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The Daily Pennsylvanian

Front Breaking


The message of last night's Relay for Life kickoff was simple: "Cancer doesn't wait, so why should you?" This year's annual Relay for Life information session occurred last night in Huntsman Hall. The organization, which raises cancer awareness, is managed by Colleges Against Cancer and is endorsed by the American Cancer Society.

Patrick Harker's colleagues and fellow Wharton professors can sing only praises as they begin to bid farewell to their dean. And while most agree that replacing Harker - who will leave Wharton to serve as University of Delaware's president in July - will not be easy, some point to Wharton Deputy Dean David Schmittlein as a likely successor.

The Latest
By Josh and Josh Hirsch · Dec. 6, 2006

Seven games into the season, there is no doubt who Penn's most valuable player has been. That honor belongs to senior Mark Zoller, who yesterday was named the Big 5 and the Ivy League player of the week - and the Big 5 award was Zoller's second of the season.

It's hard to miss the blow-up Santa Claus hanging from a window of the Sigma Chi fraternity house on Locust Walk. Surrounding houses boast multicolored lights, red-and-green flowers, seasonal ornaments and even presents underneath the tree. These customs, Penn fraternity brothers say, have been going on for years and are still going strong.


Giant Santas, mistletoe bedeck frats

It's hard to miss the blow-up Santa Claus hanging from a window of the Sigma Chi fraternity house on Locust Walk. Surrounding houses boast multicolored lights, red-and-green flowers, seasonal ornaments and even presents underneath the tree. These customs, Penn fraternity brothers say, have been going on for years and are still going strong.


Relay for Life seeks more walkers, donations

The message of last night's Relay for Life kickoff was simple: "Cancer doesn't wait, so why should you?" This year's annual Relay for Life information session occurred last night in Huntsman Hall. The organization, which raises cancer awareness, is managed by Colleges Against Cancer and is endorsed by the American Cancer Society.


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Patrick Harker's colleagues and fellow Wharton professors can sing only praises as they begin to bid farewell to their dean. And while most agree that replacing Harker - who will leave Wharton to serve as University of Delaware's president in July - will not be easy, some point to Wharton Deputy Dean David Schmittlein as a likely successor.



Indoor track preview: Seniors the key to Men's, Women's Track

There's no mystery surrounding the main challenge for the Penn men's track team, at least to its coaches. "We have a lot of top-end people who are really national-class guys," assistant men's coach Jamie Cook said. "We just need some of the younger underclassmen and supporting staff to step up.


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Daily Digit

By Evan Goldin · Dec. 6, 2006

16,837Average number of Philadelphia public school students skipping school each day. Source: Philadelphia Inquirer



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College sophomore Chris Yeager gazed at his screen in disbelief. He raged. He cursed. He almost clawed the walls. His Internet had gone out. But Yeager is only one of hundreds of students whose worlds fall apart when the Internet stops working, and cyberpsychologists have even invented a name for their affliction: Internet Addiction Disorder.


College Pizza heads to Strikes

For college students, beer, pizza and bowling are a winning combination. At least that's what College Pizza owner George Ballouz is banking on. The pizzeria will move from its current location - which it was forced to leave due to a planned construction project on the 3900 block of Walnut Street - into the mezzanine of Strikes Bowling Lounge over winter break.



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College junior Kathryn Lee left 30th Street Station just before dawn during Thanksgiving break. With the road only lit by street lamps, Lee said she and another female friend remained anxious during the walk back to school. "We were scared to walk back from the train station, so we debated about getting a cab," Lee said.


Sparks flew as offenses staged Big 5 shootout

Only the electric atmosphere in the Palestra made it apparent that Saturday night's match-up between Penn and Villanova was a Big 5 contest. The game did not feature the grind-it-out defense and physical smothering of opportunities that have long characterized Big 5 games.



Blast from the past

Blast from the past

By Rob Gross · Dec. 5, 2006

The year was 1971. The Baltimore Colts were champions of Super Bowl V. Joe Frazier was heavyweight champion after winning the first of three epic fights against Muhammad Ali. The Penn men's basketball team was 28-1 and ranked in the top 10 nationally.


For an historic Penn grad, a murky legacy

Nicknamed "Willing and Able" in his senior-class yearbook for the Penn School of Design, Julian Abele - pronounced "able" - was an overachiever. When he graduated from the School in 1902, Abele was president of the Penn Architectural Society, the recipient of numerous architectural awards and was poised to join one of Philadelphia's top architectural firms.


Personalities: She chose it - you're reading it

Marissa Rhodes spends her days surrounded by books. But, unlike the students who will retreat to Van Pelt Library during the next few weeks of studying before finals, it's Rhodes' job to think about what everyone else is reading. As the Penn Bookstore's trade floor manager, Rhodes oversees all the non-textbook titles in stock - a collection that runs the gamut from the classic works of Jane Austen to celebrity chef Rachael Ray's popular series of recipe books.


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As a criminal-malpractice lawyer, Penn alumna Joan Saltzman has seen everything that might go wrong in an operation. Presenting her book, Mr. Right and My Left Kidney, at the Penn Bookstore last night, Saltzman described overcoming her doubts about donating a kidney to her husband.