34th Street Magazine's "Toast" is a semi-weekly newsletter with the latest on Penn's campus culture and arts scene. Delivered Monday-Wednesday-Friday.
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Nineteen-seventy-six was the last time the Pennsylvania primary was relevant in a Presidential election. For over 30 years, Penn students have not had a meaningful say in the Democratic Party's nominee for president.
This year we have our chance. The 2008 Presidential election is the most important election we have ever seen.
It was another disappointing weekend for the Penn softball team, but at least it could be proud of something: The Quakers toppled previous Ivy undefeated Princeton, 7-2, in game one of yesterday's doubleheader at Princeton, N.J.
The other three games were undoubtedly frustrating for the Red and Blue, as they lost them by just five runs combined.
After graduation, most seniors are looking forward to stepping out into the real world alone.
But this summer a group of six seniors will travel to New Orleans to try to make a difference - together.
Inspired by an Urban Studies class that explores various models for revitalizing impoverished communities around the world, College senior Yasmin Radjy decided she wanted to turn her classroom lessons into reality down in the Big Easy.
A small fire broke out in Rodin College House Friday evening, causing no injuries but forcing residents to evacuate.
A plastic container that was too close to the stove top while students were cooking caused the blaze, Rodin House Dean Ken Grcich said.
The plastic caught on fire at about 8 p.
Singing, laughing and a customary Gatorade dousing of coaches marked the end of the Penn women's lacrosse team's Ivy League season.
The Quakers coasted past Brown Saturday, 12-5, to collect their second consecutive Ivy title.
But before Coach Karin Brower's clothes could even dry, the Quakers (12-1, 7-0) had their sights set on revenge and the Division I championship.
Three out of 51.
That's Penn's record against rival Princeton since 1982, the year that the teams began playing one another.
If there was ever a time to begin making up such a monstrous deficit, this weekend's back-to-back doubleheader against the Tigers would be it.
Well, the hard part is over now.
The No. 6 Penn women's lacrosse team upset its chief Ivy rival in No. 2 Princeton to clinch at least a share of its second-consecutive Ivy title.
All that's left for the Quakers is beating middling Brown tomorrow at Franklin Field to win the regular-season championship outright.
As is often the case with politicians, Pennsylvania House speaker Dennis O'Brien has been accused of occasionally practicing contradictory politics.
His desire to keep criminals from going unpunished is unmistakable, as is his concern for the safety and well-being of Pa.
There's now yet another way to chat with friends online.
In the latest of a series of updates, the online social-networking site Facebook released a new chat application last week.
Users can now see when their friends are online and chat with them in real-time, eliminating the need for a separate buddy list.
Whenever Penn suits up against Maryland, it seems like a lost cause. Over the past four years, the Terps have outscored the Quakers 60-25.
Still, Penn remains optimistic of its chances to upset the nation's No. 7 team when it travels to College Park, Md., for a showdown tomorrow at 1 p.
With the Pennsylvania primary four days away, Penn for Obama and Penn Democrats plan to continue Baracking the vote - only more so.
In the days leading up to Tuesday's primary, Penn for Obama will "pretty much ramp up everything we have been doing," Wharton freshman and co-president of Penn for Obama Mike Stratton said.
Too many papers, too few consumers.
That seminal problem was discussed last night at Kelly Writers House by Philadelphia City Paper editor-in-chief Brian Howard, news editor Doron Taussig, senior editor Patrick Rapa and agenda editor and College alumna Monica Weymouth.
Police too aggressive during Fling
To the Editor:
In the final hours of Fling many celebratory parties were thrown throughout the off-campus community.
Around 1 a.m. Saturday night our University police force, in conjunction with the local Philadelphia police, conducted raids on many of these parties.
For some international students, post-graduation visas are now more attainable than ever before.
On April 4, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced a new rule that allows qualified international students pursuing a degree in Science, Technology, Engineering or Mathematics to apply for an extension of the time they are allowed to work in the U.
Long drives turn heads, but it's putting that wins titles.
If the Quakers hope to somehow do that this weekend at the Ivy women's golf championship, they'll have to improve on what coach Francis Vaughn calls "an Achilles heel."
The Quakers have to finish on the greens at the Atlantic City Golf Club in New Jersey in order to beat the six other Ivy contenders and win their first league title.
Five gun-control measures unanimously passed by City Council and signed into law last Thursday by Mayor Michael Nutter have been met with heavy opposition throughout the past week.
The laws prohibit the possession of an automatic weapon within Philadelphia, limit the number of firearms an individual can purchase to one a month, mandate that owners of lost or stolen guns report the loss within 24 hours and ban persons with orders of protection against them from owning guns.
From hominid to homo sapien, human evolution has shaped who you are.
And this weekend you can discover more about your past at the opening of the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology's newest exhibit, "Surviving: The Body of Evidence," an exploration of the human body and its evolutionary roots.
With plans to adjust the information it collects for its annual ranking of colleges, the U.S. News and World Report might be seeking to make its annual rankings more rounded.
The magazine announced plans last week to make its rankings more qualitative by collecting information from high-school guidance counselors for the first time.
Anyone who has ever played baseball will tell you that playing on a warm, sunny day is one of the best feelings there is. Heck, it's enough to make even the four-game Ivy weekends palatable.
But for the woebegone Penn baseball team - who dropped an 8-2 contest to lowly La Salle on Wednesday after three losses to Cornell over the weekend - the playable conditions may be, first and foremost, a source of frustration.
Avery Lawrence is a College senior from Charlottesville, Va. His e-mail address is lawrence@dailypennsylvanian.com. Unsigned editorials appearing on the Opinion Page represent the opinion of The Daily Pennsylvanian as determined by the majority of the Opinion Board.