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Monday, July 6, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian

Front Breaking

Hindus, Christians, Jews and Muslims left their places of worship last night to remember together the events of Sept. 11, 2001. But they did more than remember. They sang, prayed, performed poetry and reflected, on this fifth anniversary of a day few Penn students will forget.


Five years ago today, the world was irrevocably shaken. Who does not remember where they were? Who has not told the story a dozen times? Huddled around television sets across the country, we watched New Yorkers flee from Lower Manhattan, a swelling cloud of dust and ash chasing them from their offices and homes.

Come January, students will have the option to switch from Penn's traditional e-mail service to something that looks more like Gmail or Microsoft's Windows Live Mail. Officials are planning to replace the University's e-mail server with a new host from either Google Inc.

The Latest

What a difference a week makes. After a disappointing loss on opening weekend, the men's soccer team held on to beat Hartwick, 2-1, and then blew out Marist 4-0 to capture the Mayor's Cup in Oneonta, N.Y. Towson's 3-2 loss to Hartwick clinched the tournament for Penn, which will now have its name on college soccer's oldest trophy.

For most students, the years spent at Penn are fairly self-absorbed. It's time spent boosting a resume, or partying, or studying for final exams. From Wharton to Nursing, a Penn education is a ticket to a better life, but it's a ticket that bears a very high price: a responsibility to do everything we can to contribute to our community and to our world.

With 40 percent of its members being students of color, Penn's class of 2010 is its most diverse to date. But this triumph of diversity was not won without aggressive effort. As admissions officials nationwide, including Penn, fight for higher percentages of minorities at their schools, more and more are using a range of multicultural recruitment programs.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

With 40 percent of its members being students of color, Penn's class of 2010 is its most diverse to date. But this triumph of diversity was not won without aggressive effort. As admissions officials nationwide, including Penn, fight for higher percentages of minorities at their schools, more and more are using a range of multicultural recruitment programs.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Five years ago today, the world was irrevocably shaken. Who does not remember where they were? Who has not told the story a dozen times? Huddled around television sets across the country, we watched New Yorkers flee from Lower Manhattan, a swelling cloud of dust and ash chasing them from their offices and homes.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Come January, students will have the option to switch from Penn's traditional e-mail service to something that looks more like Gmail or Microsoft's Windows Live Mail. Officials are planning to replace the University's e-mail server with a new host from either Google Inc.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Ex-Wharton professor Scott Ward is stuck in jail - for now. A federal judge ruled on Friday that Ward, charged with importing child pornography, will remain in Virginia court custody until his trial. The judge overturned last Wednesday's ruling that Ward could return to his Massachusetts home if he posted bail set at $2 million and abided by strict regulations, which included wearing a GPS-tracking device and never accessing travel documents or a computer.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

By Leanne Ta The Daily Pennsylvanian Hundreds of protest groups, numerous online petitions, a public demonstration and an organized boycott: not the way Facebook.com officials expected users to respond to the site's recent makeover. "We really messed this one up," Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerburg wrote in an open letter to Facebook users Friday morning.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

In her Sept. 10 op-ed in The New York Times, Susan Sontag anticipated that the anniversary of Sept. 11 would serve as "a day of mourning" and "an affirmation of American solidarity." "But," she continued, "of one thing we can be sure. It is not a day of national reflection.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

By Josh Wheeling The Daily Pennsylvanian Despite facing nearly 20 teams each in the men's and women's Fordham Invitationals on Saturday, the women's cross country team won the event, while the men came in second behind Navy. No Penn runner finished with a top three time in either race, but depth carried the Quakers to two high finishes.


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Week of affordable dining in Center City This fall's Center City Restaurant Week began yesterday, but hurry to make your reservations - it only runs through Friday. The event, which occurs annually, allows patrons to dine for $30 at some of the city's most expensive restaurants.


W. Soccer staves off Spiders for pair of wins

Entering this weekend's Penn Invitational, the women's soccer team was one of the many Quakers squads that had yet to score a goal, much less win a game. But after all was said and done, Penn had accomplished both of those things as part of an Ivy sweep of the Penn Invitational.


Ivy schedule gets off to good start with shutout

By Krista Hutz The Daily Pennsylvanian Penn field hockey coach Val Cloud expected sophomore transfer Margaretha Ehret to make an immediate impact for her team. And with one goal she did just that. Ehret scored the Red and Blue's first goal of the season and her first in a Quakers uniform, in Penn's 2-0 win over Harvard (0-3, 0-1 Ivy) on Saturday.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

After being in New York on Sept. 11, 2001, a lot of things changed. I started reading the newspaper. I figured out that both America and my beloved home city weren't indestructible. And to this day, I give a second look to every plane that flies over Manhattan.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

By Leanne Ta The Daily Pennsylvanian High schools and small laboratories can now access a piece of world-class equipment they once could only dream of, thanks to graduate student Brian Edwards. That device is a pair of tweezers. Well, sort of. Edwards, an Electrical and Systems Engineering doctoral candidate, has created "electric tweezers" that allow researchers to manipulate microscopic particles simply by moving a joystick.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

The Daily Pennsylvanian spoke with University President Amy Gutmann about Scott Ward's time as a Wharton Marketing professor. DP: Why was Ward allowed to remain on the faculty after two arrests? AG: The most important fact is that Mr. Ward is no longer at Penn.




The Daily Pennsylvanian

No one would ever accuse the Ivy League of being a powerhouse conference in football or basketball. In this day and age, Penn and its counterparts are simply never contenders for a bowl game, let alone a national championship. To many, it is comical that the sports in which the Ivy League tends to excel are ones like squash, fencing, lacrosse and crew.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Although their tastes in music might be very different, there is one thing many Penn students can have in common: a sleek software called iTunes that sells millions of digital songs. But a new program is trying to compete. Having dominated the digital music industry - and the laptops of Penn students - for the past several years, iTunes may soon be challenged by the social-networking Web site MySpace.