The Daily Pennsylvanian was founded in 1885 as a successor to the
University Magazine, a publication by the
Philomathean Society. In 1894, the paper began publishing daily, and remained so until it paused publication in May 1943 due to
World War II. It resumed publication in November 1945. In 1962, after a feud with the University of Pennsylvania Student Government Association over a critical editorial led to the Association withdrawing its recognition and subsidies for the paper, the DP became independent. That same year, the organization accepted its first woman staffer, Sharon Lee Ribner. The university's alternative women weekly, the Pennsylvanian News, ended publication in 1964. In 1968, the
34th Street magazine, the publication's arts and culture magazine, was founded.
Under the Button, the DP's satirical publication, was created out of
34th Street in 2008. In 1984, the Daily Pennsylvanian incorporated itself, becoming fully editorially and financially independent of the University of Pennsylvania. In 2014, the paper reduced its printing frequency, dropping its Friday issue. After the onset of the
COVID-19 pandemic in March of 2020, the DP ceased its print publication for the first time since World War II. In 2021, the DP announced it would maintain printing the further-reduced printing schedule it adopted during the pandemic. == Organization ==