Katrina, Katrina, Katrina. It’s all we hear about these days. First it was the brutal accounts of the damage done, and now the news is flooded with development stories about the rebuilding of New Orleans.
Heaven has a stripper factory and a beer volcano. No, really, it does. And believe it or not, there is a statistically sound, inverse relationship between pirates and global warming. Wait, it gets better. The
Whether it’s a prickling sensation on the back of the neck or a cold chill running the length of the spine, signs of the supernatural have fascinated humans for millennia. For paranormal enthusiasts, the City
Evolution satisfies science Regarding your article [“Darwin not enough; new theory vital for an education,” Oct. 18], Darwin may not be enough for the author, but evolution has satisfied scientists for a long time.
As an artist, art educator, curator and critic, Keith Morrison has done it all. Now he can add dean of Tyler School of Art to his list of accomplishments. In July, the University officially named
Su Pham dragged himself out of bed before dawn, arrived at Speakman Hall by 6:30 a.m., and waited an hour and a half for his adviser’s door to open so he could register for classes.
When the Owls take the field Saturday for the final time under Bobby Wallace, don’t expect the coach to get very emotional. When he leaves at the end of the season, Wallace says, he’ll forever
Ingredients for a Jazz-tini to soothe a rainy day: A little strum of guitar, a drop of sultry vocals, a dash of a swinging beat and…a silver flask? Watching jazz guitarist Joseph Federico play, you
On the afternoon of Oct. 8, University of Pennsylvania running back Kyle Ambrogi scored two touchdowns while helping the Quakers dominate Bucknell, 53-7. Football was not the only thing Ambrogi had success with in his
The results are plain to see, but the reasons are not as clear. Why does senior quarterback Mike McGann play so much better in games he doesn’t start? McGann appeared calm and patient in connecting