth at the Keystone Classic without three standout seniors, Rollie Peterkin (125 pounds) and co-captains Matt Dragon (157) and Cesar Grajales (149), who were all suspended for violating an Athletic Department policy.
The Quakers came away with a split in their dual meet Saturday in Princeton, N.J., falling 160.5-128.5 to perennial powerhouse Princeton but knocking off typical bottom feeder Cornell, 172-128.
A sexual assault was reported at an off-campus fraternity party early Sunday morning. Philadelphia Police said a woman reported that the rape occurred on the 4000 block of Walnut Street.
In dominating fashion, the football team claimed the Ivy championship trophy for itself for the first time since 2003, trouncing Cornell, 34-0.
Students' apathy could be a challenge for the upcoming referendum that would establish direct elections for the Undergraduate Assembly’s top two positions, which requires at least 20 percent of the student body to care enough to vote.
Yale will look to ruin Harvard's Ivy title hopes in the 126th edition of The Game.
While Harvard travels to Yale praying for a Penn loss, the Quakers (7-2, 6-0) will try to claim the title for themselves tomorrow beginning at 1 p.m. at Franklin Field.
When hip-hop duo Hoodie Allen took the stage Thursday in the Zellerbach Theatre, students stormed the stagefront, eager to see not only performances by big name artists, but also familiar faces.
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, one of Penn’s most eminent professors, was honored with three National Communication Association book awards in addition to an American Red Cross lifetime achievement award was last week.
The new Quakers open their season tomorrow afternoon against Cornell in Ithaca, N.Y.
The Red and Blue will get their next opportunity to prevent an inauspicious start when they play their home opener against Duquesne. Penn lost to the Dukes (3-0) 78-45 last season.
Penn will host the Keystone Classic Sunday — its only tournament at the Palestra in 2009 — and then it’s on the road again as the Quakers embark on a four-tournament road stand that will have them traveling up and down the east coast until Jan. 9.
When Wharton and College junior Rohan Grover begins his one-year term as the new chairman of the Asian Pacific Student Coalition on Dec. 18, he hopes to increase communication between APSC, other minority groups and the student body as a whole.
Conditioning has been the main focus of the men’s squash team in preparing for the 2009-10 season. And tomorrow the Quakers will get the chance to show if it has paid off when they open their season with back-to-back matches in Ithaca, N.Y.
Tomorrow, Penn women’s swimming will face Olympic Qualifier Alicia Aemisegger and a powerful Princeton team that finished 7-0 in the Ivy League last season. The Quakers will also compete against Cornell in the dual meet held in Princeton, N.J.
Most Penn teams circle their first matchups with Princeton on their calendars. The men’s swimming team did the same thing — but for a very different reason. In tonight’s meet in Princeton, N.J., the Quakers have their eyes on Cornell.
Jawan Carter likes playing in the state of Delaware.