Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian

Front Breaking

The Daily Pennsylvanian

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation recently awarded a $750,000 grant to be given over the next six years to the School of Arts and Science's initiative to encourage Cross-Cultural Contact scholarship, the study of what happens when different cultures collide and coalesce.


The new substance-free residential program at Fisher Hassenfeld College House has entered its second semester with no reported violations. The program stipulates that residents will not use or be under the influence of drugs or alcohol while in the hall. Although only about half of the residents on floors where the program is in effect signed up for the program, students and supervisors report that the program has created a sense of community and mutual respect in those two halls.

College junior Sarah Kaminetsky resigned from the Undergraduate Assembly Monday night. "Due to other school-related and extracurricular commitments, I don't feel like I can devote 110 percent to the UA, and . there are other people who may be able to devote more time to the UA," said Kaminetsky, who is also a member of the Junior Class Board.

The Latest

In the past few weeks, I have had the pleasure of hearing a wide array of feedback relating to the most recent issue of the Pennsylvania Punch Bowl Humor Magazine. As a member of Penn's large and diverse Asian American community and as an editor of Punch Bowl, however, I was concerned to hear that some people found the issue racist.

They're physical. They've got great guard play. And most importantly, they've emerged as the second-best team in the Ivy League this season. But you don't have to tell Glen Miller what Brown (15-3, 7-3 Ivy) does well. The former head man in Providence, R.

Group protests casinos

By Jon Meza · Feb. 29, 2008

Anti-casino activists are hoping to score a royal flush with their latest campaign launched this week. On Wednesday, Casino-Free Philadelphia kicked off its campaign against construction of casinos in the city - called Operation Hidden Costs - with a visit to the Governor's office at Walnut and Broad streets.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Group protests casinos

By Jon Meza · Feb. 29, 2008

Anti-casino activists are hoping to score a royal flush with their latest campaign launched this week. On Wednesday, Casino-Free Philadelphia kicked off its campaign against construction of casinos in the city - called Operation Hidden Costs - with a visit to the Governor's office at Walnut and Broad streets.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

The new substance-free residential program at Fisher Hassenfeld College House has entered its second semester with no reported violations. The program stipulates that residents will not use or be under the influence of drugs or alcohol while in the hall. Although only about half of the residents on floors where the program is in effect signed up for the program, students and supervisors report that the program has created a sense of community and mutual respect in those two halls.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

College junior Sarah Kaminetsky resigned from the Undergraduate Assembly Monday night. "Due to other school-related and extracurricular commitments, I don't feel like I can devote 110 percent to the UA, and . there are other people who may be able to devote more time to the UA," said Kaminetsky, who is also a member of the Junior Class Board.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Ever since they began practicing in January, the young Quakers have been anxiously awaiting their first taste of collegiate softball. They were supposed to begin their season on Saturday, but forecasted inclement delayed their opener further. On Sunday, the Red and Blue finally took the field against Lafayette, but even then they had to wait 11 innings to find out the result of their first game.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

The writers and editors of The Daily Pennsylvanian must often strike a difficult balance between getting the scoop on a breaking news story and taking the time to get the facts right. On Tuesday, IvyGate, the "Ivy League blog," received a tip - seemingly sent from SPEC - claiming that Limp Bizkit was chosen to headline this year's Spring Fling Concert.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

President Bush's budget for the 2009 fiscal year shows an increased push from the government to encourage foreign-language study for national-security purposes. But it seems unlikely that the increased funding will persuade students learning those languages to pursue careers in the government.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

On Sunday, the Undergraduate Assembly urged the University to examine whether the presence of on-campus blood collectors who are bound by an FDA policy banning certain blood donors violates Penn's non-discrimination policy. Despite a national blood shortage, millions are prohibited from donating by the Federal Drug Administration's lifetime ban on men who have had sex with men (MSM) since 1977.


Big stage for W. Swim freshmen

Penn swim coach Mike Schnur wants his women to swim "as if their hair is on fire." While Harvard and Princeton are expected to finish first and second at the Ivy League Swimming and Diving Championships, running today through Saturday, the rest of the slots are all very much up for grabs.



The Daily Pennsylvanian

This time last year, basketball was the furthest thing from Porter Braswell's mind. He was too busy exploring the Serengeti and throwing spears with Masai warriors. Braswell, a freshman guard at Yale, spent just over two weeks of his senior year at The Lawrenceville School on a trip to Tanzania.


Students praised for relief efforts

In August 2005, the winds and waters of Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, and Penn students have been helping to rebuild the area ever since. Yesterday, the Fox Leadership Program hosted a "celebration and call to Service," congratulating student groups from Penn for previous and upcoming community service trips to the area in the past two and a half years.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

It will likely take years, not months, for many colleges to fully upgrade their computer systems to Vista, and Penn is no exception. In a recent informal online survey, Gary Roberts, Alfred University's director of information-technology services, found that, of 33 colleges he polled, 28 had not yet completely upgraded to Vista, Microsoft's year-old Windows operating system.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

With the Democratic presidential nomination still up for grabs, the issue of superdelegates is on the forefront of media attention, grabbing headlines and yes, even one of Jon Stewart's jokes at the Oscars last Sunday. Despite this attention, many Penn students - and Democratic voters across the country, it seems - are still unclear as to what superdelegates are.


A zebra's daughter in Red and Blue

On Friday night, Bob Adams watched his daughter net 13 points for Penn in a 62-47 loss to Dartmouth at the Palestra. On Saturday, he was on hand in a slightly more active role as the Siena Saints men's team downed Boise St. 93-70 in Boise, Idaho. Such is the life of an NCAA referee and basketball dad.


Skimming through sophomore year

It was a sweet night for sophomores yesterday, as they celebrated their biggest event of the year, Sophomore Skimmer. A total of 600 to 800 students showed up for a Candyland-themed evening of food, music and mingling, Wharton sophomore and class president Arthur Gardner Smith said.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

A program that began in 2000 to rehabilitate area homes has stopped expanding, but 400 properties near campus have been restored as a result of its efforts . The Neighborhood Preservation and Development Fund was created by the University and its partners to buy dilapidated homes in University City and rent them at cheaper rates to graduate students and West Philadelphia residents.


A journalist's view from the campaign trail

If you don't have time to tune into CNN, depending on your Blackberries for the latest election headlines might be better than you think. According to CBS correspondent and 1995 Penn alumna Nancy Cordes, the role of often-overlooked online reporters has never been more important.