Diana Gonimah
Recent articles
The ABC's of Penn's ABCS classes
This semester, there were 21 undergraduate and nine graduate ABCS classes offered, three of which were new.
Penn NAACP president sits down with 'The Daily Pennsylvanian'
College senior Megan Reed recently sat down with The Daily Pennsylvanian to reflect on her experience as the president of Penn’s chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Penn mutliheritage organization experiences re-birth
College junior Chris Cruz and Engineering sophomore Ibrahim Ayub hosted a general body meeting to relaunch Check One, a multiracial and multicultural organization that has not met for about a decade on Penn’s campus after being founded in 1995.
The 'DP' sits down with new PCUW chair
Last week, College junior Adrienne Edwards was elected the new chair of the Penn Consortium for Undergraduate Women — the umbrella group for women’s groups on campus.
Natives at Penn celebrates culture, heritage third annual powwow
Natives at Penn — a group that aims to celebrate Native American heritage and to increase visibility and awareness of native cultures on campus — hosted their third annual powwow at Wynn Commons Saturday afternoon.
Q&A with co-chair of Natives at Penn
The ‘DP’ sits down with the Co-Chair of Natives at Penn, College freshman Sean Massa.
Minorities fall behind in graduation rates
While 90.9 percent of white students graduated in four years, those numbers were lower for black and Asian students, who had four-year graduation rates of 82.2 percent and 87.3 percent, respectively.
30th Annual Festival Latino aims to 'highlight' Latino community at Penn
Sunday night marked the beginning of the 30th annual Festival Latino, a week-long celebration of Latino culture and heritage. The Latino Coalition launched this year’s festival with a kick-off ceremony of food and spoken word artists known as “Sancocho.”
Black students may be wary to seek counseling, study finds
A write-up of the study suggested that stigma, trust and unpleasant experiences were some of the primary factors that discouraged black students from seeking counseling services in college.
For some, recent MSA protest recalls past demonstration
Last April, more than 200 students and faculty members participated in a silent protest against racism on College Green. The protest was triggered by a Daily Pennsylvanian guest column in which then-College of Liberal and Professional Studies student Christopher Abreu, described an encounter with racism on Penn’s campus.
School of Education releases report on black male college success
GSE professor and founder of the Center for the Study of Race and Equity in Education Shaun Harper studied black male undergraduate students who succeeded in college through their involvement as campus leaders and were on track to graduate on time.
Students celebrate memory of Jeffrey Lee
More than 30 students gathered Thursday to honor Lee, who died at the finish line of the Philadelphia Half Marathon.
Students discuss 'Shit People Say'
Penn’s Race Dialogue Project collaborated with several student cultural groups at Penn to host a dialogue about race in light of the social virality of the “Shit People Say” videos.
Latino Coalition, SFS help translate aid materials for applicants
Recently, the Latino Coalition and Student Financial Services have spearheaded efforts to facilitate the financial aid application process for Spanish-speaking families.
Wharton Japan Trek persists despite obstacles
Despite the significant damage the earthquake caused last March, the group plans to carry on with its annual trip to Japan as planned.
University launches childcare program for student-parents
Last month, the University launched the 2012 Emergency Backup Childcare program, which will run through Dec. 19. The program is offered to all full-time undergraduate and graduate students at Penn.
Consortium of Undergraduate Women kicks off Women's Week
Women’s Week 2012, which is themed “Celebrating Herstory,” will include a variety of events like discussion panels, performances by the Penn Monologues and the Vagina Monologues and keynote speeches addressing issues related to women’s health as well as women’s rights.
UMOJA kicks off week-long celebration of culture
Starting today, UMOJA — the umbrella organization for black student groups at Penn — will combine themes such as black heritage and social justice as part of a week-long celebration.
Students launch immigrant group on campus
Last week, Wharton sophomore Tania Chairez — who came out as an undocumented student in a Daily Pennsylvanian guest column in October — launched Penn for Immigrant Rights.
Q&A with professor John Jackson
Jackson — who, in 2006, became the University’s first-ever Penn Integrates Knowledge professor — was recently appointed the first-ever senior adviser to the provost for diversity.



